Study: 25% of ankle-sprain patients In ERs got opioids
Four years of data showed aggressive prescription pace.
OxyContin, a brand name for oxycodone, is one of the opioid painkillers regularly prescribed for sprained ankles in ERs, a study showed. LIZ O. BAYLEN / LOS ANGELES TIMES 2013
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The researchers found that 25.1 percent of patients were prescribed opioids in the emergency department.

Five percent of patients who were initially offered 30 tablets or more went on to prolonged use of opioids.


Only 1.1 percent of those prescribed 10 tablets or fewer showed long-term use.

WASHINGTON POST

OPIOID CRISIS

A quarter of the adults who went to hospital emergency departments with sprained ankles were prescribed opioid painkillers, a new study shows, in another sign of how commonly physicians turn to narcotics even for minor injuries.

The state-by-state review revealed wide variation in the use of opioids for the sprains, from 40 percent in Arkansas to 2.8 percent in North Dakota.

Above-average prescribing was seen in North Carolina, Tennessee, Georgia, Alabama, Arkansas, Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas and Arizona.

The analysis of 30,832 private insurance claims from 2011 to 2015 revealed that emergency department prescriptions can influence long-term opioid use. The median prescription was 15 tablets, or three days’ worth of hydiocodone, oxycodone, tramadol or other narcotics. Patients who received the largest amounts were five times as likely to continue with prolonged opioid use than those given 10 tablets or fewer, though their overall numbers were relatively small. The recipients were not known to have previously used opioids.

Opioid prescriptions written by emergency room doctors are responsible for a small portion of the vast amount of narcotic painkillers consumed by patients each year. Most prescriptions come from primary-care physicians. There were about 215 million prescriptions for the drugs in 2016, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The new study looked at prescriber habits shortly before CDC issued guidelines that urged doctors to use opioids sparingly, and before many states and the federal government moved to limit the length of firsttime opioid prescriptions.

“There was this leap to opioids, either in perception of patient expectations or to meet patient expectations,” said a leader of the study, Kit Delgado, an assistant professor of emergency medicine and epidemiology at the University of Pennsylvania’s Perelman School of Medicine.

Delgado and Jeanmarie Perrone, an emergency medicine professor at Perelman and another leader of the study, speculated that some doctors during those years offered opioids because their medical training did not sufficiently warn about addiction; to aggressively treat pain, as many had been taught; and to earn positive patient satisfaction ratings, among other reasons. Opioid prescribing declined over the four years the researchers reviewed, as awareness of the opioid epidemic grew.

The research was published this week in the journal Annals of Emergency Medicine.

Other research has shown that doctors are unsure about the number of opioids to offer in different circumstances. One study by the Yale School of Medicine showed that hospitals were able to decrease opioid use by lowering default settings for pill limits in electronic medical records from 30 to 12.

Delgado and Perrone decided to look at sprained ankles because they are minor injuries “that most of us agree is something we would not give someone opioids for,” Delgado said. The injury should be treated with rest, ice and nonaddictive painkillers such as ibuprofen.