Naturopaths and Nurse Practitioners have Riskier Pain Patients

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drusso

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Opioid Prescribing Patterns and Patient Outcomes by Prescriber Type in the Oregon Prescription Drug Monitoring Program
Opioid Prescribing Patterns and Patient Outcomes by Prescriber Type in the Oregon Prescription Drug Monitoring Program
Published:

16 November 2017
Abstract
Objective
Prescription drug monitoring programs (PDMPs) were created to facilitate responsible use of controlled substances. In Oregon, physicians, physician’s assistants (MDs/DOs/PAs), dentists, nurse practitioners (NPs), and naturopathic physicians (NDs) may prescribe opioids, but differences in prescribing practices, patient mix, and patient outcomes among prescriber types have not been characterized.

Methods
De-identified Oregon PDMP data from October 2011 through October 2014 were linked with vital records and a statewide hospital discharge registry. The disciplines of registered prescribers were identified by board affiliations. Prescription profiles associated with opioid overdose risk were tabulated for patients with at least one registered prescriber. Opioid-related hospitalizations and deaths were identified using ICD-9 and ICD-10 codes.

Results
There were 5,935 prescribers registered during the study period. Patients of NPs or NDs received more high-risk opioid prescriptions than patients of MDs/DOs/PAs. For example, they received greater proportions of high-dose prescriptions (NP 12.9%, ND 15%, MD/DO/PA 11.1%), and had greater opioid-related hospitalization (NP 1.7%, ND 3.1%, MD/DO/PA 1.2%; P < 0.005 for all). However, patients of NPs or NDs were also more likely to have four or more prescribers (NP 45.3%, ND 58.5%, MD/DO/PA 27.1%), and most of their patients’ high-risk opioid prescriptions came from prescribers in other disciplines.

Conclusion
Our analysis suggests significant differences in opioid prescription profiles and opioid-related hospitalization and mortality among patients receiving opioid prescriptions from nurse practitioners, naturopathic physicians, or medical clinicians in Oregon. However, these differences appear largely due to differences in patient mix between provider types rather than discipline-specific prescribing practices.

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wrong conclusion.

the reason that there is a difference in patient mix is because doctors are probably more circumspect with prescribing opioids to poor candidates and willing to say NO, so these patients migrate to NPs and NDs.
 
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I agree with Ducttape. I dont believe they have riskier patients—when was the last time one saw a midlevel provider happily accept a patient they knew was super complex? Nope, they have to punt them off to the Dr or Specialist bc they cant handle it. IF there is a complex patient being managed by an np/nd it is probably due to the lack of clinical acumen to even REALIZE the complexity level at hand...
 
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