| Literature DB >> 36142028 |
Helena Biancuzzi1, Francesca Dal Mas2, Valerio Brescia3,4, Stefano Campostrini5, Marco Cascella6, Arturo Cuomo6, Lorenzo Cobianchi7,8, Ander Dorken-Gallastegi9, Anthony Gebran9, Haytham M Kaafarani9,10, Franco Marinangeli11, Maurizio Massaro2, Angela Renne9, Giacomo Scaioli12, Rym Bednarova13, Alessandro Vittori14, Luca Miceli1.
Abstract
In the United States, from 1999 to 2019, opioid overdose, either regularly prescribed or illegally acquired, was the cause of death for nearly 500,000 people. In addition to this pronounced mortality burden that has increased gradually over time, opioid overdose has significant morbidity with severe risks and side effects. As a result, opioid misuse is a cause for concern and is considered an epidemic. This article examines the trends and consequences of the opioid epidemic presented in recent international literature, reflecting on the causes of this phenomenon and the possible strategies to address it. The detailed analysis of 33 international articles highlights numerous impacts in the social, public health, economic, and political spheres. The prescription opioid epidemic is an almost exclusively North American problem. This phenomenon should be carefully evaluated from a healthcare systems perspective, for consequential risks and harms of aggressive opioid prescription practices for pain management. Appropriate policies are required to manage opioid use and prevent abuse efficiently. Examples of proper policies vary, such as the use of validated questionnaires for the early identification of patients at risk of addiction, the effective use of regional and national prescription monitoring programs, and the proper dissemination and translation of knowledge to highlight the risks of prescription opioid abuse.Entities:
Keywords: literature review; opioid epidemic; opioid misuse; opioid prescription; public health; social impacts
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36142028 PMCID: PMC9517221 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph191811754
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Figure 1Process of article selection using the PRISMA methodology. Source: Authors’ elaboration following Page et al. [30].
Papers included in the sample.
| N. | Authors | Title | Journal | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Vivolo-Kantor A.M., Seth P., Gladden R.M., Mattson C.L., Baldwin G.T., Kite-Powell A., Coletta M.A. | Vital signs: Trends in emergency department visits for suspected opioid overdoses—United States, July 2016–September 2017 | Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report | [ |
| 2 | Fleischauer A.T., Ruhl L., Rhea S., Barnes E. | Hospitalizations for endocarditis and associated health care costs among persons with diagnosed drug dependence-North Carolina, 2010–2015 | Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report | [ |
| 3 | Chiu A.S., Healy J.M., DeWane M.P., Longo W.E., Yoo P.S. | Trainees as Agents of Change in the Opioid Epidemic: Optimizing the Opioid Prescription Practices of Surgical Residents | Journal of Surgical Education | [ |
| 4 | Guy G.P., Jr., Haegerich T.M., Evans M.E., Losby J.L., Young R., Jones C.M. | Vital signs: Pharmacy-based naloxone dispensing—United States, 2012–2018 | Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report | [ |
| 5 | Lynch S., Sherman L., Snyder S.M., Mattson M. | Trends in infants reported to child welfare with neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) | Children and Youth Services Review | [ |
| 6 | Strickler G.K., Kreiner P.W., Halpin J.F., Doyle E., Paulozzi L.J. | Opioid prescribing behaviors-Prescription behavior surveillance system, 11 states, 2010–2016 | MMWR Surveillance Summaries | [ |
| 7 | Graves R.L., Tufts C., Meisel Z.F., Polsky D., Ungar L., Merchant R.M. | Opioid Discussion in the Twittersphere | Substance Use and Misuse | [ |
| 8 | Saunders J.B., Jarlenski M.P., Levy R., Kozhimannil K.B. | Federal and State Policy Efforts to Address Maternal Opioid Misuse: Gaps and Challenges | Women’s Health Issues | [ |
| 9 | Daniulaityte R., Silverstein S.M., Crawford T.N., Martins S.S., Zule W., Zaragoza A.J., Carlson R.G. | Methamphetamine Use and Its Correlates among Individuals with Opioid Use Disorder in a Midwestern U.S. City | Substance Use and Misuse | [ |
| 10 | Eeckhaut M.C.W., Wagner J., Neitzke-Spruill L., Walker R., Anderson T.L. | Is the gender gap in overdose deaths (Still) decreasing? an examination of opioid deaths in Delaware, 2013–2017 | Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs | [ |
| 11 | Cordes J. | Spatial trends in opioid overdose mortality in North Carolina: 1999–2015 | Southeastern Geographer | [ |
| 12 | Chiarello E. | Where Movements Matter: Examining Unintended Consequences of the Pain Management Movement in Medical, Criminal Justice, and Public Health Fields | Law and Policy | [ |
| 13 | Seltzer N. | The economic underpinnings of the drug epidemic | SSM-Population Health | [ |
| 14 | Bushman G., Victor B.G., Ryan J.P., Perron B.E. | In Utero Exposure to Opioids: An Observational Study of Mothers Involved in the Child Welfare System | Substance Use and Misuse | [ |
| 15 | Sud A., Doukas K., Hodgson K., Hsu J., Miatello A., Moineddin R., Paton M. | A retrospective quantitative implementation evaluation of Safer Opioid Prescribing, a Canadian continuing education program | BMC Medical Education | [ |
| 16 | Queeneth U., Bhimanadham N.N., Mainali P., Onyeaka H.K., Pankaj A., Patel R.S. | Heroin overdose-related child and adolescent hospitalizations: Insight on comorbid psychiatric and substance use disorders | Behavioral Sciences | [ |
| 17 | Feinglass J., Wang J.A., Ye J., Tessier R., Kim H. | Hospital Care for Opioid use in Illinois, 2016–2019 | Journal of Behavioral Health Services and Research | [ |
| 18 | Sobotka T.C., Stewart S.A. | Stereotyping and the opioid epidemic: A conjoint analysis | Social Science and Medicine | [ |
| 19 | Aguilar-Amaya M., Gutiérrez M., Sr. | Implementing Compassion Fatigue Prevention for Lay Employees Conducting Naloxone Training: An Example from Rural Arizona | Journal of Social Work Practice in the Addictions | [ |
| 20 | Wagner J., Neitzke-Spruill L., Donnelly E.A., O’Connell D.J., Anderson T.L. | The Current Community Context of Overdose Deaths: Relations among Drug Types, Drug Markets, and Socioeconomic Neighborhood Characteristics | Sociological Forum | [ |
| 21 | Wentzlof C.A., Boman IV J.H., Pryor C., Hemez P. | “Kicking the Can down the Street”: Social Policy, Intimate Partner Violence, and Homicide during the Opioid Crisis | Substance Use and Misuse | [ |
| 22 | Gollust S.E., Haselswerdt J. | A crisis in my community? Local-level awareness of the opioid epidemic and political consequences | Social Science and Medicine | [ |
| 23 | Odusola F., Kaufman J., Turrigiano E., Aydinoglo N., Shulman M., Kidd J., Hu M.-C., Levin F.R. | Predoctoral substance use disorders curricula: A survey analysis and experiential pedagogy | Journal of Dental Education | [ |
| 24 | Rosenfeld R., Roth R., Wallman J. | Homicide and the Opioid Epidemic: A Longitudinal Analysis | Homicide Studies | [ |
| 25 | Testa A., Weiss D.B., Santos M.R. | Opioid mortality, public health care expenditures, and cross-national homicide rates: findings from 25 OECD countries, 2000–2017 | Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology | [ |
| 26 | Sud A., Hodgson K., Bloch G., Upshur R. | A Conceptual Framework for Continuing Medical Education and Population Health | Teaching and Learning in Medicine | [ |
| 27 | Rao D., Giannetti V., Kamal K.M., Covvey J.R., Tomko J.R. | Pharmacist Views Regarding the Prescription Opioid Epidemic | Substance Use and Misuse | [ |
| 28 | Scorsone K.L., Haozous E.A., Hayes L., Cox K.J. | Ending the Chase: Experiences of Rural Individuals with Opioid Use Disorder | Substance Use and Misuse | [ |
| 29 | Cashwell S.T., Campbell M., Cowser J. | Stone soup: social work community engagement in rural America’s opioid crisis | Social Work in Mental Health | [ |
| 30 | Cotti C.D., Gordanier J.M., Ozturk O.D. | The relationship of opioid prescriptions and the educational performance of children | Social Science and Medicine | [ |
| 31 | Barnes M.C., Kelly T.J., Piemonte C.M. | Demanding Better: A Case for Increased Funding and Involvement of State Medical Boards in Response to America’s Drug Abuse Crisis | Journal of Medical Regulation | [ |
| 32 | Deshazer C., Dominic O., Deleo C., Johnson R. | Impact of a health system’s three-pronged strategy to address the opioid epidemic in de, pa, and wv, 2013–2017 | Open Public Health Journal | [ |
| 33 | Ho J.A., Rovzar A.O. | Preventing neonatal abstinence syndrome within the opioid epidemic: A uniform facilitative policy | Harvard Journal on Legislation | [ |
Coding framework and results.
| Node | Number of Coding | |
|---|---|---|
| 01_Authors | 33 | |
| 02_Geographic area | 33 | |
| 03_Type of pathology/department of reference | 33 | |
| 04_Research method | 33 | |
| 05_Type of impact | 33 | |
| 06_Stakeholders | ||
| 07_Recommended strategies | ||
Source: Authors’ elaboration.
Classification of the most relevant impacts.
| Type of Impact | Most Relevant Subgroups | References | Extracted Contents |
|---|---|---|---|
| Social, Health and Public Health | 1. Illegal use of methamphetamine-fentanyl-etc. | Eeckhaut, M.C.W., et al. 2020 | “Synthetic opioids are now driving the US epidemic11 as prescription opioid is being replaced by heroin adulterated with fentanyl and its analogues.” |
| 2. Homicides | Rosenfeld, R., et al., 2020 | “The results reveal a positive association between change over time in homicide and opioid-related deaths, net of multiple socioeconomic and demographic controls, in both the Non-Hispanic White and Black population.” | |
| 3. Increase in the number of deaths | Chiu, A.S., et al., 2018 | “As of 2014, the number of opioid-related deaths in the United States had risen to nearly 50,000 a year, a number now greater than the annual deaths from motor vehicle accidents.” | |
| Medical | 1. Infectious complications | U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2017 | “(…) infectious complications of intravenous drug use constitute a major cause of morbidity leading to hospitalization” |
| 2. Neonatal abstinence syndrome | Saunders, J.B., et al., 2018 | “Opioid misuse during pregnancy is increasingly common and is associated with preterm birth and neonatal abstinence syndrome.” | |
| Economic, politics and justice | 1. Increase in health care costs | DeShazer, C., et al., 2020 | “Employees with substance abuse disorder have three times more in health care costs of the average worker.” |
| 2. Violence and safety | Testa, A., et al., 2021 | “The pharmacological effects of opioids may prompt users to become involved in illicit markets and the violence associated with such markets (…) Individuals who are physically dependent on opioids may also resort to economic-compulsive offending, which may include violence in the instance of robbery or drug dealing, to support their use.” |
Main stakeholders.
| Stakeholders | References | Extracted Contents |
|---|---|---|
| Patients | Chiu, A.S., et al., 2018 | “(…) excess prescription of opioids present a hazard to both the patient and those around them.” |
| Justice | Scorsone, K.L., et al., 2021 | “All of the participants described having lost employment income, leading to reliance on stealing from family and burglary.” |
| Healthcare System/Pharmacists | Rao, D., et al., 2021 | “Oftentimes, pharmacists call prescribers and question long term use of medications and are met with trouble.” |
| Families | Wentzlof, C.A., et al., 2021 | “Research has established a strong, positive correlation between homicides and substance use and also between homicides and intimate partner violence.” |
| Minors | Queeneth, U., et al., 2019 | “Younger children are more vulnerable to the accidental ingestion of opioids. Certain strategies should be developed and also implemented to curb heroin overdoses in the pediatric population.” |