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How Clinicians Use Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs: A Qualitative Inquiry
Author(s) -
Hildebran Christi,
Cohen Deborah J.,
Irvine Jessica M.,
Foley Carol,
O'Kane Nicole,
Beran Todd,
Deyo Richard A.
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.12469
Subject(s) - focus group , medicine , qualitative research , medical prescription , grounded theory , denial , medline , addiction medicine , prescription drug misuse , addiction , family medicine , psychiatry , nursing , psychology , opioid use disorder , psychotherapist , opioid , social science , receptor , marketing , sociology , political science , law , business
Objectives Prescription drug monitoring programs ( PDMP s) are now active in most states to assist clinicians in identifying potential controlled drug misuse, diversion, or excessive prescribing. Little is still known about the ways in which they are incorporated into workflow and clinical decision making, what barriers continue to exist, and how clinicians are sharing PDMP results with their patients. Design Qualitative data were collected through online focus groups and telephone interviews. Setting Clinicians from pain management, emergency and family medicine, psychiatry/behavioral health, rehabilitation medicine, internal medicine and dentistry participated. Patients Thirty‐five clinicians from nine states participated. Methods We conducted two online focus groups and seven telephone interviews. A multidisciplinary team then used a grounded theory approach coupled with an immersion–crystallization strategy for identifying key themes in the resulting transcripts. Results Some participants, mainly from pain clinics, reported checking the PDMP with every patient, every time. Others checked only for new patients, for new opioid prescriptions, or for patients for whom they suspected abuse. Participants described varied approaches to sharing PDMP information with patients, including openly discussing potential addiction or safety concerns, avoiding discussion altogether, and approaching discussion confrontationally. Participants described patient anger or denial as a common response and noted the role of patient satisfaction surveys as an influence on prescribing. Conclusion Routines for accessing PDMP data and how clinicians respond to it vary widely. As PDMP use becomes more widespread, it will be important to understand what approaches are most effective for identifying and addressing unsafe medication use.

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