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Evidence to Improve Care

Opioid Prescribing for Chronic Pain

Care for People 15 Years of Age and Older

Click below to see a list of brief quality statements and scroll down for more information.


Quality standards are sets of concise statements designed to help health care professionals easily and quickly know what care to provide, based on the best evidence.

See below for the quality statements and click for more detail.

Quality Statement 1: Comprehensive Assessment
People with chronic pain receive a comprehensive assessment, including consideration of their functional status and social determinants of health.

Quality Statement 2: Setting Goals for Pain Management and Function
People with chronic pain set goals for pain management and functional improvement in partnership with their health care professionals. These goals are evaluated regularly.

Quality Statement 3: First-Line Treatment With Non-opioid Therapies
People with chronic pain receive an individualized and multidisciplinary approach to their care. They are offered non-opioid pharmacotherapy and nonpharmacological therapies as first-line treatment.

Quality Statement 4: Shared Decision-Making and Information on the Potential Benefits and Harms of Opioids for Chronic Pain
People with chronic pain, and their families and caregivers receive information about the potential benefits and harms of opioid therapy for chronic pain at the time of both prescribing and dispensing so that they can participate in shared decision-making.

Quality Statement 5: Initiating a Trial of Opioids for Chronic Pain
People with chronic pain begin a trial of opioid therapy only after other multimodal therapies have been tried without adequate improvement in pain and function, and they either have no contraindications to opioid therapy or have discussed any relative contraindications with their health care professional.

If opioids are initiated, the trial starts at the lowest effective dose, preferably below 50 mg morphine equivalents per day. Titrating over time to a dose of less than 90 mg morphine equivalents per day may be warranted in selected cases in which people are willing to accept a higher risk of harm for an improved pain relief.

Quality Statement 6: Co-prescribing Opioids and Benzodiazepines
People with chronic pain are not prescribed opioids and benzodiazepines at the same time whenever possible.

Quality Statement 7: Opioid Use Disorder
People prescribed opioids for chronic pain who are subsequently diagnosed with opioid use disorder have access to opioid agonist therapy.

Quality Statement 8: Prescription Monitoring Systems
Health care professionals who prescribe or dispense opioids have access to a real-time prescription monitoring system at the point of care. Prescription history is checked when opioids are prescribed and dispensed and every 3 to 6 months during long-term use, or more frequently if there are concerns regarding duplicate prescriptions, potentially harmful medication interactions, or diversion.

Quality Statement 9: Tapering and Discontinuation
All people with chronic pain on long-term opioid therapy, especially those taking 90 mg morphine equivalents or more per day, are periodically offered a trial of tapering to a lower dose or tapering to discontinuation.

Quality Statement 10: Health Care Professional Education
Health care professionals have the knowledge and skills to appropriately assess and treat chronic pain using a multidisciplinary, multimodal approach; appropriately prescribe, monitor, taper, and discontinue opioids; and recognize and treat opioid use disorder.

10

Health Care Professional Education

Health care professionals have the knowledge and skills to appropriately assess and treat chronic pain using a multidisciplinary, multimodal approach; appropriately prescribe, monitor, taper, and discontinue opioids; and recognize and treat opioid use disorder.


Health care professionals, students, and learners should be provided with evidence-based, unbiased inter-professional educational opportunities to improve their ability to provide multimodal, multidisciplinary treatment for chronic pain and to reduce the harms associated with opioid prescribing. Barriers and facilitators to aligning opioid prescribing practices with current best evidence should be determined, and supports for prescribers to change practice when indicated should be implemented.

For Patients

Your health care professional should understand how to assess and treat chronic pain using different approaches, including non-opioid medications, physical interventions, and psychological therapies. They should know how to appropriately prescribe opioids and monitor your opioid use, and they should help you lower your dose and stop taking opioids when the time is right. They should also know how to recognize when opioids might be having a negative impact on your life and how to treat opioid use disorder.


For Clinicians

Stay current with the evidence-based knowledge and skills needed to appropriately assess and treat chronic pain using a multimodal, multidisciplinary approach; appropriately prescribe, monitor, taper, and discontinue opioids; and recognize and treat opioid use disorder.


For Health Services

Ensure that health care professionals have access to evidence-based, unbiased educational opportunities that provide information on how to assess and treat chronic pain using a multimodal, multidisciplinary approach; appropriately prescribe, monitor, taper, and discontinue opioids; and recognize and treat opioid use disorder.

Structural Indicator

Local availability of physicians, nurse practitioners, and dentists with the knowledge and skills to assess and treat chronic pain using a multidisciplinary, multimodal approach and to prescribe, monitor, taper, and discontinue opioids

  • Data source: provincial/regional data collection
Multidisciplinary, multimodal approach

A multidisciplinary, multimodal approach to pain management involves a combination of therapies, including non-opioid pharmacotherapy and nonpharmacological therapies (i.e., active and passive physical interventions, psychological therapies, and self-management programs) provided by a team of different types of health care professionals.

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