Bryan Rollins | Memphis Parent
Thousands of children are hospitalized annually for prescription opioid poisonings, and in recent years, hospitalization rates have nearly doubled among children of all ages, according to a new Yale University study that shows toddlers and older teens are particularly at risk.
These findings, based on a review of hospital discharge records over a 16-year period, show the impact of the prescription opioid crisis on children and the need for strategies to address it, said the researchers in the study published in JAMA Pediatrics.
Prescription opioids include common painkillers such as oxycodone, hydrocodone, and fentanyl. In adults, the growing use and abuse of these drugs are linked to a rise in hospitalizations for opioid poisonings. To gauge the impact of these trends on children, the Yale team conducted a comprehensive analysis of hospitalizations attributed to opioid poisonings in children and adolescents.
The Yale study analyzed data from the Kids’ Inpatient Database, a national source that compiles data on children admitted to U.S. hospitals. The researchers examined discharge records for patients aged 1 to 19 who were hospitalized for opioid poisonings. Using data from 1997 to 2012, they identified more than 13,000 such records.
The researchers found that hospitalizations for opioid poisonings in children rose significantly during the period studied, with the greatest increases seen in the youngest kids and the oldest teens. “Over 16 years, poisonings from prescription opioids in children and teens increased nearly twofold,” said Julie Gaither, lead author of the study. “Those most vulnerable to opioid exposure were children ages 1 to 4 and 15 to 19. In toddlers and preschoolers, rates more than doubled over time.”
Gaither noted that prescription opioid poisonings among children less than 10 years of age were primarily of an accidental nature, but among older teens, suicidal intent was the primary cause.
A silver lining in the data is that hospitalizations among older teens did decrease slightly in the most recent years. “For 15 to 19 year olds, we saw a slight decrease, 7 percent, in hospitalizations from 2009 to 2012,” said Gaither.
Despite this decrease, “the take-home message is that prescription opioid poisonings are likely to remain a growing problem among children unless greater attention is directed toward the pediatric community,” she noted.
The researchers described multiple strategies for addressing the risks of opioid exposure in children, including changes to the packaging and storage of prescription opioid medications. They also discussed parent education, clinical practice guidelines for prescribing opioid painkillers to children, and programs to prevent opioid misuse among adolescents. Parents should also dispose of unused pills via a medicine take-back program or DEA-authorized collection center, by flushing them down the sink or toilet, or by mixing them with unpalatable substances before placing in household trash.
The study was supported by grants from the National Institute on Drug Abuse.
Ziba Kashef is a writer for Yale News, Yale University.
Leftover Danger
How to reduce the risk of opiod poisoning.
A new study finds patients use less than 50% of the opioid doses they are prescribed after oral surgery, resulting in over 100 million leftover opioid pills each year.
Kent Runyon of Novus Medical Detox Center believes leftover painkillers are a key contributor to America’s opioid epidemic and related hospitalizations.
“Saving unused opioid pills after surgery increases the likelihood that children or others will obtain them and either accidentally consume them or intentionally misuse them,” he warns.
Runyon urges anyone prescribed opioids to properly dispose of unused pills via a medicine take-back program or DEA-authorized collection center, by flushing them down the sink or toilet, or by mixing them with unpalatable substances before placing in household trash.