Paediatricians must prescribe opioids for pain to children when necessary, with recommended precautions to increase safety, according to a new clinical practice guideline released by the American Academy of Pediatrics on Monday.
The first clinical practice guideline for opioid prescriptions in kids also includes explicit instructions on how and when to prescribe these medications for pain while reducing the long-term risk of addiction.
The guideline, published in the journal Pediatrics online, called on Paediatricians always to start non-opioid medications and treatment, for a patient with mild to moderate pain. It also marked a shift in clinical practice by recommending a routine prescription for naloxone — a medication used to reverse overdoses — alongside every opioid prescription.
Thereâs been a big pendulum swing in the practice of medicine over the last two decades — first with opioid-overprescribing, then with a huge cutback in opioid prescribing, likely leaving some childrenâs pain undertreated,â said Scott Hadland, lead author of the guideline.
âWe want paediatricians to prescribe opioids when theyâre needed,” Hadland said.
While “untreated pain can lead to distress and psychological harm, physicians need to take steps that reduce the long-term risk for addiction,â Hadland noted.
The AAP clinical practice guideline recommends that opioids must be prescribed in conjunction with other non-pharmacological approaches, such as physical therapy, to reduce pain and improve function.
