
Specialty of Prescribers Associated with Prescription Opioid Fatalities in U tah, 2002–2010
Author(s) -
Porucznik Christina A.,
Johnson Erin M.,
Rolfs Robert T.,
Sauer Brian C.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
pain medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.893
H-Index - 97
eISSN - 1526-4637
pISSN - 1526-2375
DOI - 10.1111/pme.12247
Subject(s) - specialty , medicine , medical prescription , opioid , opioid epidemic , prescription drug misuse , family medicine , adverse effect , medical emergency , emergency medicine , nursing , opioid use disorder , receptor
Opioid adverse events are widespread, and deaths have been directly attributed to opioids prescribed by medical professionals. Little information exists on the amount of opioids various medical specialties prescribe and the opioid fatality rate that would be expected if prescription opioid‐related deaths were independent of medical specialty. Objective To compute the incidence of prescription opioid fatalities by medical specialty in U tah and to calculate the attributable risk ( AR ) of opioid fatality by medical specialty. Design Prevalence database study design linking the Utah Controlled Substance Database (CSD) for prescribing data with the Utah Medical Examiner data to identify prescription opioid fatalities. AR were calculated for each medical specialty and year. Results Opioid prescriptions are common with 23,302,892 recorded in the CSD for 2002–2010, 0.64% of which were associated with a fatality. We attached specialty to 90.2% of opioid prescriptions. Family medicine and internal medicine physicians wrote the largest proportion of prescriptions (24.1% and 10.8%) and were associated with the greatest number of prescription opioid fatalities. The number of active prescriptions at time of death decreased each year. The AR of fatality by provider specialty varied each year with some specialties, such as pain medicine and anesthesiology, consistently associated with more fatalities per 1,000 opioid prescriptions than internal medicine physicians the same year. Conclusions Primary care providers were the most frequent prescribers and the most often associated with opioid fatalities and should be targeted for education about safe prescribing along with specialties that prescribe less frequently but are associated with a positive AR for opioid fatality.