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Reduction of Long-Term Opioid Prescribing for Back Pain in Oregon Community Health Centers After a State Medicaid Policy Change

John Muench, MD, MPH; Megan Hoopes, MPH; Meghan Mayhew, MPH; Maura Pisciotta, MS; Susan M. Shortreed, PhD; Catherine J. Livingston, MD, MPH; Michael Von Korff, ScD; Lynn L. DeBar, PhD, MPH

Corresponding Author: John Muench, MD, MPH; Department of Family Medicine - Oregon Health & Science University. 

Email: muenchj@ohsu.edu

Section: Original Research

Publication Date: 3/22/2022

INTRODUCTION: Beginning around 2011, innumerable policies have aimed to improve pain treatment while minimizing harms from excessive use of opioids. It is not known whether changing insurance coverage for specific conditions is an effective strategy. We describe and assess the effect of an innovative Oregon Medicaid back/neck pain coverage policy on opioid prescribing patterns.

METHODS: This retrospective cohort study uses electronic health record data from a network of community health centers (CHCs) in Oregon in order to analyze prescription opioid dose changes among patients on long term opioid treatment (LOT) affected by the policy.

RESULTS: Of the 1,789 patients on LOT at baseline, 41.6% had an average daily dose of <20 morphine milligram equivalents (MME), 32.3% had ≥20 to<50 MME, 14.5% had ≥50 to <90 MME, and 11.6% ≥90 MME. Around half of each group discontinued opioids within the 18-month policy period. Those who discontinued did so gradually (average of 11 months) regardless of starting dosage. Predictors of discontinuation included: diagnosis of opioid use disorder, older, non-Hispanic white, and less medical complexity.

CONCLUSIONS: Regardless of starting opioid dose, nearly half of patients affected by the 2016 Oregon Medicaid back/neck pain treatment policy no longer received opioid prescriptions by end of the 18-month study period; another 30% decreased their dose. Gradual dose reduction was typical. These outcomes suggest that the policy impacted opioid prescribing. Understanding patient experiences resulting from such policies could help clinicians and policymakers navigate the complex balance between potential harms and benefits of LOT. 

ABSTRACTS IN PRESS

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