Opioid Prescribing Education in Surgical Residencies: A Program Director Survey

Opioid abuse and misuse is a public health crisis. A national effort to reduce this phenomenon is ongoing. Residents represent a large pool of opioid prescribers but, are often not the target for opioid prescribing education (OPE). We developed a survey to assess current opioid prescribing practices...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of surgical education 2018-05, Vol.75 (3), p.552-556
Hauptverfasser: Yorkgitis, Brian K., Bryant, Elizabeth, Raygor, Desiree, Brat, Gabriel, Smink, Douglas S., Crandall, Marie
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container_end_page 556
container_issue 3
container_start_page 552
container_title Journal of surgical education
container_volume 75
creator Yorkgitis, Brian K.
Bryant, Elizabeth
Raygor, Desiree
Brat, Gabriel
Smink, Douglas S.
Crandall, Marie
description Opioid abuse and misuse is a public health crisis. A national effort to reduce this phenomenon is ongoing. Residents represent a large pool of opioid prescribers but, are often not the target for opioid prescribing education (OPE). We developed a survey to assess current opioid prescribing practices and education among surgical residents. An Institutional Review Board and Association of Program Directors in Surgery approved survey was electronically mailed to surgical program directors (PDs). The survey included questions regarding residency type, location, number of graduates per year, perceived value of OPE, residency policy on prescribing outpatients controlled substances, presence of OPE, and preferred method of OPE. A total of 248 PDs were e-mailed the survey with 110 complete responses (44.4%). Of all 104 (94.5%) allow residents to prescribe outpatient opioids with 24 (23.1%) limiting the opioid class prescribed. A total of 29 (27.9%) programs require residents to obtain their own Drug Enforcement Administration registration. Only 22 (20.0%) programs had in place mandatory OPE, 7 (6.4%) PDs were unsure if OPE was a mandatory educational requirement. Furthermore, 70 (79.5%) of programs currently without OPE are considering adding it. Didactic lecture (18, 81.8%) is the most common modality for OPE. The mode time dedicated to OPE was 1 hour. When PDs were asked about which method would be best to deliver OPE, the most common response was case-based scenarios (39, 35.5%). Bivariate statistics were performed and no association was found between OPE and program characteristics'. Most surgical residency programs allow residents to prescribe outpatient opioids, very few require OPE. The most common method of OPE was didactic lectures. To enhance a resident's knowledge in prescribing opioids, programs should incorporate OPE into their curriculum.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.jsurg.2017.08.023
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subjects opioid education
opioid prescribing
Patient Care
Practice-Based Learning and Improvement
surgical residency
Systems-Based Practice
title Opioid Prescribing Education in Surgical Residencies: A Program Director Survey
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