Impact of State Policies on Opioid Prescribing Among Surgery and Injury Patients: Controlled Interrupted Time-Series Study, North Carolina, 2014-2019.

dc.contributor.author

Beltran, Theo G

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Pence, Brian W

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Fulcher, Naoko

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Dasgupta, Nabarun

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Maierhofer, Courtney N

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DiPrete, Bethany L

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Marshall, Stephen W

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Nocera, Maryalice

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Proescholdbell, Scott K

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Wu, Li-Tzy

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Edwards, David A

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Carey, Timothy S

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Chelminski, Paul R

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Hincapie-Castillo, Juan M

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Mathias, Joacy G

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Ranapurwala, Shabbar I

dc.date.accessioned

2025-09-16T17:20:32Z

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2025-09-16T17:20:32Z

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2025-04

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Purpose

Impact of policies limiting opioid prescribing for acute and post-surgical pain among racially minoritized populations is not well understood. We evaluated the impact of two North Carolina (NC) policies on outpatient opioid prescribing among injury and surgical patients by race, ethnicity, age, and sex.

Methods

We conducted controlled and single series interrupted time series using electronic health data from two integrated healthcare systems in NC, among > 11 years-old patients having acute injuries and surgery between April 2014 and December 2019. The policy interventions were safe opioid prescribing investigative initiative (SOPI, May 2016) and NC law limiting opioid days' supply (STOP Act, January 2018). Outcomes included, proportion of patients receiving index opioid prescription after surgery or injury event, receipt of subsequent opioid prescriptions, days' supply, and milligrams of morphine equivalents (MME).

Results

Of the 621 997 surgical and 864 061 injury patients, 69.4% and 19.7%, respectively, received an index opioid analgesic prescription. There were sustained declines in index opioid prescription among post-surgical patients after SOPI [-2.7% per year (-4.6, -0.9)] and STOP act [-4.1% (-5.9, -2.2)], but no change among injury patients. Policy-related opioid prescribing declines were larger among black, native American, and Hispanic post-surgical patients than whites and Asians. Index and subsequent opioid days' supply showed sustained declines after SOPI and STOP Act among post-surgical patients. There was no policy impact on MME.

Conclusions

Policies were associated with reductions in opioid prescribing, particularly in post-surgical patients; however, racialized inequities likely reflect implicit and explicit racialized biases in pain management practices.
dc.identifier.issn

1053-8569

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1099-1557

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/33193

dc.language

eng

dc.publisher

Wiley

dc.relation.ispartof

Pharmacoepidemiology and drug safety

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10.1002/pds.70144

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https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0

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Humans

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Wounds and Injuries

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Pain, Postoperative

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Analgesics, Opioid

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Health Policy

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Adolescent

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Adult

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Aged

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Middle Aged

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Child

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North Carolina

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Female

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Male

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Drug Prescriptions

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Young Adult

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Interrupted Time Series Analysis

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Practice Patterns, Physicians'

dc.title

Impact of State Policies on Opioid Prescribing Among Surgery and Injury Patients: Controlled Interrupted Time-Series Study, North Carolina, 2014-2019.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Wu, Li-Tzy|0000-0002-5909-2259

pubs.begin-page

e70144

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4

pubs.organisational-group

Duke

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School of Medicine

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Clinical Science Departments

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Medicine

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Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences

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Medicine, General Internal Medicine

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University Institutes and Centers

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Duke Institute for Brain Sciences

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Psychiatry, Child & Family Mental Health & Community Psychiatry

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

34

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