Articles: opioid.
-
Background: Patients with severe coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) often rapidly deteriorate with severe dyspnea and should receive early specialist palliative care (SPC) as intensive symptom management may be required at the end of life. Currently, there is a paucity of data identifying triggers for early SPC involvement. Objective: To identify risk factors among nonventilated patients with severe COVID-19 who required high opioid and/or benzodiazepines (BZD) use for the control of dyspnea. ⋯ High users also required higher supplemental oxygen and had higher inpatient mortality rates. Conclusions: High dyspnea score is predictive of high opioid and/or BZD use for symptom control in nonventilated patients with severe COVID-19. Such patients with high mortality rates should be seen early by SPC.
-
Addition of illicitly manufactured fentanyl to the opioid and nonopioid illicit drug supply has exacerbated the drug overdose crisis in the United States. People who use drugs are often unaware that their drugs contain fentanyl. Awareness about fentanyl adulteration may be protective against fatal overdose. ⋯ Many drug-related ED visits involved fentanyl exposure, even when individuals did not believe they were using fentanyl. Knowledge of fentanyl adulteration can inform people who intend to use opioid and/or nonopioid drugs about harm reduction approaches, such as distribution of fentanyl test strips and educational interventions.
-
Tapering of chronic opioids has increased, with subsequent reports of exacerbated pain among patients who tapered. We aimed to evaluate the association between opioid dose tapering and subsequent pain-related healthcare utilization (ED visits, hospitalizations and primary care visits). ⋯ These associations suggest that opioid tapering may lead to increased emergency and hospital utilization for acute pain and possibly a decreased perceived need for primary care for those whose opioids were discontinued.