Bree Guidelines have informed and influenced state agencies as well. The Washington Health Care Authority (HCA) has embedded Bree Collaborative recommendations into the creation of Accountable Communities of Health (ACHs) and included three Bree metrics on the Washington State common Measure Set: New Opioid Patient Days Supply of First Opioid Prescription, New Opioid Patients Transitioning to Chronic Opioids, and Patients Prescribed High-Dose Chronic Opioid Therapy. This inclusion allows the HCA to use these metrics in contracting to support quality improvement in opioid prescribing.
The Washington State Department of Health (DOH) provides a dashboard to view data on Opioid prescribing state-wide, stratified by county or ACH. DOH has included an equity lens in their tracking of prescription opioids by measuring impacts such as Opioid deaths by age group, industry of employment, race and ethnicity, sex assigned at birth, SOGI, veterans status, and county. Bree measures included on the dashboard are:
- Patients prescribed any opioid, by age group
- Patients prescribed chronic opioids, all age groups
- Patient prescribed high dose chronic opioids, 50+/90+/120+ MME/days per quarter
- Patients prescribed any opioids and sedatives
- Days supply of patients prescribed opioids, by youth or adult – 0-3 days, 4-7 days, 8-13 days and 14+ days
- New opioid patient with chronic opioids
- All patients with any opioid use disorder treatment formulary
In 2018 the Washington State Medical Quality Assurance Commission adopted changes to opioid prescribes laws which specifically recommend Bree Guidelines as clinical best practices for prescribing of opioids in the treatment of pain (WAC 246-919-850 to WAC 246-919-985).
System-wide the Bree Guidelines have contributed to a 51.4% drop in the rate of patients being prescribed an opioid, a 65.5% drop in the rate of patients receiving an opioid prescription with a concurrent sedative prescription, and a 76.3% drop in the rate of patients being prescribed 120+ MME per day.3 The key to this success has been clear guidance for prescribing and a shared definition of prescribing metrics to provide transparency and surveillance capacity across multiple health care system actors. The Bree’s work on opioid prescribing is a clear example of how collaborative guidelines can lead to state-wide buy-in and systemic change.
The Bree’s work to address the opioid crisis in Washington State is not yet over. In 2017 the Bree addressed treatment for Opioid Use Disorder Treatment and is currently revising the guidance to address new substances and new evidence for treatment for those suffering from OUD. For more information on these guidelines, please visit the Current Work tab on our website.
Recent Comments