
Recognising and dealing with patients who seek drugs for nonmedical purposes can be a difficult problem in general practice. 'Prescription shoppers' and patients with chronic nonmalignant pain problems are the main people who constitute this small but problematic group. The main drugs they seek are benzodiazepines and opioids.To provide data on current trends in prescription drug abuse and to discuss different strategies on how to deal with this issue in the clinic setting.Misuse of prescription drugs can take the form of injecting oral drugs, selling them on the street, or simply overusing the prescribed amount so that patients run short before the due date and then request extra prescriptions from the doctor. Currently oxycontin and alprazolam are the most abused drugs in Australia. Adequate prescription monitoring mechanisms at the systems level are lacking so we need to rely on our clinical skills and the patient's behaviour pattern over time to detect problematic prescription drug misuse. Management strategies may include saying 'no' to patients, having a treatment plan, and adopting a universal precaution approach toward all patients prescribed drugs of addiction. Among patients with chronic nonmalignant pain, requests for increasing opioid doses need careful assessment to elucidate any nonmedical factors that may be at play.
Adult, Male, Prescription Drugs, Substance-Related Disorders, Drug-Seeking Behavior, General Practice, Australia, Pain, Inappropriate Prescribing, Drug Prescriptions, Drug Users, Physicians, Chronic Disease, Humans, Female, Practice Patterns, Physicians'
Adult, Male, Prescription Drugs, Substance-Related Disorders, Drug-Seeking Behavior, General Practice, Australia, Pain, Inappropriate Prescribing, Drug Prescriptions, Drug Users, Physicians, Chronic Disease, Humans, Female, Practice Patterns, Physicians'
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