Kettering Adventist Health Care Creates Tool to Help Clinicians Provide Opioid-free Health Care
Story by Kettering Adventist Health Care
To stem the spread of the opioid epidemic, Kettering Adventist Health Care has created an innovative tool for healthcare providers and pharmacists. This tool has the potential to help clinicians provide opioid-free health care.
Kettering physicians and executives introduced the Pause—Not all pain is the same program. Pause is a way for healthcare providers and pharmacists to manage chronic or benign pain by pausing and considering alternatives to opioids. Designed in collaboration with Pain Management and Addiction Medicine, the program offers reference materials for clinicians that show alternatives to opioids for five key types of pain:
1. Chronic benign headache
2. Chronic dental pain
3. Chronic neck or back pain
4. Chronic joint pain
5. Chronic abdominal pain
Nancy Pook, MD, medical director of the emergency department at Kettering Medical Center, developed the Pause program in response to the high number of patients who have been prescribed high doses of long-acting narcotics and the increased number of overdose deaths.
“Because of this need, we developed a program as a network-wide initiative at Kettering Health Network,” Dr. Pook explains. “We reinforced it by embedding it in electronic medical record education, providing laminated posters in the Emergency Departments, training our medical teams, and tracking reports of opiate prescribing within our electronic medical record. Each piece, individually and in total, has been essential to the results we are seeing today.”
After implementing these steps, Kettering Health Network’s opiate use has dropped approximately 20 percent. Repeat emergency visits for minor pain complaints have decreased by more than 50 percent. “Even as we continue to see high acuity and high volume, we maintain our commitment to delivering compassionate health care,” says Dr. Pook.
The Pause program is available for free to healthcare providers and pharmacists throughout the country. For more information, visit ketteringhealth.org/pause.
Kettering Adventist HealthCare is a not-for-profit network of eight hospitals, 10 emergency departments, and 120 outpatient facilities serving southwest Ohio. The network’s hospitals are Kettering, Grandview, Sycamore, Southview, Greene Memorial, Soin, Fort Hamilton, and Kettering Behavioral Medicine. Kettering College, a division of Kettering Medical Center, is a fully accredited college that specializes in health science education. Kettering Health Network is recognized as one of the 2017 Truven Health Analytics 15 Top Health Systems in the United States. For more information, visit www.ketteringhealth.org.
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