Background
In response to the opioid crisis, U.S. states have passed laws requiring urine drug testing (UDT) when prescribing opioid analgesics for chronic pain. We sought to identify state law UDT requirements.
Methods
We searched NexisUni legal database using terms related to UDT, chronic pain, and opioids. We included laws effective during Spring 2022 that required UDT when opioids were prescribed for chronic pain. We performed deductive content analysis, coding laws for mandated UDT frequency, type of clinician and payor to whom the law applied, and circumstances under which UDT was mandated.
Results
We found thirty-two laws across thirteen states that met our inclusion criteria. UDT requirements varied substantially by state, including with respect to the type of clinician to whom the law applied, mandated frequency of UDT (e.g., at initiation/assessment, at least annually, more than once per year), and circumstances when UDT was mandated (e.g., patient had substance use disorder; dosage/day threshold).
Discussion
Relatively few states have UDT mandates associated with prescribing opioids as chronic pain treatment. Researchers evaluating how UDT policy affects health outcomes must consider the complexity and lack of uniformity of UDT requirements when developing policy indicators for empirical studies. In addition, even if states mandate UDT, it is unclear whether clinicians understand the best way to use them.