A personalized protocol for prescribing opioids after cesarean delivery: leveraging the electronic medical record to reduce outpatient opioid prescriptions

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Abstract

Background: Although cesarean delivery is the most common surgery performed in the United States, prescribing practices for analgesia vary. Strategies to manage postpartum pain have mostly focused on the immediate postpartum period when patients are still admitted to the hospital. At discharge, most providers prescribe a fixed number of opioid tablets. Most patients do not use all the opioids that they are prescribed at hospital discharge. This leads to an excess of opioids in the community, which can ultimately lead to misuse and diversion. Objective: This study aimed to determine whether a transition from universal opioid prescribing to a personalized, patient-specific protocol decreases morphine milligram equivalents prescribed at hospital discharge after cesarean delivery while adequately controlling pain. Study Design: This was a prospective cohort study of patients undergoing cesarean delivery before and after the implementation of a personalized opioid-prescribing practice at the time of hospital discharge. Each patient was prescribed scheduled ibuprofen and acetaminophen, with a prescription for oxycodone tablets equal to 5 times the morphine milligram equivalents used in the 24 hours before discharge, calculated via an electronic order set. The previous traditional cohorts were routinely prescribed 30 tablets of acetaminophen-codeine 300/30 mg. The primary outcome was morphine milligram equivalents prescribed at discharge. A hotline to address pain control issues after discharge was established, and calls, emergency department visits, and readmissions were examined. Statistical analyses was performed using chi-square and Wilcoxon rank-sum test, with a P value of

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Imo, C. S., Macias, D. A., McIntire, D. D., McGuire, J., Nelson, D. B., & Duryea, E. L. (2024). A personalized protocol for prescribing opioids after cesarean delivery: leveraging the electronic medical record to reduce outpatient opioid prescriptions. American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 230(4), 446.e1-446.e6. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajog.2023.09.092

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