Meducate Pulse
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Home
  • Now
  • Categories
    • Addiction
    • MedHeads
    • Lifestyle Matters
    • Healthcare
    • Global
  • Shows
    • Cracking Addiction – Show
    • Substance Stories – Show
    • Lifestyle Matters – Show
    • MedHeads – Show
  • Home
  • Now
  • Categories
    • Addiction
    • MedHeads
    • Lifestyle Matters
    • Healthcare
    • Global
  • Shows
    • Cracking Addiction – Show
    • Substance Stories – Show
    • Lifestyle Matters – Show
    • MedHeads – Show
No Result
View All Result
Meducate Pulse
No Result
View All Result
ADVERTISEMENT
Home Addiction

Mitigating Opioid Risks

Tony Laughton by Tony Laughton
April 12, 2022
Reading Time: 6 mins read
0 0
0
Mitigating Opioid Risks

On Cracking Addiction this week

Legacy patients on high dose opioids or on combination hypno-sedatives including the combination of opioids and benzodiazepines are at an elevated risk of death. The OPQRST mnemonic can be used to conceptualise the strategies that help to mitigate legacy patients’ risk of death and to trend them towards a position of safer prescribing.

  • O= opioid antagonist therapy: take home naloxone

  • P = pharmacotherapy

  • Q = quantity: reduced

  • R = referral to allied health and or psychology

  • R = rotation of opioids

  • S = staged supply

  • T = tapering

Opioid antagonist therapy.
Opioid antagonist therapy in the form of naloxone is available as “Narcan” vials, “Prenoxad” prefilled syringes and as “Nyxoid” nasal spray.

The Pennington institute’s community overdose prevention education program (COPE) provides useful resources and advice regarding the use of naloxone in the management of accidental opioid overdose. It should at this point be stated that naloxone therapy should not be reserved for patients with opioid substance use disorders, but rather should be a widely available therapy for all patients who are at risk of opioid overdose.

Regarding this point, Jauncey and Nielson stated in their 2017 paper that “Regardless of whether opioid use is licit or illicit, anyone at risk of opioid overdose should be considered for naloxone.” It is the author’s opinion therefore, that any patient who is prescribed a total opioid load of more than 50 mg oral morphine equivalent per day should be prescribed naloxone and that they and their carers should be provided with training on its use.

Pharmacotherapy
Suboxone pharmacotherapy can be considered as one option for the treatment of those patients on high dose prescription opioids who meet the diagnostic criteria for an opioid use disorder as defined DSM 5. The distinction needs to be made between physiological dependence and opioid use disorder. Any patient on long term prescribed opioids has the potential to become physiologically dependent on their opioid medication and can therefore present to their clinician requesting higher doses of opioids to treat an apparently worsening pain.

This group of patients can be dealt with by various interventions including a reassessment of underlying medical conditions, alternative pain management interventions (pharmacological or otherwise) opioid rotation or opioid tapering (if deemed appropriate). They must also be distinguished from those patients who present with aberrant behaviours. Such behaviours have been extensively described and include the following.

• Medically unsanctioned use of prescription medication including use of higher doses, unsanctioned indications (non-pain indications e.g. a “bad day”) and unsanctioned routes of ingestion (e.g. snorting or injecting crushed tablets)

• Prescription forgery

• Selling medication

• Doctor shopping

Patents who demonstrate aberrant behaviours with regard to their prescription opioids should be considered for long term pharmacotherapy either with methadone or buprenorphine (with or without naloxone). Each state in Australia has its own rules and regulations regarding the accreditation of clinicians to provide pharmacotherapy and it behoves clinicians to consider their own local requirements before prescribing pharmacotherapy.

Quantity: reduced
It is not mandatory to prescribe quantities as per the original pack size. Smaller quantities of medication should be prescribed per prescription by clinicians who are concerned about the supply of hypno-sedative drugs to their patients.

RELATED POSTS

Pill Testing Melbourne: Critical Drug Alert | Tiletamine

The Paracetamol-Autism Connection: What Expecting Parents Need to Know

Nitazenes in Australia: A Lethal New Wave of Synthetic Opioids

Referral
Referrals to allied health practitioners and or psychologists should be encouraged as part of a multimodal system of chronic pain management in which the provision of psychological and physical therapies supersede the emphasis on prescribing.

Rotation of opioids
Opioid rotation provides a rapid and effective means of reducing the total daily oral morphine equivalent (OME) daily dose. For patients on more than 100 mg OME, opioid rotation can be used to rapidly reduce the OME to less than 100 mg. It relies on the fact that patients do not usually demonstrate cross tolerance between opioids so converting a patient from one opioid to another necessitates a reduction in dose of the second opioid to approximately fifty percent of the equivalent dose of the first opioid. For instance, if a patient has been prescribed 60 mg b.d. of “Targin” this equates to approximately 200 mg OME. If the patient were to be transferred to 200 mg daily of a long acting morphine, e.g. “MS Contin” or “Kapanol” the patient would likely suffer an overdose because of the lack of cross tolerance between opioids. Therefore, as per the usual practice of only prescribing 50% of the calculated OME for the second opioid, the patient should be started on only 100 mg daily of long acting morphine. It can be seen in this example that converting from oxycodone to morphine has reduced the overall OME from 200 mg to 100 mg. A reduction in OME is an important step in trending the legacy patient to a position of reduced risk of death.

Staged supply
Staged supply denotes the practice of requiring that a patient attend a pharmacy or other dosing point on a regular basis to receive a daily dose of the medication in question. Clinicians can arrange staged supply of any drug, not just Suboxone or methadone. Therefore, staged supply of opioids would be entirely reasonable as part of a plan to manage high dose or high-risk opioid prescribing.

Tapering of opioids
Patients can be weaned off high doses of opioids by gradually reducing their dose over weeks to months. This process, called tapering, is usually done in conjunction with opioid rotation.

The process of tapering involves the following steps.

• The daily dose of short acting opioids is incorporated into a long acting dose of equivalent opioid.
• If multiple opioid combinations are used, then all opioids are converted into an oral morphine equivalent and an opioid rotation is performed as described above.
• One long acting opioid is commenced
• The taper starts at a rate of approximately ten percent per week of the original starting dose
• The use of short acting opioids or prn doses is strictly limited.

ADVERTISEMENT

The recommended taper rate is a reduction of ten per cent of the original dose of opioid per week or fortnight such that over a period of ten to twenty weeks patients can be completely weaned off their opioids if appropriate or otherwise weaned down to a dose of less than 100 mg OME.

Tags: Addiction Medicine
ShareTweet
Tony Laughton

Tony Laughton

Tony Laughton is Meducate’s CTO and a core member of the writing team. Combining technical expertise with a passion for clear, evidence-based communication, he helps shape Meducate’s digital platforms while contributing engaging, accessible health content for professionals and the public alike.

Related Posts

Critical Drug Alert
Addiction

Pill Testing Melbourne: Critical Drug Alert | Tiletamine

October 21, 2025
Paracetamol
Kids Health

The Paracetamol-Autism Connection: What Expecting Parents Need to Know

October 10, 2025
Nitazenes
Addiction

Nitazenes in Australia: A Lethal New Wave of Synthetic Opioids

October 3, 2025
Hidradenitis Suppurativa
Healthcare

Exploring the Latest Breakthroughs in Hidradenitis Suppurativa Management”

September 29, 2025
The Scandal Of Qld'S Suppressed Pill Testing Findings
MedHeads

The Scandal of QLD’s Suppressed Pill Testing Findings

September 27, 2025
Prenatal Care
Kids Health

Prenatal Care: The Impact of Monthly Prenatal Benefits and Nutritional Support

September 27, 2025
Next Post
Unveiling The True Power Of The Mediterranean Diet

Unveiling the True Power of the Mediterranean Diet

Unveiling The True Power Of The Mediterranean Diet

Unveiling the True Power of the Mediterranean Diet

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recommended

Dry Landscape Ai Image

Teletrials: The Game-Changer Bringing Clinical Trials to Rural Australia

7 months ago
Brain Power Anim

Why Your Gut Feelings Are More Scientific Than You Think

7 months ago
ADVERTISEMENT

You Might Like

Parental Shaming

The Hidden Damage of Parental Shaming:

September 11, 2025
What Makes Cortisol Bad

What Makes Cortisol Bad

September 11, 2025
The Real Impact Of Childbirth

The Real Impact of Childbirth on Your Wellbeing.

September 11, 2025
Understanding Your Constant Hunger Hormonal Insights Gns

The Real Reasons Behind Your Constant Hunger – Hormonal Insights

September 15, 2025
Dad Parenting Lessons

Dad Parenting Lessons: 10 Powerful Tips for Play, Science & Bonding

September 17, 2025
How To Sleep Better

How to Sleep Better Naturally: Effective Stress Management & Mindfulness Tips

September 11, 2025
The Future Of Digital Health

The Future of Digital Health

September 15, 2025
Opioid Stewardship

Opioid Stewardship Training: A Comprehensive Guide to Clinical Professional Development in Pain Management and Addiction Medicine

September 10, 2025
Natural Remidies

Natural Remedies for Anxiety: Identifying Symptoms, Comparing Therapies, and Supporting Your Colleagues

September 7, 2025
Recognising The Signs Of Burnout

Recognising the Signs of Burnout in Healthcare: Strategies for Stress Management and Well-Being

September 12, 2025
Is A Low Salt Diet Dangerous?

Is a low salt diet dangerous?

September 12, 2025
Survival Benefit With Obesity

Survival Benefit With Obesity in Prostate Cancer

September 7, 2025
Your Sunscreen Rules Are Wrong: A Science-Backed Guide To Real Protection

Your Sunscreen Rules Are Wrong: A Science-Backed Guide to Real Protection

September 7, 2025
Narcissistic Family Abuse

Narcissistic Family Abuse (Backed by DSM-5 Criteria) and How to Heal

September 7, 2025
Meducate Pulse

© Meducate

Navigate Site

  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy

Follow Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Now
  • Categories
    • Addiction
    • MedHeads
    • Lifestyle Matters
    • Healthcare
    • Global
  • Shows
    • Cracking Addiction – Show
    • Substance Stories – Show
    • Lifestyle Matters – Show
    • MedHeads – Show

© Meducate

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.