Physicians often prescribe the drugs instead of nonaddictive options that some research suggests is more effective for managing pain, and they routinely prescribe opioids for conditions deemed inappropriate by medical organization such as the AmericanAcademy of Neurology. The benefits of using opioids to treat pain for conditions like headache, fibromyalgia or lower back pain are outweighed by the risk of addiction or death.
“Studies have shown that once we get beyond seven days of these opiate prescriptions for acute pain, the outcomes become much worse,” Donald Teater, MD, medical adviser for NSC, told the Chicago Tribune. “They get on these for a long time and have a hard time getting off them.”
In its new guidance for opioid prescription released last week, the CDC recommended that opioids generally be reserved for cancer, palliative and end-of-life care. For short-term pain, prescriptions should be limited to three days. However, of the 201 internists and family medicine physicians surveyed by NSC, nearly all provide prescriptions for far longer periods, and about one in five prescribed opioids for 30 days, according to the report.
More articles on physician issues:
Rush University Medical Center invites dogs to hospital to ease clinician burnout, stress
5 key elements for cultivating physician resilience
Which cities, states have the shortest physician wait times?