Affiliation:
1. 1 Brandeis University, Heller School for Social Policy and Management, Waltham, MA
Abstract
Nonmedical use of opioid medications constitutes a serious health threat as the rates of
addiction, overdoses, and deaths have risen in recent years. Increasingly, inappropriate and
excessively liberal prescribing of opioids by physicians is understood to be a central part of the
crisis. Public health officials, hospital systems, and legislators are developing programs and
regulations to address the problem in sustained and systematic ways that both insures effective
treatment of pain and appropriate limits on the availability of opioids. Three approaches have
obtained prominence as means of avoiding excessive and inappropriate prescribing, including:
providing financial incentives to physicians to change their clinical decision through pay-forperformance contracts, monitoring patient medications through Prescription Drug Monitoring
Programs, and educational outreach to physicians.
A promising approach to educational outreach to physicians is an intervention known as
“academic detailing.” It was developed in the 1980s to provide one-on-one educational
outreach to physicians using similar methods as the pharmaceutical industry that sends
“detailers” to market their products to physician practices. Core to academic detailing, however,
is the idea that medical decisions should be based on evidence-based information, including
managing conditions with updated assessment measures, behavioral, and nonpharmacological
interventions. With the pharmaceutical industry spending billions of dollars to advertise their
products, individual practitioners can have difficulty gathering unbiased information, especially
as the number of approved medications grows each year. Academic detailing has successfully
affected the management of health conditions, such as atrial fibrillation, chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease, and recently, has targeted physicians who prescribe opioids. This article
discusses the approach as a potentially effective preventative intervention to address the
epidemic of opioid overuse.
Key words: Opioid abuse, opioid misuse, academic detailing, health policy, interactive
education,prevention
Publisher
American Society of Interventional Pain Physicians
Subject
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine
Cited by
21 articles.
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