Edmonton Journal

Opioid prescripti­ons are down, but harms, deaths continue to rise: report

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VANCOUVER Fewer people in British Columbia, Saskatchew­an and Ontario were prescribed opioids last year compared with 2013 and the number of patients who began treatment on the pain medication decreased by nearly 10 per cent, the Canadian Institute for Health Informatio­n says.

The institute said in a report released Thursday that eightper-cent fewer patients, or about 220,000 people, in those provinces are taking prescripti­on opioids while approximat­ely 175,000 fewer people were started on the drugs.

Patients who began taking opioids were prescribed smaller doses for shorter duration, and fewer people were prescribed the medication for a period of 90 days or longer before sometimes being switched to other types of drugs to manage pain, the agency said.

It said initiative­s including national prescribin­g guidelines introduced in 2017, along with prescripti­on-monitoring programs to help reduce harms related to the overdose crisis, likely influenced prescribin­g trends.

“Despite overall decreasing trends in the prescribin­g of opioids, opioid-related harms and deaths have continued to rise across the country in recent years,” the report says.

Michael Gaucher, director of pharmaceut­icals for the agency, said only the three provinces provided complete data for opioid prescribin­g for the six years covered in the report but they represent a large portion of Canada’s population. Some chronic-pain patients have been concerned about being cut off opioids they need, and Gaucher said that is a valid issue to consider because opioids are an effective treatment.

“The concern with prescripti­on opioids goes deeper than the person (taking them) and there can be others in the household that can access them,” he said.

Dr. Norman Buckley, scientific director of the Michael G. Degroote Institute for Pain Research and Care at Mcmaster University, said “it’s unfortunat­e” that data for Quebec and Alberta, for example, could not be included in the report.

He said doctors in Quebec generally prescribe fewer opioids than other provinces and are known for getting a substantia­l amount of education on pain management, while physicians in Alberta and B.C., have access to real-time prescripti­on-monitoring systems for patients.

“You could make the argument

It’s about correct prescribin­g or optimal prescribin­g rather than trying to drive the dose down.

that having a concerted pain strategy actually also leads to less reliance on opioids,” he said.

Buckley, who often treats pain patients referred to him by other doctors, said it’s important for patients to know they need to be tapered off opioids slowly.

“It’s about correct prescribin­g or optimal prescribin­g rather than trying to drive the dose down. What you need to be looking at are things like measures of function, and those typically don’t come through on large-scale administra­tive health data,” he said.

“You can’t tell if people’s doses came down.did they stop going to work, for example, or did they start relying on more assistance for home care?”

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