Opioid Prescribing Trends and the Physician’s Role in Responding to the Public Health Crisis

Adams and Giroir examine the opioid prescribing trends and the physician's role in responding to the public health crisis. The opioid overdose epidemic affects millions of Americans and their families. Nationwide polls reveal that 49% of respondents personally know someone who is or has been ad...

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Veröffentlicht in:Archives of internal medicine (1960) 2019-04, Vol.179 (4), p.476-478
Hauptverfasser: Adams, Jerome M, Giroir, Brett P
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Giroir, Brett P
description Adams and Giroir examine the opioid prescribing trends and the physician's role in responding to the public health crisis. The opioid overdose epidemic affects millions of Americans and their families. Nationwide polls reveal that 49% of respondents personally know someone who is or has been addicted to prescription opioid medication. In 2017, more than 49,000 people died in the United States of opioid overdoses, according to preliminary data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). This crisis has spanned different phases, beginning with increased overdose deaths from prescription opioids, which then evolved to increased heroin overdose deaths, and most recently manifesting as a dramatic spike in overdose deaths from illicitly manufactured fentanyl and fentanyl analogs.
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source MEDLINE; American Medical Association Journals
subjects Analgesics, Opioid - pharmacology
Drug abuse
Drug Prescriptions - statistics & numerical data
Humans
Narcotics
Physician's Role
Physicians
Practice Patterns, Physicians
Public Health
title Opioid Prescribing Trends and the Physician’s Role in Responding to the Public Health Crisis
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