Prescribing patterns of analgesics and other medicines by dental practitioners in Australia from 2001 to 2012

OBJECTIVES Dental practitioners are able to prescribe a variety of medicines subsidized on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Schedule (PBS), the main categories of which are analgesics and antibiotics. We aimed to investigate the patterns of PBS prescribing of non-antimicrobial medicines by dental practitioners in Australia from 2001 to 2012. METHODS Data were collected from Medicare Australia on prescriptions from dental practitioners dispensed to concessional beneficiaries between 2001 and 2012. We examined patterns of use over time. RESULTS There was an overall increase in number of prescriptions and in dispensed use (standardized by dose and population) of analgesic medicines for the concessional population over the 12-years period. The use of dentally prescribed analgesics increased 15%, with use of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs increasing by 41% and opioid analgesics by 12%. Prescribing of the oxycodone 5-mg tablet increased 344% between 2005 and 2012, and dental prescription of the benzodiazepines diazepam and temazepam increased by 51% and 229%, respectively, over the observation period. Injectable corticosteroid use increased by 19%. Conversely, use of carbamazepine and anti-emetics decreased by 39% and 10%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS Dental prescribing of analgesics, anti-inflammatories and benzodiazepines in the concessional population has increased significantly over the past decade. These data can form the baseline to further examine appropriate medicine use in the management of dental conditions.

[1]  S. Hollingworth,et al.  Prescribing patterns of dental practitioners in Australia from 2001 to 2012. Antimicrobials , 2017, Australian dental journal.

[2]  N. Savage Dental note: Opioids in dental practice , 2014 .

[3]  M Mofizul Islam,et al.  Twenty‐year trends in benzodiazepine dispensing in the Australian population , 2014, Internal medicine journal.

[4]  Anand W. Mehendale,et al.  Opioid overuse pain syndrome (OOPS): the story of opioids, prometheus unbound. , 2013, Journal of opioid management.

[5]  C. Wright Therapeutic Guidelines: Oral and Dental. Version 2. , 2012 .

[6]  M. Peres,et al.  Socio-demographic and behavioural inequalities in the impact of dental pain among adults: a population-based study. , 2012, Community Dentistry and Oral Epidemiology.

[7]  P. McGettigan,et al.  Cardiovascular Risk with Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs: Systematic Review of Population-Based Controlled Observational Studies , 2011, PLoS medicine.

[8]  Jean A. O’Donnell,et al.  The rise in prescription drug abuse: raising awareness in the dental community. , 2011, Compendium of continuing education in dentistry.

[9]  Nathaniel Katz,et al.  Prevention of prescription opioid abuse: the role of the dentist. , 2011, Journal of the American Dental Association.

[10]  Nathaniel Katz,et al.  Prescribing recommendations for the treatment of acute pain in dentistry. , 2011, Compendium of continuing education in dentistry.

[11]  C. Herman The Minnesota Prescription Monitoring Program. , 2011, Northwest dentistry.

[12]  J. Goodchild,et al.  Appropriate analgesic prescribing for the general dentist. , 2010, General dentistry.

[13]  D. Becker Pain management: Part 1: Managing acute and postoperative dental pain. , 2010, Anesthesia progress.

[14]  H. Birnbaum,et al.  Volume of Prescription Opioids Used Nonmedically in the United States , 2010, Journal of pain & palliative care pharmacotherapy.

[15]  I. Stupans,et al.  Appropriate use of non‐prescription ibuprofen: a survey of patients' perceptions and understanding , 2010, International Journal of Pharmacy Practice.

[16]  R. Zallen,et al.  Overuse of non-prescription analgesics by dental clinic patients , 2008, BMC oral health.

[17]  S. Caputi,et al.  Prescriptions of NSAIDs to Patients Undergoing Third Molar Surgery , 2008, Clinical drug investigation.

[18]  G. Slade,et al.  Australia's dental generations: the National Survey of Adult Oral Health 2004-06 , 2007 .

[19]  S. Wisniewski,et al.  Dental therapeutic practice patterns in the U.S. II. Analgesics, corticosteroids, and antibiotics. , 2006, General dentistry.

[20]  K. Hargreaves,et al.  Drugs for pain management in dentistry. , 2005, Australian dental journal.

[21]  N. Savage,et al.  Topical corticosteroids in dental practice. , 2005, Australian dental journal.

[22]  D. Becker,et al.  Drug therapy in dental practice: nonopioid and opioid analgesics. , 2005, Anesthesia progress.

[23]  B. Das,et al.  Analgesic use in dentistry in a tertiary hospital in western Nepal , 2004, Pharmacoepidemiology and drug safety.

[24]  J. Yagiela,et al.  Current concepts in acute pain management. , 2003, Journal of the California Dental Association.

[25]  D. Mehlisch The efficacy of combination analgesic therapy in relieving dental pain. , 2002, Journal of the American Dental Association.