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For patients admitted while taking chronic outpatient opioids, how do you decide whether to resume their baseline opioid regimen at discharge versus tapering or modifying therapy during hospitalization?

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5 Answers
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Hospital Medicine · Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

I'm not sure there's a single right answer here. My only recommendation is for patients who are on chronic outpatient opiates: please talk to their ambulatory clinician before making any significant changes. Their ambulatory doctor knows them over time and can give you advice regarding what's happen...

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Hospital Medicine · Washington University

Very difficult question, and I think it is very dependent on the situation/reason to be on opioids. I think the most important aspect is what their follow-up is. Who will be prescribing these medications in the future? Ideally, they should follow up with a pain management doctor if they are on chron...

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Hospital Medicine · University of Tennessee Health Science Center

Drs. @Dr. First Last and @Dr. First Last, per usual, have covered this very well. One little thing to add is that as a palliative physician, I often get consulted for patients with 'uncontrolled pain' only to find that they have been chronically on a decently high OME regimen for chronic or malignan...

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Hospital Medicine · University of Vermont Medical Center

All the preceding advice is excellent, and I want to expand on @Dr. First Last's comment on switching to Buprenorphine in the inpatient setting. Not all of us are experienced with Buprenorphine, but one of its superpowers is that it does not cause respiratory depression like full agonist opioids. An...

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Hospital Medicine · Yale School of Medicine/Yale-New Haven Hospital

Agree with all in this thread. I'll put a finer point on it -- modifying an opiate pain regimen while a patient is in the hospital, without confirming and communicating with an outpatient prescriber, should never occur. In addition, inpatient providers need to be specifically cognizant of strategies...

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