Patient impressions of opioid-related printouts, discussions and care in a primary care clinical decision support system implementation trial [abstract] Abstract uri icon
Overview
abstract
  • Primary care is a critical setting to provide care for the 75-79% of patients who have opioid use disorder (OUD) but do not receive medications for OUD. However, patient perceptions of primary care of OUD are not well understood. Patients completed surveys about their experience with opioid-related clinical decision support system (CDSS) printouts and OUD treatment in the first 7-9 months of implementation of an OUD-CDSS. Survey responses were presented overall and by reason for study eligibility. Of 277 patients completing surveys, 22% recalled seeing the printouts; of these, 85% said the printouts made them more comfortable discussing opioid risk. Of all respondents, half discussed opioids during their visit; of these, 84% felt conversations were conducted sensitively. Overall, 88% felt primary care was the right setting to discuss opioid risks. The opioid-related printouts and discussions were generally well-received, and patients felt primary care was a suitable setting for opioid-related care.

  • publication date
  • 2026