Diagnosing and managing patients with chronic pain who develop prescription opioid use disorder: A scoping review of general practitioners' experience

Background and objective: Prescription opioid use disorder (pOUD) is an important sequela of long-term prescribed opioids for chronic pain. General practitioners (GPs) may not systematically diagnose or manage this; however, it is unclear why. Methods: This scoping review searched multiple databases...

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Veröffentlicht in:Australian journal of general practice 2022-10, Vol.51 (10), p.804-811
Hauptverfasser: Wilson, Hester, Harris-Roxas, Ben, Lintzeris, Nicholas, Harris, Mark
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container_title Australian journal of general practice
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creator Wilson, Hester
Harris-Roxas, Ben
Lintzeris, Nicholas
Harris, Mark
description Background and objective: Prescription opioid use disorder (pOUD) is an important sequela of long-term prescribed opioids for chronic pain. General practitioners (GPs) may not systematically diagnose or manage this; however, it is unclear why. Methods: This scoping review searched multiple databases to assess GPs' experience diagnosing and managing patients prescribed opioids for chronic pain who have developed pOUD. Results: The 19 included articles report high levels of GP concern regarding opioid diversion, inappropriate use, abuse, misuse, diversion, dependence and addiction. Confidence screening and detecting pOUD is mixed, and few screen systematically. The most common response is declining to prescribe rather than diagnosing and managing pOUD. Discussion: GPs experience high levels of conflict when considering potential pOUD in their patients with chronic pain prescribed opioids. Their experiences diagnosing and managing pOUD are not fully understood. Further theory-based research may help to understand this and assist future policy directions, programs and research priorities.
doi_str_mv 10.31128/AJGP-10-21-6201
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General practitioners (GPs) may not systematically diagnose or manage this; however, it is unclear why. Methods: This scoping review searched multiple databases to assess GPs' experience diagnosing and managing patients prescribed opioids for chronic pain who have developed pOUD. Results: The 19 included articles report high levels of GP concern regarding opioid diversion, inappropriate use, abuse, misuse, diversion, dependence and addiction. Confidence screening and detecting pOUD is mixed, and few screen systematically. The most common response is declining to prescribe rather than diagnosing and managing pOUD. Discussion: GPs experience high levels of conflict when considering potential pOUD in their patients with chronic pain prescribed opioids. Their experiences diagnosing and managing pOUD are not fully understood. 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subjects Chronic pain
Diagnosis
Opioid abuse
Opioids
Pain
Therapeutic use
Treatment
title Diagnosing and managing patients with chronic pain who develop prescription opioid use disorder: A scoping review of general practitioners' experience
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