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CDC Releases New Opioid Prescribing Guidelines

Monday, November 7, 2022 | 0

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control on Friday released its revised guidelines for opioid prescribing with new recommendations for providers that emphasize greater communication with patients and that opioids should not be on the front line for managing pain.

The last time the CDC released opioid guidelines was in 2016, which triggered what many considered harsh reductions in pain medication prescribing and a host of laws and other regulations that left pain undertreated and unmanaged. The CDC document said some of the 2016 recommendations resulted in “misapplication” of strategies for limiting opioid prescribing and in some cases, abrupt discontinuation of opioids that jeopardized patients’ health.

The CDC said the new recommendations “aim to improve communication between clinicians and patients about the benefits and risks of prescription opioids and other pain treatment strategies; improve the safety and effectiveness of pain treatment; improve pain, function and quality of life for persons with pain; and reduce the risks associated with opioid pain treatment (including opioid use disorder, overdose and death) and with other pain treatment.”

The recommendations address tapering for patients who have been on long-term opioid therapy, urging physicians to utilize a slow approach to lowering medication strength and dosages.

The CDC also said nonopioid therapies “are at least as effective as opioids for many common types of acute pain” and that doctors “should maximize use of nonpharmacologic and nonopioid pharmacologic therapies.

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