2019
DOI: 10.1093/ajhp/zxy042
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Quality indicators to measure the effect of opioid stewardship interventions in hospital and emergency department settings

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Cited by 22 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…Multimodal analgesia, or the use of multiple modalities of differing mechanisms of action, is key to decreasing surgical recovery times and complications, and so is also a fundamental component of the enhanced recovery paradigm promoted by the international Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS ® ) Society [19,24,[62][63][64][65]. Dedicated resources and care coordination are often required for institutions to align analgesic use with best practices, so Opioid Stewardship Programs (OSPs) are taking hold, modeled after antimicrobial stewardship practices [29,38,[66][67][68].…”
Section: Opioid Stewardship Multimodal Analgesia and Equianalgesic mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Multimodal analgesia, or the use of multiple modalities of differing mechanisms of action, is key to decreasing surgical recovery times and complications, and so is also a fundamental component of the enhanced recovery paradigm promoted by the international Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS ® ) Society [19,24,[62][63][64][65]. Dedicated resources and care coordination are often required for institutions to align analgesic use with best practices, so Opioid Stewardship Programs (OSPs) are taking hold, modeled after antimicrobial stewardship practices [29,38,[66][67][68].…”
Section: Opioid Stewardship Multimodal Analgesia and Equianalgesic mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As with nonopioid agents, oral opioids should be used preferentially over intravenous agents for patients who can utilize oral administration. The intravenous route does not confer superior efficacy and carries greater risk for adverse events, and should therefore be reserved for patients unable to use the oral route or patients with severe pain that is refractory to increased doses of oral agents [15,38,405]. When the intravenous route is intermittently warranted for severe breakthrough pain, healthcare provider administration of opioid doses according to patient-reported and functional pain assessments is typically adequate, especially for opioid-naïve inpatients.…”
Section: Postoperative Opioid Considerationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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