• J Hosp Med · Aug 2023

    Randomized Controlled Trial

    A behavioral intervention to promote use of multimodal pain medication for hospitalized patients: A randomized controlled trial.

    • Tasce Bongiovanni, Mark J Pletcher, Catherine Lau, Andrew Robinson, Elizabeth Lancaster, Li Zhang, Matthias Behrends, Elizabeth Wick, and Andrew Auerbach.
    • Department of Surgery, University of California San Francisco School of Medicine, San Francisco, California, USA.
    • J Hosp Med. 2023 Aug 1; 18 (8): 685692685-692.

    BackgroundThe use of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) can reduce pain and has become a core strategy to decrease opioid use, but there is a lack of data to describe encouraging use when admitting patients using electronic health record systems.ObjectiveAssess an electronic health record system to increase ordering of NSAIDs for hospitalized adults.Designs, Settings And ParticipantsWe performed a cluster randomized controlled trial of clinicians admitting adult patients to a health system over a 9-month period. Clinicians were randomized to use a standard admission order set.InterventionClinicians in the intervention arm were required to actively order or decline NSAIDs; the control arm was shown the same order but without a required response.Main Outcome And MeasuresThe primary outcome was NSAIDs ordered and administered by the first full hospital day. Secondary outcomes included pain scores and opioid prescribing.ResultsA total of 20,085 hospitalizations were included. Among these hospitalizations, patients had a mean age of 58 years, and a Charlson comorbidity score of 2.97, while 50% and 56% were female and White, respectively. Overall, 52% were admitted by a clinician randomized to the intervention arm. NSAIDs were ordered in 2267 (22%) interventions and 2093 (22%) control admissions (p = .10). Similarly, there were no statistical differences in NSAID administration, pain scores, or opioid prescribing. Average pain scores (0-5 scale) were 3.36 in the control group and 3.39 in the intervention group (p = .46). There were no differences in clinical harms.Conclusions And RelevanceRequiring an active decision to order an NSAID at admission had no demonstrable impact on NSAID ordering. Multicomponent interventions, perhaps with stronger decision support, may be necessary to encourage NSAID ordering.© 2023 The Authors. Journal of Hospital Medicine published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Society of Hospital Medicine.

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