Opioids
Narcotics, or opioids, are often used to treat pain, including pain associated with work injuries. Yet, abuse of these painkillers has resulted in such a large increase in hospitalizations and deaths that the situation is called an “opioid epidemic.” IWH research looks at optimal opioid prescribing practices for physicians, as well as the use and effects of opioids related to the treatment of work-related injuries in particular.
Featured
At Work article
IWH study finds 7 in 10 injured workers still experience pain more than a year after injury
A high proportion of injured workers in Ontario experience persistent pain for well over a year after their work-related injury. According to an IWH study of workers' compensation lost-time claimants, 70 per cent of workers experience pain 18 months after their work injury.
Published: September 30, 2022
Journal article
Journal article
Canadian guidelines on opioid use disorder among older adults
Published: Canadian Geriatrics Journal, March 2020
Journal article
Journal article
Impact of a jail-based treatment decision-making intervention on post-release initiation of medications for opioid use disorder
Published: Drug and Alcohol Dependence, February 2020
Journal article
Journal article
Improving opioid guideline adherence: evaluation of a multifaceted, theory-informed pilot intervention for family physicians
Published: BMJ Open, January 2020
Journal article
Journal article
Identifying appropriate outcomes to help evaluate the impact of the Canadian Guideline for Safe and Effective Use of Opioids for Non-Cancer Pain
Published: BMC Anesthesiology, January 2020
Journal article
Journal article
Changes in opioid prescribing behaviors among family physicians who participated in a weekly tele-mentoring program
Published: Journal of Clinical Medicine, December 2019
Journal article
Journal article
Opioid overdose hospitalization trajectories in states with and without opioid-dosing guidelines
Published: Public Health Reports, September 2019
Journal article
Journal article
Testing a support programme for opioid reduction for people with chronic non-malignant pain: the I-WOTCH randomised controlled trial protocol
Published: BMJ Open, June 2019
IWH Speaker Series
IWH Speaker Series
The link between workplace injury and fatality risks and the use of substances affecting the central nervous system
Prescription and recreational drugs that act on the central nervous system can have many adverse effects, including cognitive and psychomotor impairment. An IWH systematic review has looked into the link between workplace injury and fatality risks and the use of such substances—including opioids, benzodiazepines and cannabis. In this presentation, Dr. Nancy Carnide shares findings from that systematic review.
Published: May 2019
Journal article
Journal article
Relationship between early prescription dispensing patterns and work disability in a cohort of low back pain workers' compensation claimants: a historical cohort study
Published: Occupational and Environmental Medicine, May 2019
Journal article
Journal article
Identifying patient-important outcomes in medication-assisted treatment for opioid use disorder patients: a systematic review protocol
Published: BMJ Open, December 2018