Practical Reviews: Opioid Prescribing Practices
PROGRAM DESCRIPTION Opioid Prescribing Practices sheds light on today’s leading medical crisis and examines a clinician’s role in combatting the epidemic. You’ll also hear one doctor’s personal story of loss ...
PROGRAM DESCRIPTION
Opioid Prescribing Practices sheds light on today’s leading medical crisis and examines a clinician’s role in combatting the epidemic. You’ll also hear one doctor’s personal story of loss in this two-part audio series presented by Practical Reviews:PART 1: Managing Opioid Therapy in High-Risk PatientsRobert N. Jamison, PhD, Donald Deye, MD, FACP, and Melinda Deye, NP-C, discuss responsible prescribing, including a look at non-opiate analgesics and managing high-risk patients. They also discuss the paradox of patients whose chronic pain has been managed successfully on long-term opioid therapy. Get practical tips for identifying high-risk patients, compliance testing, intervention strategies and more.PART 2: Opioid EpidemicAfter the loss of his son to a heroin overdose, A. Omar Abubaker, DMD, PhD, sought formal education on pain, pain management, opioids and addiction. In this presentation, he details alarming overdose statistics, and outlines opioid side effects and addiction risks. Learn optional management strategies for treating patients with acute and chronic pain and more.You'll also have the opportunity to earn a maximum of 8.50 AMA PRA Category 1 CreditsTM.
EDUCATIONAL OBJECTIVES
After taking part in this educational activity, participants should be better able to:Define the terms “pain” and “chronic pain.”Provide examples of potential high-risk patients for opioid misuse based on the following 3 areas: family history, personal history/behavior, and environmental factors.Describe how a health care provider might assess a patient’s chronic pain and measure the outcomes after initiating treatment.Discuss the value of physical therapy and relaxation therapy in the management of chronic pain.List at least five non-opioid drugs that may offer first-line therapy for non-cancer related pain management.Summarize the Centers for Disease Control’s (CDC) guidelines that pertain to proper prescribing practice for pain medications.Discuss the paradox of using opioids to treat patients whose chronic pain has been successfully managed with long-term opioids up to this time.State whether the incidence of providers actually losing their license or having any legal action taken against them regarding opioid prescribing practices is large or small.Describe Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs and discuss their use in the prescribing of opioid medications.Discuss how the smartphone app called the Brigham and Women’s Hospital Pain App can be used as part of a patient’s chronic pain management program.Differentiate between acute and chronic pain.Recall from memory important statistics about the number of deaths due to drug overdose in the U.S. and how this relates to the number of people lost in 911 and the number of soldier killed in the Vietnam War.Summarize at least 3 steps that providers can take to reduce the opioid epidemic.List some nonopioid alternatives to managing mild pain, moderate to severe pain, and severe pain.Discuss the impact that new federal and state regulations on opioid prescribing practices is having on prescription-related overdoses and provider prescribing practices.Describe at least 4 topics that providers must discuss in detail with their patients before giving them a postoperative prescription for opioid pain medications.List at least 3 common opioid-related side effects.Differentiate between the addictive potential of Schedule I, Schedule II, Schedule III, Schedule IV, and Schedule V narcotics.Summarize the discrepancy between addiction treatment versus other diseases as it relates to access to care.
Read more about this
Write the first review
Join now
to leave a review or read peer reviews!
Resource tags
Show all tags