Opioid abuse down when physicians are legally obligated to check patient’s drug history
WEDNESDAY, May 24, 2017 (HealthDay News) — Prescription databases can help combat drug abuse when doctors are required by law to check them before writing opioid prescriptions, according to a study to be published in a future issue of the American Economic Journal: Economic Policy.
The researchers found that states that enforced a “must access” policy for prescription drug databases saw a drop in the number of Medicare recipients who got more than a seven-month supply of opioid medication in just six months. Also, fewer people filled a prescription before their previous supply ran out.
The investigators also found that the number of Medicare opioid users who received prescriptions from five or more doctors dropped by 8 percent in those states. The number of people who got opioids from five or more pharmacies fell by more than 15 percent. The effects of prescription database regulations were most notable in states with the strictest laws, including New York. New York requires doctors to check the opioid history of “every patient, every time,” the researchers said. But even less stringent state laws reduced doctor-shopping.
“The main issue is getting providers to change their prescribing behavior,” study coauthor Colleen Carey, Ph.D., an assistant professor of policy analysis and management at Cornell University’s College of Human Ecology in Ithaca, N.Y., said in a university news release. “The majority of opioids that people abuse start in the medical system as a legitimate prescription.”
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