View clinical trials related to Opioid Use.
Filter by:The effect of pain agreements to reduce opioid misuse is an accepted practice in many settings, but it has never been applied to the acute care setting. Pain agreements are considered the standard of care for chronic pain management reliant on opioid prescribing, and they are a mandated component of care in many states. Therefore, the adjunct of safe opioid use agreements into acute pain management offers a logical extension of current practices from chronic pain management. This study will test the use of agreements to improve safe opioid use to prevent misuse and opioid-related harm.
Given the nationwide epidemic of opioid use and abuse (in part due to over prescription), this study aims at addressing the need for opioid prescription after laparoscopic hysterectomy.
The purpose of this research is to study serious clinical problems from surgical pain and the use of oxycodone or other opioids in women having a Cesarean Delivery to improve the safety and efficacy of surgical pain relief. This research will ultimately improve the safety and efficacy of surgical pain relief with opioids by preoperative risk predictions and personalized care with the right dose of the right analgesic for each patient.
This project addresses the highly significant problem of developing effective strategies for facilitating withdrawal from opioid medications. The proposed work is conceptualized within the context of a well-known theoretical framework (Cognitive Activation Theory of Stress), and the research questions are theory-driven. The team proposes to evaluate an innovative web-based version of CBT-I followed by tapered withdrawal in a randomized trial in comparison to a Treatment As Usual control followed by tapered withdrawal. The dependent measures have been well-selected to effectively evaluate the outcomes. The methodological details are rigorous.
This study investigates brain reorganization and behavioral responses in chronic pain with opioid exposure in Chronic Back Pain (CBP).
The opioid crisis is a growing problem around the world, with prescription opioids being a major contributor to this crisis. They can be prescribed in different chronic and acute settings, such as surgery. This is therefore an event which may mark a first exposure to opioids in many opioid-naive patients and be associated with subsequent long-term use. This long-term persistent opioid consumption (POC) after surgery may be due, among other things, to chronic postsurgical pain (CPSP). Many risk factors have been identified in the development of chronic pain. Some are related to the surgery while others are related to patient characteristics. Of these, preoperative opioid use, pre-existing pain, and psychological history are major factors that increase the risk of POC or CPSP. The population having undergone major abdominal surgery remains poorly represented in studies of postoperative POC. It can be reasonable to think that these patients may have a similar high risk of CPSP and POC as other surgical patients. The potential harmful effects of POC and CPSP may limit the recovery of these patients and impair their quality of life (QoL). The risk factors for CPSP are important to consider when considering POC. While psychological factors related to pain have been shown to be associated with postoperative pain and analgesic use, the association between unrelieved postoperative pain and POC may have been underestimated. Regional anesthesia is frequently used in major abdominal surgery to reduce the risk of acute and chronic postoperative pain. However, data regarding CPSP specifically after major abdominal surgery are lacking, and the role of neuraxial analgesia on its prevention and on postoperative opioid use is unclear. Since little is known about the prevalence of POC after major abdominal surgery and its determinants, the investigators propose to conduct a major abdominal surgery cohort study by examining POC and CPSP using information reported by patients.
Research question: Does an opioid limiting pain management counseling and education program result in decreased opioid consumption and improved pain control compared to traditional pain management programs after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR) surgery? At many institutions, the current standard of care is to instruct patients to take opioid pain medicine as needed when in severe pain to "stay ahead of the pain." This study is investigating whether modifying the instructions to take opioid pain medications only if in "unbearable pain" will have an effect on 1) reducing opioid consumption and 2) improving pain levels. Adults who are undergoing an ACLR surgery will be invited to participate in the study and be randomly assigned to one of the two pain management programs. All patients will receive a comprehensive multi-modality pain management treatments and medications. Patients in both groups will receive the same type and amount of all postoperative medications. The only difference will be in the instructions about when to take the opioid medications. The patients will then be sent an electronic survey twice per day for 2 weeks about their pain levels and number of opioid pills taken.
The purpose of this study is to develop and test the feasibility of a commercially-ready mobile neurofeedback app for individuals with chronic pain. Thirty (30) participants who are prescribed opioids for chronic pain will use the new mobile neurofeedback app and an EEG headset for 10 minutes at a time, 4 times a week for 12 weeks and provide feedback about using the app.
This is a pilot study to assess the feasibility of a full study. The purpose is to assess the analgesic effectiveness of the serratus anterior plane (SAP) block following cardiac surgery. Patients will be randomized to receive either Ropivacaine 0.2% or placebo via bilateral SAP block catheters for 72 hours postoperatively.
This study responds to Request For Application-DA-19-035, HEAL (Helping End Addiction Long Term) initiative: Preventing OUD in Older Adolescents and Young Adults (ages 16-30) by developing and implementing a culturally centered intervention to address opioid use among urban AI/AN emerging adults in California. The primary goal of this study is to compare AI/AN emerging adults who receive TACUNA plus a Wellness Circle (WC) to those AI/AN emerging adults who receive an opioid education workshop on outcomes (e.g., opioid misuse and alcohol and other drug use) over a period of 12 months. TACUNA will be a motivational interviewing group intervention that incorporates traditional practices and discussion of how to cultivate healthy social networks and cultural worlds. The Wellness gathering will be for emerging adults and people in their social network, and will focus on how social networks and cultural connectedness influence healthy behaviors. Opioid education will focus on discussion of opioid misuse within the AI/AN urban community and ways to reduce use in a culturally appropriate manner. Investigators expect those who receive TACUNA + WG will report less opioid and AOD (alcohol and other drug) use frequency, fewer consequences, less time spent around peers who use opioids and AOD, and less perceived prevalence of peer use compared to opioid education over a period of 12 months. Also, investigators will evaluate the intervention's effects on secondary outcomes of social networks and cultural connectedness. Survey data is collected at baseline, 3-months, 6-months and 12-months. Longitudinal analyses will compare intervention participant and control participants on primary and secondary outcomes.