reversing the overdose epidemic

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1 Reversing the Overdose Epidemic: A Toolkit for Oregon’s Clinicians Katrina Hedberg, MD, MPH Oregon Medical Association October 29, 2020

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Page 1: Reversing the Overdose Epidemic

1

Reversing the Overdose

Epidemic:

A Toolkit for Oregon’s Clinicians

Katrina Hedberg, MD, MPH

Oregon Medical Association

October 29, 2020

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Disclosures

• I have no disclosures to report

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Target Audience

• The overarching goal of PCSS is to train healthcare

professionals in evidence-based practices for the

prevention and treatment of opioid use disorders,

particularly in prescribing medications, as well for

the prevention and treatment of substance use

disorders.

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Educational Objectives

• Describe current trends in the overdose epidemic

and the Oregon Health Authority data dashboard

• Identify ways to help make pain treatment safer and

more effective, emphasizing non-opioid and non-

pharmaceutical treatments

• Demonstrate tools to reduce harms for people

taking opioids

• Discover resources for treatment of substance use

disorders

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Oregon Toolkit Overview

• Scope of problem

• Strategies to reduce opioid misuse and abuse

• Treating pain with care and compassion

• Reducing harms using naloxone

• Treating substance use disorders

• Educating patients about pain management,

safe storage and disposal of medications

• Call to Action

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Age-adjusted Drug Overdose Death Rates,

US 2018

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Overdose Deaths, 2018

US

67,367 people in US died of overdose

46,802 (70%) of these involved opioids, of which 2/3 were

synthetic opioids (e.g. fentanyl)

Deaths from prescription opioids have been decreasing, BUT

deaths from illicit opioids (e.g. heroin, fentanyl) have been

increasing

Deaths from stimulants increased 5-fold from 2012-2018

Oregon

571 people in Oregon died of an overdose

336 (60%) involved opioids, of which 3/4 were illicit opioids

230 involved stimulants (e.g. methamphetamine)

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Drug Overdose Deaths,

Oregon 2000-2018

Prescription

opioids

Methamphetamine/

stimulants

Heroin

Synthetic opioids

(e.g. fentanyl)

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Drug Overdose Deaths by Age

Oregon 2012-2016 D

eath

s p

er

10

0,0

00

re

sid

en

ts

Source: Oregon Vital Statistics, Death Certificates 9

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Scope of the Opioid Epidemic

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Opioid Use Disorder in US

• Opioid dependency

2015: 2.4 million persons diagnosed with a SUD

involving opioids (OUD)

2019: 1.6 million diagnosed with OUD

• Opioid Use Disorder Treatment

Only 18% (294,000) those diagnosed with an OUD

received Medication Assisted Treatment (MAT).

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Opioid Prescriptions

• Opioid prescriptions in US: 2018

168 million prescriptions for opioid pain

medications

Equals 3 bottles of pills for every 4

adults (age 18+)

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Oregon Prescribing: 2011-2019

Opioids

Benzodiazepines

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Oregon Prescribing: 2011-2019

Opioids

Benzodiazepines

Stimulants

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Oregon Opioid Prescription fills

by Age

Rec

ipie

nts

per

1,0

00

res

iden

ts

Age Group

15

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Oregon Opioid Strategies

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• Safe storage and disposal

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Pain Categories for Treatment

• Pain lasting > 3 months, or past

time of tissue healing

• Prevalence: ~15% of US adults

Acute Pain

Chronic non-

cancer pain

Cancer pain

End of life

pain

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Oregon Pain Commission Created by Oregon Legislature in 1999

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Pain Management Education

• Prescribers required to take online training: Changing

the Conversation about Pain

• Provider Tools available

• Domains

• Knowledge of Pain

• Sleep

• Mood

• Activity

• Nutrition

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Oregon’s Opioid Guidelines

Task Forces

Goal

• Standard for opioid prescribing across Oregon health care systems, practice settings

Oregon Health Authority

• Convener

Membership

• Subject matter experts

• Professional Assoc’s, licensing boards, organizations

• Health systems, hospitals, payers

• Regional task forces, public health departments

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Format for Oregon Guidelines

• One stop shopping for statewide guidelines

• Overarching foundational principles for opioid

prescribing in Oregon

• Specific prescribing guidelines:

Acute pain: emergency departments, post-

surgical

Chronic pain

For pregnant women

Dental clinics

• Opioid Tapering guidelines

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Acute Pain Prescribing Guidelines

In general, opioids should NOT be considered first line

therapy for mild to moderate pain.

If opioid is prescribed:

• Evaluate the Patient

• Assess history of long-term opioid use / substance use disorder (SUD)

• Check Prescription Drug Monitoring Program (PDMP)

• Provide Patient Education

• Amount and type:

• Lowest effective dose for shortest duration (usually <3 days).

• Patient follow-up

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Chronic Pain Prescribing Guidelines Endorse CDC Guideline as Foundation

1. Determine when to start or continue opioids for chronic pain • Non-pharmicologic, non-opioid therapies

• Establish treatment goals

• Discuss risks and benefits

2. Opioid selection, dose, duration, f/u • Immediate release

• Lowest dose, short duration

• Fewest number pills necessary

• F/U, re-evaluate, plan for discontinuation

3. Assess risk and address harms of opioid use • Evaluate need for naloxone/ SUD treatment

• Review PDMP

• Use urine testing as needed

• Limit co-prescribing with benzos

• Safe storage and disposal

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Oregon Chronic Opioid Prescribing

Guidelines

• Oregon-specific addenda: o Cannabis use

o Chronic (legacy) patients

o Naloxone

o Prescription Drug Monitoring Program

o OMB Material Risk Notice

• Finalized November 2016

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Misapplications of 2016 CDC

Opioid Prescribing Guideline

• Patients outside scope of guidelines: Inadequate or

refusal of pain meds for cancer patients, end-of-life

care, post-surgical, sickle cell crises, etc.

• Pharmacies and Benefit Managers adopting hard

MME thresholds in regulations

• Forced and inappropriate tapering

• Reluctance by physicians and pharmacies to

prescribe and fill opioid prescriptions

• Misapplication of dose rec’s to patients starting

MAT

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Tapering Guidelines-- Principles

• Pain management should be patient-centered, trauma-informed

and based on current pain science.

• Overarching goals: improve patient safety, maintain or improve

function, improve quality of life through provision of compassionate

care.

• Guidelines encourage conversations between clinicians and

patients; promote patient engagement and shared decision-

making; support informed consent; and apply easily to different

practice settings.

• Tapering plans should be individualized, collaborative, clear,

flexible, and include realistic goals.

• Health systems and payers must support a team-based, integrated

approach to tapering, and ensure access to non-pharmacologic

pain therapies, and multi-disciplinary supports

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Oregon Medical Board

Requirements

• 1995 the Oregon Legislature passed the

Intractable Pain Law, amended in 2007

• Required Material Risk Notification

when prescribing controlled substances

for chronic intractable pain

• MRN documentation of a detailed

Procedure, Alternatives, Risks and

Questions, with patient and physician

signatures

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Prescription Drug Monitoring

Program (PDMP)

• Passed 2009, went live 2011

• Tool to help healthcare providers and pharmacists provide patients better care in managing prescriptions.

• Provide data on controlled substance prescriptions to improve patient safety and health o Patients at risk for: overdose, side effects, other

drugs, physical dependence, drug abuse

• Integration into existing EHRs

• Prescribing Practices Review Subcommittee o Letters to high prescribers

o Provider “report cards”

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PDMP: Oregon Prescribing Data

• 7 million prescriptions annually

• 1.2 million queries to PDMP

• 4,000 prescribers write 80% of scheduled substance

prescriptions

• Opioids (e.g. hydrocodone, oxycodone) account for

~50% of prescriptions

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• Benzodiazepines 2nd most frequent

prescription

• Prescriptions for stimulants increasing

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OMA/ AMA Encourages

Clinicians to ….

• Support multi-disciplinary/ multi-modal approaches to pain

management, including: medication, behavioral and

complementary integrative treatment

• Individualize care for all patients with pain, focused on

evidence-based therapies

• Identify and treat mental

and behavioral health

disorders that can impact

pain

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Oregon Pain Guidance

• Pain treatment guidelines

• Assessment tools

• Morphine Equivalent Dose

calculator

• Provider resources

Having difficult conversations

• Patient resources

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Naloxone: Co-prescribing

• Patients at risk for overdose

High dose opioids

Concomitant benzo prescription

History of SUD

Mental health condition

Medical condition

Friend/ family at risk of OD

Recently been in detox or SUD treatment

Oregon law allows pharmacies to dispense without prescription after brief training

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Substance Use Disorder

Treatment: Oregon

• Oregon Medication-Assisted Treatment resources

Oregon Health Authority: Supports and Regulate addiction

prevention and treatment services in Oregon, including:

treatment, counseling, support

Oregon Substance Use Disorder Services Directory

• Northwest Addiction Technology Transfer Center

(Northwest ATTC)

services to strengthen the substance use disorder treatment

and recovery workforce in Alaska, Idaho, Oregon, and

Washington

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Substance Use Disorder

Treatment: National

• Substances Abuse and Mental Health Services

Administration (SAMHSA)

Overdose prevention toolkit

OUD treatment directory

Treatment of stimulant use disorder

• Providers’ Clinical Support System (PCSS)

Train primary care providers in the evidence-based prevention

and treatment of opioid use disorders (OUD)

Mentoring program

MAT waiver information

• American Society of Addiction Medicine

National practice treatment guidelines for OUD

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Substance Use Disorder Treatment

• Oregon Patient resources

Oregon Health Authority

Lines for Life

Oregon Recovers

NW Portland Area Indian Health Board

• US Surgeon General’s Turn the Tide

Addiction recovery resources

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Protect Community/ Support Patients

Heal Safely Campaign toolkit: • Insights into commonly-held beliefs about opioids and pain

• Understanding of how these beliefs affect people’s decisions about

their pain management options

• Key learnings around effective, research-tested language and

messages

• Strategies for adapting to better reflect the experiences and

concerns of communities of color

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OMA

Governor’s Opioid Task

Force Oregon Health

Leadership Council

Lines for Life

Oregon Pain

Guidance

Tri-county opioid Safety

Coalition

Multnomah County

Health Dept

Oregon Health

Authority

OR Medical Education

Foundation

Oregon Partnerships

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2015 AMA Physician

Recommendations

• Support use of PDMPs

• Use effective, evidence-based treatment for

pain and SUDs

• Increase access to comprehensive,

affordable, treatment for pain and SUDs

• End stigma for patients with pain or SUD

• Expand access to naloxone in community

and co-prescribing

• Encourage safe medication storage and

disposal

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AMA Call to Action

• Remove prior authorization or administrative barriers to MAT

• Support assessment and treatment for mental health

disorders; enforce mental health and SUD parity laws

• Remove barriers to comprehensive pain care and rehab

programs

• Support MCH by improving access to treatment that preserves

family structure

• Support needle exchange and criminal justice reform for drug

crimes

• Implement comprehensive data systems that enable analysis

by demographic characteristics, including race ethnicity

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PCSS Mentoring Program

PCSS Mentor Program is designed to offer general information to

clinicians about evidence-based clinical practices in prescribing

medications for opioid use disorder.

PCSS Mentors are a national network of providers with expertise in

addictions, pain, evidence-based treatment including medications for

addiction treatment.

• 3-tiered approach allows every mentor/mentee relationship to be unique

and catered to the specific needs of the mentee.

• No cost.

For more information visit:

https://pcssNOW.org/mentoring/

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PCSS Discussion Forum

Have a clinical question?

http://pcss.invisionzone.com/register

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PCSS is a collaborative effort led by the American Academy of Addiction

Psychiatry (AAAP) in partnership with:

Addiction Technology Transfer Center American Society of Addiction Medicine

American Academy of Family Physicians American Society for Pain Management Nursing

American Academy of Pain Medicine Association for Multidisciplinary Education and

Research in Substance use and Addiction

American Academy of Pediatrics Council on Social Work Education

American Pharmacists Association International Nurses Society on Addictions

American College of Emergency Physicians National Association for Community Health Centers

American Dental Association National Association of Social Workers

American Medical Association National Council for Behavioral Health

American Osteopathic Academy of Addiction

Medicine The National Judicial College

American Psychiatric Association Physician Assistant Education Association

American Psychiatric Nurses Association Society for Academic Emergency Medicine

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Educate. Train. Mentor

www.pcssNOW.org

[email protected]

@PCSSProjects

www.facebook.com/pcssprojects/

Funding for this initiative was made possible (in part) by grant no. 1H79TI081968 from SAMHSA. The views expressed in written conference materials or

publications and by speakers and moderators do not necessarily reflect the official policies of the Department of Health and Human Services; nor does

mention of trade names, commercial practices, or organizations imply endorsement by the U.S. Government.