# Opioid prescribing patterns among medical practitioners in New South Wales, Australia

**Authors:** Andrea L. Schaffer, Natasa Gisev, Fiona M. Blyth, Nicholas A. Buckley, David Currow, Timothy A. Dobbins, Andrew Wilson, Louisa Degenhardt, Sallie‐Anne Pearson

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/dar.13675 · Drug and Alcohol Review · 2023-05-09

## TL;DR

This study analyzed how medical practitioners in New South Wales prescribed opioids from 2013 to 2018, finding significant variation in prescribing patterns.

## Contribution

The study identifies four distinct opioid prescribing clusters among practitioners using population-level data and clustering methods.

## Key findings

- A small percentage of practitioners prescribed the majority of opioids, with the top 1% accounting for 15% of all opioid milligrams dispensed.
- The largest cluster of prescribers treated older patients and accounted for 76.7% of all opioids dispensed.
- Two smaller clusters represented 21.2% of prescribers and 20.9% of opioids dispensed.

## Abstract

Prescriber behaviour is important for understanding opioid use patterns. We described variations in practitioner‐level opioid prescribing in New South Wales, Australia (2013–2018).

We quantified opioid prescribing patterns among medical practitioners using population‐level dispensing claims data, and used partitioning around medoids to identify clusters of practitioners who prescribe opioids based on prescribing patterns and patient characteristics identified from linked dispensing claims, hospitalisations and mortality data.

The number of opioid prescribers ranged from 20,179 in 2013 to 23,408 in 2018. The top 1% of practitioners prescribed 15% of all oral morphine equivalent (OME) milligrams dispensed annually, with a median of 1382 OME grams (interquartile range [IQR], 1234–1654) per practitioner; the bottom 50% prescribed 1% of OMEs dispensed, with a median of 0.9 OME grams (IQR 0.2–2.6). Based on 63.6% of practitioners with ≥10 patients filling opioid prescriptions in 2018, we identified four distinct practitioner clusters. The largest cluster prescribed multiple analgesic medicines for older patients (23.7% of practitioners) accounted for 76.7% of all OMEs dispensed and comprised 93.0% of the top 1% of practitioners by opioid volume dispensed. The cluster prescribing analgesics for younger patients with high rates of surgery (18.7% of practitioners) prescribed only 1.6% of OMEs. The remaining two clusters comprised 21.2% of prescribers and 20.9% of OMEs dispensed.

We observed substantial variation in opioid prescribing among practitioners, clustered around four general patterns. We did not assess appropriateness but some prescribing patterns are concerning. Our findings provide insights for targeted interventions to curb potentially harmful practices.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** mortality (MESH:D003643)
- **Chemicals:** morphine (MESH:D009020)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

38 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10946566/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10946566