Primary care physicians lead in opioid prescriptions — 5 takeaways

Spine

Stanford (Calif.) University researchers found primary care physicians are the leading opioid prescribers, according to WedMD.

In the study, researchers analyzed data from 2013 Medicare Part D prescription drug coverage claims including prescriptions for narcotic painkillers containing hydrocodone, oxycodone, codeine and others in this class.

 

JAMA Internal Medicine published the study online.

 

Here are five takeaways:

 

1. Family practice physicians issued 15.3 million prescriptions.

 

2. Researchers found internal medicine physicians issued 12.8 million prescriptions.

 

3. The data revealed nurse practitioners wrote 4.1 million prescriptions for narcotic painkillers.

 

4. Physician assistants wrote 3.1 million prescriptions for narcotic painkillers.

 

5. In the last 20 years, narcotic painkiller abuse has increased 10-fold.

 

More articles on spine:
Hyperbaric oxygen therapy can treat iatrogenic spine surgery infection — 6 key facts
Stanford Healthcare unveils new neuroscience center, integrating care: 5 notes
Committee to review guidelines for prescribing opioids — 5 points

Copyright © 2024 Becker's Healthcare. All Rights Reserved. Privacy Policy. Cookie Policy. Linking and Reprinting Policy.