Prescribing opioid analgesics for chronic non-malignant pain in general practice - a survey of attitudes and practice

Background: This study replicates a previous postal survey of general practitioners (GPs) to explore whether attitudes to opioid prescribing have changed at a time when the number of opioid prescriptions issued in primary care has increased. Methods: With permission, a 57-item survey instrument p...

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Main Authors: Blake, Holly, Leighton, Paul, van der Walt, Gerrie, Ravenscroft, Andrew
Format: Article
Published: SAGE 2015
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Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/39015/
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author Blake, Holly
Leighton, Paul
van der Walt, Gerrie
Ravenscroft, Andrew
author_facet Blake, Holly
Leighton, Paul
van der Walt, Gerrie
Ravenscroft, Andrew
author_sort Blake, Holly
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Background: This study replicates a previous postal survey of general practitioners (GPs) to explore whether attitudes to opioid prescribing have changed at a time when the number of opioid prescriptions issued in primary care has increased. Methods: With permission, a 57-item survey instrument previously utilised with GPs in the South-west of England was circulated to 214 GPs in city-centre practices in the East Midlands. The survey instrument included items relating to practice context, prescribing patterns and attitudes about analgesic medication, perceived prescribing frequency and reluctance to prescribe. Results: Responses were received from 94 GPs (45%). Almost three-quarters (72.7%) of GPs reported that they sometimes or frequently prescribed strong opioids for chronic non-cancer pain. Over two-thirds (67.8%) reported that they were sometimes or frequently reluctant to prescribe strong opioids for chronic non-cancer pain. No significant relationships were observed between perceived frequency of prescribing and a range of demographic factors; however, concerns about ‘physical dependence’, ‘long-term commitment to prescribing’ and ‘media reports’ were associated with less frequent reported prescribing of, and greater reluctance to prescribe, strong opioids. Discussion: Given the national trend for increased opioid prescriptions, it is unsurprising that more frequent self-reported prescribing is reported here; however, increased frequency does not translate into less reluctance about prescribing. The effectiveness of strong opioids for chronic pain is recognised, but concerns about addiction, dependence and misuse inform a reluctance to use strong opioids. These juxtapositions highlight a continued need for clearer understanding of GPs’ perceptions of strong opioids and point to the potential benefit of dedicated guidelines or specialist education and training to address their uncertainties.
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spelling nottingham-390152020-05-04T17:03:43Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/39015/ Prescribing opioid analgesics for chronic non-malignant pain in general practice - a survey of attitudes and practice Blake, Holly Leighton, Paul van der Walt, Gerrie Ravenscroft, Andrew Background: This study replicates a previous postal survey of general practitioners (GPs) to explore whether attitudes to opioid prescribing have changed at a time when the number of opioid prescriptions issued in primary care has increased. Methods: With permission, a 57-item survey instrument previously utilised with GPs in the South-west of England was circulated to 214 GPs in city-centre practices in the East Midlands. The survey instrument included items relating to practice context, prescribing patterns and attitudes about analgesic medication, perceived prescribing frequency and reluctance to prescribe. Results: Responses were received from 94 GPs (45%). Almost three-quarters (72.7%) of GPs reported that they sometimes or frequently prescribed strong opioids for chronic non-cancer pain. Over two-thirds (67.8%) reported that they were sometimes or frequently reluctant to prescribe strong opioids for chronic non-cancer pain. No significant relationships were observed between perceived frequency of prescribing and a range of demographic factors; however, concerns about ‘physical dependence’, ‘long-term commitment to prescribing’ and ‘media reports’ were associated with less frequent reported prescribing of, and greater reluctance to prescribe, strong opioids. Discussion: Given the national trend for increased opioid prescriptions, it is unsurprising that more frequent self-reported prescribing is reported here; however, increased frequency does not translate into less reluctance about prescribing. The effectiveness of strong opioids for chronic pain is recognised, but concerns about addiction, dependence and misuse inform a reluctance to use strong opioids. These juxtapositions highlight a continued need for clearer understanding of GPs’ perceptions of strong opioids and point to the potential benefit of dedicated guidelines or specialist education and training to address their uncertainties. SAGE 2015-03-30 Article PeerReviewed Blake, Holly, Leighton, Paul, van der Walt, Gerrie and Ravenscroft, Andrew (2015) Prescribing opioid analgesics for chronic non-malignant pain in general practice - a survey of attitudes and practice. British Journal of Pain, 9 (4). pp. 225-232. ISSN 2049-4645 chronic pain; general practice; opioids; prescribing practice analgesics http://bjp.sagepub.com/content/9/4/225 doi:10.1177/2049463715579284 doi:10.1177/2049463715579284
spellingShingle chronic pain; general practice; opioids; prescribing practice
analgesics
Blake, Holly
Leighton, Paul
van der Walt, Gerrie
Ravenscroft, Andrew
Prescribing opioid analgesics for chronic non-malignant pain in general practice - a survey of attitudes and practice
title Prescribing opioid analgesics for chronic non-malignant pain in general practice - a survey of attitudes and practice
title_full Prescribing opioid analgesics for chronic non-malignant pain in general practice - a survey of attitudes and practice
title_fullStr Prescribing opioid analgesics for chronic non-malignant pain in general practice - a survey of attitudes and practice
title_full_unstemmed Prescribing opioid analgesics for chronic non-malignant pain in general practice - a survey of attitudes and practice
title_short Prescribing opioid analgesics for chronic non-malignant pain in general practice - a survey of attitudes and practice
title_sort prescribing opioid analgesics for chronic non-malignant pain in general practice - a survey of attitudes and practice
topic chronic pain; general practice; opioids; prescribing practice
analgesics
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/39015/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/39015/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/39015/