Literature DB >> 33735203

A comparison of educational events for physicians and nurses in Australia sponsored by opioid manufacturers.

Quinn Grundy1,2, Sasha Mazzarello1, Sarah Brennenstuhl1, Emily A Karanges2,3,4.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Educational activities for physicians sponsored by opioid manufacturers are implicated in the over- and mis-prescribing of opioids. However, the implications of promotion to nurses are poorly understood. Nurses play a key role in assessing pain, addressing the determinants of pain, and administering opioid medications. We sought to understand the nature and content of pain-related educational events sponsored by opioid manufacturers and to compare events targeting physicians and nurses.
METHODS: We conducted a cross sectional, descriptive analysis of pharmaceutical company reports detailing 116,845 sponsored educational events attended by health professionals from 2011 to 2015 in Australia. We included events that were sponsored by manufacturers of prescription opioid analgesics and were pain related. We compared event characteristics across three attendee groups: (a) physicians only; (b) at least one nurse in attendance; and (c) nurses only. We coded the unstructured data using iteratively generated keywords for variables related to location, format, and content focus.
RESULTS: We identified 3,411 pain-related events sponsored by 3 companies: bioCSL/CSL (n = 15), Janssen (n = 134); and Mundipharma (n = 3,262). Pain-related events were most often multidisciplinary, including at least one nurse (1,964/3,411; 58%); 38% (1,281/3,411) included physicians only, and 5% (166/3,411) nurses only. The majority of events were held in clinical settings (61%) and 43% took the form of a journal club. Chronic pain was the most common event topic (26%) followed by cancer pain and palliative care (18%), and then generic or unspecified references to pain (15%); nearly a third (32%) of event descriptions contained insufficient information to determine the content focus. Nurse-only events were less frequently held in clinical settings (32%; p < .001) and more frequently were product launches (17%; p < .001) and a significantly larger proportion focused on cancer or palliative care (33%; p < .001), generic pain topics (27%; p < .001), and geriatrics (25%; p < .001) than physician-only or multidisciplinary events. DISCUSSION: Opioid promotion via sponsored educational events extends beyond physicians to multidisciplinary teams and specifically, nurses. Despite lack of evidence that opioids improve outcomes for long-term chronic non-cancer pain, hundreds of sponsored educational events focused on chronic pain. Regulators should consider the validity of distinguishing between pharmaceutical companies' "promotional" and "non-promotional" activities.

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 33735203      PMCID: PMC7971255          DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0248238

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS One        ISSN: 1932-6203            Impact factor:   3.240


  26 in total

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Authors:  Michael A Steinman; Lisa A Bero; Mary-Margaret Chren; C Seth Landefeld
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7.  Twenty-five years of prescription opioid use in Australia: a whole-of-population analysis using pharmaceutical claims.

Authors:  Emily A Karanges; Bianca Blanch; Nicholas A Buckley; Sallie-Anne Pearson
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8.  Marketing and the Most Trusted Profession: The Invisible Interactions Between Registered Nurses and Industry.

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9.  Changes in the type and amount of spending disclosed by Australian pharmaceutical companies: an observational study.

Authors:  Lisa Parker; Emily A Karanges; Lisa Bero
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2019-02-19       Impact factor: 2.692

10.  Sunshine Policies and Murky Shadows in Europe: Disclosure of Pharmaceutical Industry Payments to Health Professionals in Nine European Countries.

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