News

Group refines existing opioid misuse risk assessment tool


 

AT THE AAPM ANNUAL MEETING

Dr. Gostine said that he is planning to publish the findings. After refinement of the ORT, which is currently in the public domain and available to physicians, the tool might expand to 15 questions – a short-enough questionnaire that patients can fill out in 2 or 3 minutes. If the questionnaires are fed into electronic medical records, as they are in Dr. Gostine’s practice, "the doctor can find out whether [the patient] is someone they should be nervous about or someone they can trust" when it comes to prescribing opioids.

Dr. Gostine and his partner, Dr. Fred Davis, developed the Prism Pain Health Assessment that was used to capture and analyze the data. The product is now commercially available. Dr. Webster has received honoraria/travel support from AstraZeneca, Covidien Mallinckrodt, and other companies.

nmiller@frontlinemedcom.com

On Twitter @naseemsmiller

Pages

Recommended Reading

Five ways the DSM-5 could change your practice
MDedge Family Medicine
Beware warfarin interaction with antibiotics, acetaminophen, steroids
MDedge Family Medicine
Use and misuse of the term 'mini-stroke'
MDedge Family Medicine
Stroke: The brave new world of prevention and treatment
MDedge Family Medicine
Memory loss in older adults varies by race/ethnicity
MDedge Family Medicine
Preclinical brain amyloid deposition linked to poor sleep
MDedge Family Medicine
West Nile virus cases spiked in 2012
MDedge Family Medicine
Alzheimer's mortality varies widely between states
MDedge Family Medicine
Panel supports lower doses of novel insomnia drug
MDedge Family Medicine
Hypertension hurts memory, attention in children
MDedge Family Medicine