• Pain Res Manag · Jan 2017

    Opioid Prescribing Practices and Training Needs of Québec Family Physicians for Chronic Noncancer Pain.

    • Élise Roy, Richard J Côté, Denis Hamel, Pierre-André Dubé, Éric Langlois, Maud Emmanuelle Labesse, Christiane Thibault, and Aline Boulanger.
    • Faculté de Médecine et des Sciences de la Santé, Université de Sherbrooke, Campus de Longueuil, 150 place Charles-Le Moyne, Room 200, Longueuil, QC, Canada J4K 0A8.
    • Pain Res Manag. 2017 Jan 1; 2017: 1365910.

    AimTo examine medical practices and training needs of Québec family physicians with respect to pain management and opioid prescription for chronic noncancer pain (CNCP).MethodologyAn online survey was carried out in 2016.ResultsOf 636 respondents (43.0% men; 54.3% ≥ 50 years old), 15.2% and 70.9% felt very or somewhat confident that they could properly prescribe opioids for CNCP. Concerns related to abuse (72.5% strongly/somewhat agree), dependence (73.2%), and lack of support (75.4%) were the main barriers reported. Only 19.7% always/often screened their patients for risks of abuse and dependence using a screening tool. About two-thirds of participants (65.7%) had recently (last five years) taken part in continuing education programs on opioid use for CNCP and 73.4% on CNCP management. Patient evaluation and differential diagnoses of chronic pain syndromes were rated as a top priority for further training.ConclusionsThis study provides insights into Québec family physicians' concerns, practices, and needs with respect to the management of CNCP. Physicians' difficulties around the application of strategies to mitigate the problem of opioid abuse and addiction are worrying. The need to better train physicians in the field of pain and addiction cannot be emphasized enough.

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