Army and Navy ECHO Pain Telementoring Improves Clinician Opioid Prescribing for Military Patients: an Observational Cohort Study

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Abstract

Background: Opioid overdose deaths occur in civilian and military populations and are the leading cause of accidental death in the USA. Objective: To determine whether ECHO Pain telementoring regarding best practices in pain management and safe opioid prescribing yielded significant declines in opioid prescribing. Design: A 4-year observational cohort study at military medical treatment facilities worldwide. Participants: Patients included 54.6% females and 46.4% males whose primary care clinicians (PCCs) opted to participate in ECHO Pain; the comparison group included 39.9% females and 60.1% males whose PCCs opted not to participate in ECHO Pain. Intervention: PCCs attended 2-h weekly Chronic Pain and Opioid Management TeleECHO Clinic (ECHO Pain), which included pain and addiction didactics, case-based learning, and evidence-based recommendations. ECHO Pain sessions were offered 46 weeks per year. Attendance ranged from 1 to 3 sessions (47.7%), 4–19 (32.1%, or > 20 (20.2%). Main Measures: This study assessed whether clinician participation in Army and Navy Chronic Pain and Opioid Management TeleECHO Clinic (ECHO Pain) resulted in decreased prescription rates of opioid analgesics and co-prescribing of opioids and benzodiazepines. Measures included opioid prescriptions, morphine milligram equivalents (MME), and days of opioid and benzodiazepine co-prescribing per patient per year. Key Results: PCCs participating in ECHO Pain had greater percent declines than the comparison group in (a) annual opioid prescriptions per patient (− 23% vs. − 9%, P < 0.001), (b) average MME prescribed per patient/year (−28% vs. −7%, p

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Katzman, J. G., Qualls, C. R., Satterfield, W. A., Kistin, M., Hofmann, K., Greenberg, N., … Arora, S. (2019). Army and Navy ECHO Pain Telementoring Improves Clinician Opioid Prescribing for Military Patients: an Observational Cohort Study. Journal of General Internal Medicine, 34(3), 387–395. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-018-4710-5

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