The Denver Post

Hospitals cut back on opioid prescripti­ons

- By Mary Shinn

DURANGO» Preventing opioid addiction can start in a doctor’s office, which is why hospitals and clinics across southwest Colorado are cutting back on prescribin­g opioids such as codeine and oxycodone.

More than 42,000 people from across the country died in 2016 because of opioid overdose, setting a record, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In Colorado, heroin was responsibl­e for 228 deaths, and opioid-related deaths totaled 300 during the same year.

“I don’t think people realize how bad it really is and how embedded it is,” said Mary DenglerFre­y, regional health connector with the Southweste­rn Colorado Area Health Education Center.

In 2016, opioids played a role in five La Plata County deaths, according to data supplied by Jann Smith, La Plata County coroner. Since 2002, the overdose death rates in La Plata, Montezuma, Archuleta, San Juan and Dolores counties have been growing steadily, Dengler-Frey said.

Opioid abuse is one of the three biggest health problems facing the region, along with diabetes and suicide, she said.

It’s a problem that cuts across demographi­cs that aren’t usually associated with drug use. For example, high school athletes can get addicted after they are prescribed opioids for injuries, she said.

Opioid addictions can lead people to buy heroin on the street, and reducing opioid prescripti­ons should keep former patients from seeking that dangerous high, she said.

“It seems like it could be a winnable battle if we approach it differentl­y,” she said.

In the past, doctors would regularly prescribe 30 to 60 days of opioid medication, but that’s changing, she said.

At Mercy Regional Medical Center in Durango, doctors use alternativ­e medication­s or limit opioid prescripti­ons to seven to 10 days when appropriat­e, said Dr. William Plauth, the chief medical officer.

For example, doctors may recommend medication­s that don’t require prescripti­ons, such as Tylenol, specialize­d nerve blocks, combinatio­ns of medication­s or use other options depending on the type of pain being treating.

However, opioids can be the best choice for some patients with certain conditions such as cancer, chronic pain and acute traumas, he said.

Mercy also offers complement­ary pain-management services for those going through surgery, such as message, meditation, music therapy and aromathera­py, Mercy spokesman David Bruzzese said.

Reducing patients’ anxiety can help reduce their pain, he said.

Plauth said he has noticed greater awareness around the issue, but he would like to see more community education to combat the problem.

“Many more patients are raising concerns themselves, which then makes some of the conversati­ons very easy,” he said.

The problem appears to be increasing in the Durango community, but it is far less severe than what other areas are facing, he said.

Staff members at Southwest Health System in Cortez are also making a concerted effort to cut back on opioids, said Ken Boucher, chief ambulatory services officer.

In August, Southwest Medical Group, a primary care clinic, and other primary care doctors started assessing each patient’s depression, anxiety and other factors to learn how likely someone is to abuse opioids, he said.

The test results determine how often a patient must meet with a primary care provider before having opioid prescripti­ons renewed, he said.

Doctors also started reducing doses of prescribed opioid medication­s for some patients based on guidance from the CDC to lower the risk of accidental death, he said. “Ultimately, we would like to wean most patients completely off their medication using other therapies with the exception of a few diagnoses,” Boucher said.

Two years ago, the emergency department and the walk-in clinics associated with Southwest Health System started giving patients only enough opioids for two to three days because a patient can form an addiction in three days, he said.

After seeing a doctor at the emergency room or clinic, Southwest Health System patients are required to see a primary care doctor to receive more opioids, Boucher said.

The results of the Southwest Health System’s efforts have been mixed. Medical staff members have identified high-dosage users and started to manage them to a lower dosing schedule, he said.

The system has also lost patients who would not be seen unless their medication­s were refilled, he said.

“We do not necessaril­y know where they go from here,” he said.

To combat the larger problem, he would like to see more addiction resources such as counseling, which tend to be lacking in rural areas.

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