Try my Google Co-op search engine to search authoritative health and geriatric/gerontology sites on the WWW

Wednesday, May 10, 2017

New Canadian Guideline and App for Opioid Therapy & for Chronic Non-Cancer Pain

Approximately 15 to 19% of Canadians live with chronic, non-cancer pain, which is defined as pain that lasts for more than 3 months and that interferes with daily activities.

In a new clinical practice guideline released this week, doctors are being advised to reduce their prescribing of opioid medication to patients with chronic non-cancer pain.Canadians are the second highest users per capita of opioids in the world and the rates of opioid prescriptions and opioid-related hospital visits and deaths have steadily increased in recent years.

Image

Some recommendations include:

  • Non-drug and non-opioid pharmacotherapy should be considered first and optimized for patients with chronic non-cancer pain 
  • A trial of opioids for patients who have not responded to non-opioid treatment if patient does not have a current or past substance abuse problem or other psychiatric disorder
  • For patients starting opioids, a dose of less than 50 mg morphine equivalents a day is recommended and it is strongly recommended that the total daily dose is under 90 mg a day (this is a change from the previous 2010 guideline which suggested that the max dose be 200 mg/day)
  • A trial period of opioids to the lowest effective dose, potentially to none, for patients who are currently on 90 mg morphine equivalents a day or more, recognizing there are some patients who may need this tapering paused or abandoned 
Led by the renowned Michael G. DeGroote National Pain Centre at McMaster University and funded by Heath Canada and CIHI, this guideline has been developed by an international team of clinicians, researchers and patients. The full guideline is available at: http://bit.ly/2prq3Si

In addition to the guideline, an app has also been created to help doctors and patients work together to find a solution to manage their pain. The app is available at: http://bit.ly/2qhywLU

Note: This guideline does not include recommendations on opioid use for acute pain, patients with cancer-related pain, those in palliative care, or those currently undergoing treatment for opioid use disorder or opioid addiction

References:

Forum for Science, Industry and Business. (n.d.). Retrieved May 08, 2017, from http://www.innovations-report.com/html/reports/medicine-health/new-canadian-clinical-guideline-for-physicians-tapers-down-use-of-opioids.html?_scpsug=crawled_2564611_2092f900-33f0-11e7-cbab-00221934899c#_scpsug=crawled_2564611_2092f900-33f0-11e7-cbab-00221934899c





No comments: