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Prescribing Opioids in Primary Care Settings: Experiences of Nurse Practitioners

Date

2023-04-17

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

ORCID

0000-0002-1606-2826

Type

Thesis

Degree Level

Doctoral

Abstract

Abstract Many Canadians access health care for the management of acute or chronic pain. Therapeutic pain management approaches provided by nurse practitioners (NPs) may involve non-pharmacological options and the prescription of medications. When opioids are prescribed by NPs, there is a need for awareness of the concerns for opioid abuse and development of dependence, misuse related to a lack of medication education, diversion of the medication for potential financial gain, and obtaining opioids illegally when prescriptions are tapered or discontinued: which all have been implicated for concerns regarding opioid prescribing and the present opioid crisis (Canadian Centre on Substance Use and Addiction, 2020). The purpose of this study was to explore the experiences of the NPs who prescribe opioids in primary care settings within the province of Saskatchewan. The following question guided this study: What are the experiences of NPs who prescribe opioids in primary care settings? Interpretive Description was chosen as the guiding method for this inquiry: as interpretive description is most often used to explore practice based clinical questions. Through the use of the scaffolding approach in Interpretive Description (Thorne, 2016), a scoping review of the literature was performed that identified themes across a small number of peer reviewed articles from international studies, and a gap in the Canadian literature on the study phenomena. The qualitative inductive approach of Interpretive Description was chosen to develop nursing knowledge about opioid prescribing by NPs using interview data collection and analysis. Information about the study and a link to a recruitment survey was distributed to NPs in collaboration with a provincial regulatory body. The recruitment survey asked respondents to complete demographic and practice questions about their practice of opioid prescribing and indicate their interest in participating in an interview on the topic. This purposive sampling method used a modified Dillman approach, recruited 21 volunteers to conduct semi - structured interviews (Dillman et al., 2014). Constant comparative analysis of the interview data resulted in two focus areas of thematic development: the practice concerns involved in prescribing opioids and the decision-making process employed by NPs in addressing pain management. Findings from the thematic analysis of practice experiences when prescribing opioids identified three primary themes: learning to prescribe, gaining competence and confidence, and experiencing concerns for personal safety. A second descriptive thematic analysis explored the participants’ decision-making when prescribing opioids in primary care clinical settings. This analysis identified three themes that influence participant decision-making in practice: negotiating practice autonomy boundaries, applying clinical practice guidelines, and retribution from authorities. Findings from the analyses suggests that participants with more years of experience felt their educational preparation was appropriate; however, participants with fewer years of experience felt hesitant and underprepared for the associated level of accountability and responsibility. The outcomes identified a need for increased knowledge and support for NPs when prescribing opioids and a need for policy change within electronic health records to identify clients with opioid contracts to mitigate the potential of opioid prescription abuse, misuse, and diversion.

Description

Keywords

Nurse Practitioner, Opioids, Prescriptions, prescribe*, narcotics, analgesic

Citation

Degree

Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.)

Department

Nursing

Program

Nursing

Part Of

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DOI

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