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Proper Prescribing and Substance Abuse Identification: A CME Intervention

Proper Prescribing and Substance Abuse Identification: A CME Intervention. Charlene M. Dewey, M.D., M.Ed., FACP Co-Director, Vanderbilt Center for Professional Health William H. Swiggart, M.S., L.P.C./MHSP Co-Director, Vanderbilt Center for Professional Health

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Proper Prescribing and Substance Abuse Identification: A CME Intervention

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  1. Proper Prescribing and Substance Abuse Identification: A CME Intervention Charlene M. Dewey, M.D., M.Ed., FACP Co-Director, Vanderbilt Center for Professional Health William H. Swiggart, M.S., L.P.C./MHSP Co-Director, Vanderbilt Center for Professional Health Martha E. Brown, M.D.Assistant Medical Director, PRN UF Associate Professor of Psychiatry

  2. Learning Objectives 1: Discuss current information regarding controlled prescription drug abuse in the U.S., including how physicians continue to overprescribe to their patients 2: Become familiar with the components of screening, brief intervention and referral to treatment, (SBIRT) 3: Identify specific strategies to avoid risky prescribing to help physicians avoid trouble with their Boards or the DEA (including the use of the state prescription drug monitoring program and CME education)

  3. Agenda • Introduction • Proper prescribing • Continuing Medical Education interventions • SBIRT • Small group activity

  4. Introduction “To write a prescription is easy, but to come to an understanding with people is hard.” ~Franz KafkaA Country Doctor,1919

  5. Introduction “It is not what you prescribe, but rather how well you manage the patient's care, and document that care in legible form, that is important.” ~Released by the Minnesota MBE 1990, adapted by both the North Carolina and TN Boards of Medical Examiners

  6. Controlled Prescription Drug Abuse The problem: • Substance abuse, including controlled prescription medication, is the nation's number one health problem affecting millions of individuals.4 • Rate of controlled prescription drug (CPD) abuse has almost doubled from 7.8 million to 15.1 million in the past decade (1992 to 2003)2 • New drug users of pain relievers-2.4 million. [marijuana (2.1 million) or cocaine (1.0 million)] Manchikanti L, et al. 2005; Substance Abuse 2001; Bollinger LC 2005.

  7. Controlled Prescription Drug Abuse • Up to 43% of physicians DO NOT ask about controlled prescription drug abuse when taking a patient's health history • Only 19% received any medical school training in identifying prescription drug diversion • Only 40% received training on identifying prescription drug abuse and addiction5 • many are not trained to effectively handle drug-seeking patients • due to “confrontational phobia”- a term used to describe physicians’ reluctance to say “no” to a patient, thus making physicians an “easy target for manipulation.”5 Bollinger et al, 2005

  8. Sources of Misused Opioids • SAMHSA 2006

  9. Misprescribing Definition: Prescribing scheduled drugs in quantities and frequency inappropriate for the patient’s complaint or illness. • Known alcoholic or drug addict • Large quantities/frequent intervals • Family members • For trivial complaints

  10. Theories Why Physicians Misprescribe Controlled Substances • Family of origin • Core personality • Patient types • Pharmacological knowledge • Professional practice system

  11. Categories of Misprescribing Physicians • DATED- fails to keep current • DISABLED- failed judgment due to impairment • DUPED- fails to detect deception • DISHONEST- personal or financial gain • DISMAYED - Rx as quick fix due to time constraints • DYSFUNCTIONAL - finds it hard to say NO

  12. Addiction vs. Substance AbuseRelapse Ratesvs. Other Chronic Diseases ADDICTION TREATMENT WORKS

  13. Demographics 32% 27% 21% 10% 5% 2% 1% Medical School Graduation • Average Age = 51 • Male = 88% • Female = 11% • N = 715 January 1996 – March 2010

  14. Practice Type January 1996 – March 2010 Total N = 715

  15. Specialty Demographics 62% 62% 15% 9% 7% 7% 3% 3% January 1996 – March 2010 N = 715

  16. Challenges with Proper Prescribing • Misprescribing can happen easily • Many physicians are not trained to identify substance abuse, diversion, or correct protocols for pain management • Medical Boards are becoming more punitive with physicians who misprescribe • DEA is scrutinizing prescribing practices and the flow of controlled substances • Education can be helpful and is imperative!

  17. CME Goals • Provide fact-based education • Treat pain effectively and safely • Reduce contribution to diversion/misuse • Use SBIRT to increase referrals and interventions/treatments • Recognize warning signs of abuse or misuse • Avoid future misprescribing • Assist with Medical Board requirements • Avoid legal or professional sanctions by SMB or DEA in future

  18. CME Course Evaluations • 61 of 69 physicians who completed the Prescribing Controlled Drugs Course at CPH strongly agreed that the course should be taught to all practicing physicians (3/2011-2/2012). • The overall average self score on ability to take a substance abuse history prior to the course on 69 physicians was 2.8 – compared to 4.6 after the course.

  19. Vanderbilt Center for Professional Health and University of Florida CME Initiatives • Additional education of physicians after residency is needed • Continuing Medical Education Courses proven helpful • Prescribing Controlled Drugs • Program for Distressed Physicians • Maintaining Proper Boundaries (Vanderbilt)

  20. CME Course Elements • Small group • Identify why/how physicians misprescribe • Family Systems • Personal reflection • Role play of common patient presentations • Syllabus of key lectures and readings • Discuss practice organization • Understand SBIRT and other tools

  21. Future Initiatives • 20 hour course to meet Board of Medicine requirements for pain management specialists in Florida scheduled for June 2012 (University of Florida) • Professional Development Series – On-line modules 2012-13 (Vanderbilt University Medical Center)

  22. Screening, Brief Intervention and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT)Motivational Interviewing (MI)

  23. SBIRT

  24. SBIRT: Introduction Screening, Brief Intervention and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT)is a well-studied screening and intervention procedure to improve patients’ short-term health outcomes and reduce health care costs. The Joint Commission has proposed SBIRT as a performance measure for accreditation. SBIRT Proposed Accreditation Standards Could Compel U.S. Hospitals to Screen Patients for Addictions (Bob Curley, 9/11/09)

  25. Screen for Substance Use Individual and family history • “Have you ever used or currently use….[fill in the blank]?” • tobacco, ETOH, marijuana, street drugs, prescription drugs or other recreational drugs • Identify & quantify use • Within your family, has anyone ever used or currently use… • Screen for: • Tobacco & marijuana • Alcohol • Combination screens – tobacco, ETOH, CPD, & other illicit drugs

  26. SMaRT

  27. SBIRT Demonstration: DVD 35 year-old female with fibromyalgia and low back pain who is requesting opioids for pain management Things to watch for: • Red flags to indicate aberrancy/addiction • Techniques to elicit relevant history in a patient with pain • How to deal with an angry, demanding patient • Technique for screening, referral, and brief intervention (SBIRT) Adopted from: Jackson T, Dewey C, Swiggart W, Baron M and Moore D. Guidelines for Proper Opioid Prescription. Vanderbilt University School of Medicine 2009

  28. SBIRT Demonstration

  29. DVD SBIRT Discussion

  30. Small Group Activity • Break into small groups • Discuss question • Prioritize two ideas per group • Two minute report out • Large group discussion

  31. The Future • Statements:Legal issues and consequences for misprescribing are becoming more prevalent. The Joint Commission is considering requiring SBIRT as a quality indicator. • Question: How might you involve your state to require physician training in SBIRT, use of the PDMP for all patients, and training proper prescribing practices to avoid misprescribing and consequences of misprescribing?

  32. Legal Issues and Consequences More states are passing laws that regulate prescribing: • Regulations for pain clinics • Regulations for who can prescribe • CME hours required in order to prescribe long-term narcotics • Laws making diversion for own use a possible felony • State Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs

  33. Strategies to Help Physicians • Continue to push for additional education of our medical students and residents • Raise awareness of DEA rules and changes that occur http://www.deadiversion.usdoj.gov • Implement laws on regular use of State Prescription Monitoring Program http://www.pmpalliance.org • Monitor state laws and regulations that may be draconian with education of legislators

  34. Lessons Learned Most physicians are not bad physicians but lack: • information • tools to deal with patients who have substance abuse or difficult pain issues • resources • Small group education can make a difference • Prevention is first priority

  35. Summary • Reviewed guidelines and regulations • Described CPD problem • Discussed SBIRT • Reviewed CME courses and benefits • Planned for improvements in each state • Reviewed consequences and future directions

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