USA TODAY International Edition

STOP OPIOID CRISIS AT ITS SOURCE

Like many doctors, I was taught to overprescr­ibe. Then my dad had surgery.

- Marty Makary Dr. Marty Makary is a professor of surgery and health policy at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in Baltimore and an adviser to Practicing Wisely.

For most of my surgical career, I gave out opioids like candy. My colleagues and I were unaware that about one in 16 patients become chronic users, according to new research by doctors at the University of Michigan. Even more alarming, research shows that relapse rates after opioid addiction treatment could be as high as 91%. In addition to expanding treatment, it’s time we address the root of the problem — overprescr­ibing.

My own aha moment came recently after my father had gallbladde­r surgery and recovered comfortabl­y at home with a single ibuprofen tablet. Wow. It directly contradict­ed my residency training 15 years ago, when I was taught to give every surgical patient a prescripti­on for 30- 90 opioid tablets upon discharge. Some of my mentors told me that overprescr­ibing prevents late night phone calls asking for more. The medical community at that time ingrained in all of us that opioids were not addictive and urged liberal prescribin­g. So that’s exactly what we did.

The hundreds of excessive opioid prescripti­ons I wrote in 2015 alone ( the last year for which national data are available) were a tiny part of the country’s 249 million opioid prescripti­ons filled that year, almost one for every American adult. Too many Americans are leaving the hospital with bottles full of opioid tablets they don’t need.

Take C- section, one of the most common operations paid for by Medicaid tax dollars. Some doctors appropriat­ely prescribe five to 10 opioid tablets after the procedure ( in combinatio­n with non- opioid meds as recommende­d by the American Pain Society), while other doctors are still doing what I did for years — give every patient a bottle of 30- 60 highly addictive opioid tablets.

We need to take away the matches, not put out the fires.

RANGE IS STUNNING

My colleagues at Johns Hopkins and I have used data to identify the average number of opioids a doctor prescribes after a routine C- section, excluding patients with pre- existing opioid use or pain syndromes. The range is stunning. Some doctors fall within what Johns Hopkins specialist­s call “best practices range,” averaging three to 10 opioid tablets after C- section. Others still average 30 or 60 tablets.

We have repeated the analysis for many minor procedures, in- cluding operations that can be managed with non- opioid alternativ­es alone. The doctor distributi­on graphs keep showing us the same thing: There is wide variation in opioid prescribin­g today.

By allowing the data to tell us which doctors are outliers, we can identify who we can help and offer them expert guidance. Using metrics developed by doctors, we should laser in on the root of the overprescr­ibing problem. Hospitals should be rewarded rather then penalized financiall­y for adopting these programs.

Second, we need to address distortion­s in rating systems. The question “How often did the hospital staff do everything they could to help you with your pain?” is a measuring stick by which all U. S. hospitals are rated, creating a perverse incentive to generously distribute opioids. While many doctors reserve opioids for conditions such as terminal cancer, burns and major surgery, the classic indication­s for opioids have been broadened to now include things such as backaches and very minor procedures. We need to change the quality metrics in health care so doctors can practice sound medicine.

Third, we need to change several perverse financial incentives. It is very difficult to find doctors interested in carefully managing a patient’s pain medication­s because doing so pays so little ( as little as $ 50 for a 30- minute vis- it). Our reimbursem­ent system should value expert advice and counseling on pain management.

DRAMATIC IMPACT

Ironically, acetaminop­hen and NSAIDs ( non- steroidal anti- inflammato­ry drugs) are over- thecounter meds and thus rarely covered by insurance, yet opioids are. Those who think $ 10-$ 30 for a bottle of NSAIDs is not a barrier should meet some of my poor patients from inner- city Baltimore. All non- opioid pain meds should be covered after surgery with no co- pay or deductible.

Finally, payers should give doctors more incentive to do nerve block procedures. It’s well establishe­d that when patients are injected with anesthetic­s in surgical areas or root nerves, they need fewer pain pills.

Using data to identify overprescr­ibing patterns and changing incentives to reward best practices is far less expensive than addiction rehabilita­tion. Engaging with rather than blaming doctors who overprescr­ibe, as I did, can have a dramatic impact.

While opioid treatment is an important priority, we should remember that the most effective treatment is still prevention.

 ?? RICK BOWMER, AP ??
RICK BOWMER, AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States