Literature DB >> 15733811

The risk of disciplinary action by state medical boards against physicians prescribing opioids.

Jack Richard1, Marcus M Reidenberg.   

Abstract

Concern of physicians about being disciplined for prescribing opioids for patients in pain is one cause for undertreatment of pain. This study was done to assess the actual risk of being disciplined by state medical boards. A review of records of actions by the New York State Board for Professional Medical Misconduct for 3 years and of all medical boards in the United States for 9 months was done to determine this risk. New York State, with 7.8% of U.S. physicians, had 10 physicians disciplined annually related to overprescribing opioids, while the total for the entire U.S. was 120 physicians annually. Most physicians disciplined had multiple violations in addition to overprescribing controlled substances. In the national sample, 43% were prescribing for themselves or for nonpatients, 12% prescribed for addicts without addressing the patients' problems of addiction, 42% had inadequate records, 19% prescribed without indication for opioids, 13% were incompetent in additional ways, and 8% were having sexual activity with patients. Not a single physician, for whom information was available, was disciplined solely for overprescribing opioids. The actual risk of an American physician being disciplined by a state medical board for treating a real patient with opioids for a painful medical condition is virtually nonexistent.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15733811     DOI: 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2004.05.009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Pain Symptom Manage        ISSN: 0885-3924            Impact factor:   3.612


  5 in total

1.  Clinical factors associated with prescription drug use disorder in urban primary care patients with chronic pain.

Authors:  Jane M Liebschutz; Richard Saitz; Roger D Weiss; Tali Averbuch; Sonia Schwartz; Ellen C Meltzer; Elizabeth Claggett-Borne; Howard Cabral; Jeffrey H Samet
Journal:  J Pain       Date:  2010-03-24       Impact factor: 5.820

Review 2.  Legal aspects of chronic opioid therapy.

Authors:  Kwai-Tung Chan; Scott M Fishman
Journal:  Curr Pain Headache Rep       Date:  2006-12

3.  Regulation of opioid prescribing.

Authors:  Jane C Ballantyne
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2007-04-21

4.  The ends of medicine and the crisis of chronic pain.

Authors:  Kyle E Karches
Journal:  Theor Med Bioeth       Date:  2019-06

5.  Computational opioid prescribing: a novel application of clinical pharmacokinetics.

Authors:  Oscar A Linares; Annemarie L Linares
Journal:  J Pain Palliat Care Pharmacother       Date:  2011
  5 in total

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