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Solving America's prescription epidemic
solutions, current practices, provider internal skills, and systems approach to care
pp. 201-215
Abstract
Solving America's Prescription epidemic will be a team effort involving medical and pharmaceutical institutions, law enforcement, and community, state and federal governmental support programs. Within medical institutions, hospitalists need an understanding of the nation's approach to prevention of opioid dependence, current practice management, provider internal skills that must be learned and a systems approach to care. A real case report serves to demonstrate important points in the management of these patients. A graphic demonstrates how patients get caught in a cycle of iatrogenic opioid dependence and how evidence-based methods for the treatment of chronic pain and addiction must be used to lead patients toward independence and self-management. The care pathway for the prevention of addiction is outlined in a graphic and discussed. The hospitalist role is reviewed along with other physician and provider roles to promote teamwork. Community and national strategies from the Institute of Healthcare Improvement outline current strategy that is unfolding to solve this crisis. The hospitalist role will be to coordinate care with other providers, make long-term treatment care plans, withdraw patients from opioids, and participate with system administrators to make the necessary healthcare system organizational changes.
Publication details
Published in:
Conrad Kevin (2018) Clinical approaches to hospital medicine: advances, updates and controversies. Dordrecht, Springer.
Pages: 201-215
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-64774-6_14
Full citation:
Maumus Marianne (2018) „Solving America's prescription epidemic: solutions, current practices, provider internal skills, and systems approach to care“, In: K. Conrad (ed.), Clinical approaches to hospital medicine, Dordrecht, Springer, 201–215.