Pubdate: Wed, 04 Jan 2017 Source: Times-Picayune, The (New Orleans, LA) Copyright: 2017 The Times-Picayune Contact: http://www.nola.com/t-p/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/848 OPIOID-RELATED HOSPITALIZATIONS HAVE DROPPED IN LOUISIANA Fewer people are being hospitalized for opioid-related conditions in Louisiana, according to a new federal study. (txking) Louisiana was one of only four states to show a decline in the rate of opioid-related hospital stays between 2009-2014, new federal data shows. During that same time period, opioid-related hospitalizations nationwide increased by a rate of nearly 24 percent. The report, published by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, a division of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, said Louisiana showed a 6.4 percent decline in hospitalizations due to the misuse of prescription pain relievers and the use of illicit opioids like heroin and fentanyl. Kansas, Maryland and Illinois showed similarly small declines, though many states experienced a drastic increase in the rate of opioid-related inpatient stays. From 2009-2014, Oregon saw the highest uptick with 89 percent, followed by North Carolina with 82 percent and South Dakota with 74 percent. In 2014, Louisiana ranked the 14th lowest in the U.S. for opioid-related hospitalizations with 136 per 100,000 people. Maryland, driven by surging rates of opioid overdose in Baltimore, ranked highest with 362 inpatient stays for every 100,000 people. Experts offered various theories for why opioid-related stays dropped in Louisiana between 2009-2014, despite the fact that opioid overdoses rose 33 percent during that same period. Anne Elixhauser, a senior research scientist at AHRQ and one of the authors of the report, said increased use of the opioid antidote naloxone may have played a role. Though ambulance crews have carried the antidote since the 1990s, a state law signed in 2014 put it into the hands of all first responders in Louisiana. Sreyram Kuy, chief medical officer for Louisiana Medicaid at the state health department, credited the state's prescription drug monitoring program, which went live in 2009. The program allows doctors and pharmacists to monitor whether their patients are receiving prescriptions from other doctors or pharmacies, cracking down on the phenomenon of "doctor shopping." "I think this data is an indication that Louisiana is on the right track," Kuy said in an interview, adding that the number of doctors who used the database increased between 2009 and 2014. The decrease in inpatient stays "is something for us to build upon and improve and expand," she said. But Arwen Podesta, a psychiatrist who heads the New Orleans addiction treatment center Odyssey House, attributed the decline in part to the loss of hospital beds for those suffering from opioid overdose, dependence or other forms of misuse. In 2012, Interim LSU Public Hospital shut down its 20-bed chemical detox unit in response to $34 million in budgets cuts ordered by Gov. Bobby Jindal's administration. For Podesta, the decline in hospital stays did not reflect "less need for services," but rather "less use of that level of services because of less availability." In the absence of LSU's detox unit, she said, patients struggling with opioid and heroin addiction have turned instead to substance abuse treatment centers like Odyssey House, which the AHRQ study did not qualify as hospitals. Whatever the cause of the decline in statewide inpatient stays, the data provides an illuminating overview of who is being hospitalized for opioid-related issues in Louisiana. In 2009, for example, men in Louisiana were much more likely than women to stay in the hospital for opioids, with 156 out of 100,000 men compared to 119 out of 100,000 women. By 2014, however, that gap had narrowed significantly, with 139 out of every 100,000 men versus 130 women per 100,000, mirroring national trends. State residents between the ages of 25 and 44 were twice as likely to be hospitalized for opioids than those between 45 and 64. Nationwide, however, data showed that those two age groups were equally likely to be hospitalized for opioid overdoses and other forms of misuse between 2009-2014. Louisiana also bucked national trends in terms of the wealth of those admitted to the hospital for opioid-related problems. In the U.S. as a whole, those in the lowest income quartile had the biggest risk of being hospitalized on account of opioids, while those in the highest income quartile had the smallest risk. That pattern held steady between 2005 and 2014. In Louisiana, however, an unusual shift occurred. In 2008, the state matched national trends, with the poorest quarter of residents being most likely to be hospitalized for opioids, and the richest quarter being least likely to suffer a similar fate. By 2014, however, the wealthiest Louisianans were the most likely to be hospitalized for opioids, and the poorest were the least likely. - --- MAP posted-by: