“…49,65,66,84 One study only investigated opioid specifically for acute pain and that was in a free dental clinic where the outcome was the change in rates of opioid prescribing. 73 Other quantitative outcomes were retention rates in pharmacist programs, 39,68,70 discontinuation of regular opioids, 77 initiation of pharmacist care plans, 40,51 procurement of take-home naloxone, 38,39,43,50,55,81 change of long-acting opioid formulation, 67 effect on overdose occurrence or premature deaths 39,62 and emergency department presentations. 55 For medical and nurse prescriber participants, the outcomes were any impact as assessed by acceptance rates of pharmacist or multidisciplinary committee recommendations 37,40,42,47,54,59,60,63,67,72,75,78,80,85 as well as measures of prescriber behaviour change, such as adherence to pain management protocols, initiation of nonopioids, prescriptions for take-home naloxone, referrals to external providers, reduced concomitant prescribing with benzodiazepines, engagement of patients in prescriber-patient opioid agreements, prescription monitoring, urine toxicology screening and other measures to assess patient aberrant behaviours, 37,38,40,41,…”