Literature DB >> 33555551

Obesity and the Receipt of Prescription Pain Medications in the US.

Gawon Cho1, Virginia W Chang2,3.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Little is known about disparities in pain treatment associated with weight status despite prior research on weight-based discrepancies in other realms of healthcare and stigma among clinicians.
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the association between weight status and the receipt of prescription analgesics in a nationally representative sample of adults with back pain, adjusting for the burden of pain.
DESIGN: Cross-sectional analyses using the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (2010-2017). PARTICIPANTS: Five thousand seven hundred ninety-one civilian adults age ≥ 18 with back pain. MAIN MEASURES: We examine the odds of receiving prescription analgesics for back pain by weight status using logistic regression. We study the odds of receiving (1) any pain prescription, (2) three pain prescription categories (opioid only, non-opioid only, the combination of both), and (3) opioids conditional on having a pain prescription. KEY
RESULTS: The odds of receiving pain prescriptions increase monotonically across weight categories, when going from normal weight to obesity II/III, despite adjustments for the burden of pain. Relative to normal weight, higher odds of receiving any pain prescription is associated with obesity I (OR = 1.30 [95% CI = 1.04-1.63]) and obesity II/III (OR = 1.72 [95% CI = 1.36-2.18]). Obesity II/III is also associated with higher odds of receiving opioids only (OR = 1.53 [95% CI = 1.16-2.02]), non-opioids only (OR = 1.77 [95% CI = 1.21-2.60]), and a combination of both (OR = 2.48 [95% CI = 1.44-4.29]). Obesity I is associated with increased receipt of non-opioids only (OR = 1.55 [95% CI = 1.07-2.23]). Conditional on having a pain prescription, the odds of receiving opioids are comparable across weight categories.
CONCLUSIONS: This study suggests that, relative to those with normal weight, adults with obesity are more likely to receive prescription analgesics for back pain, despite adjustments of the burden of pain. Hence, the possibility of weight-based undertreatment is not supported. These findings are reassuring because individuals with obesity generally experience a higher prevalence of back pain. The possibility of over-treatment associated with obesity, however, may warrant further investigation.
© 2021. Society of General Internal Medicine.

Entities:  

Keywords:  health disparities; obesity; opioids; pain; pain medicine

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33555551      PMCID: PMC8390709          DOI: 10.1007/s11606-020-06581-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Gen Intern Med        ISSN: 0884-8734            Impact factor:   6.473


  61 in total

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10.  The contribution of obesity to prescription opioid use in the United States.

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