The Gut’s Gatekeeper: How Consistent Care Curbs Opioid Overuse in Chronic Pain
A large-scale cohort study from South Korea provides compelling evidence on the role of primary care continuity in managing non-cancer pain, a common scenario in gastroenterology for conditions like chronic abdominal pain or irritable bowel syndrome. Analyzing data from nearly 400,000 adults with musculoskeletal disorders, researchers found that patients with high continuity of care—seeing the same provider consistently—were significantly less likely to initiate opioid therapy. Compared to the high-continuity group, those with medium and low continuity had 1.27-fold and 1.43-fold higher risks of starting opioids, respectively. Furthermore, high continuity delayed the median time to opioid initiation by over 300 days and was associated with a substantially lower risk of potentially inappropriate opioid prescribing.
Why it might matter to you: For gastroenterologists managing patients with chronic functional GI disorders, this study underscores a critical, non-pharmacological strategy to mitigate opioid-related risks. It highlights that fostering a stable patient-provider relationship can be a powerful tool in your clinical arsenal, potentially delaying or preventing opioid initiation in complex pain cases. This evidence supports integrating continuity-focused models into GI practice, which could improve patient safety and align with broader efforts to combat the opioid crisis through smarter, relationship-based care.
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