Background: Primary care providers are at the center of the opioid epidemic. Whether nurse practitioners (NPs) have different opioid-prescribing outcomes from physicians is not known.
Objective: To examine opioid-prescribing outcomes of Medicare beneficiaries receiving care from NPs and physicians in primary care.
Research design: We used Medicare data from 2009 to 2013 and a propensity score-weighted analysis.
Subjects: Beneficiaries residing in states in which NPs are able to prescribe controlled substances without physician oversight and who did not have a cancer diagnosis, hospice care, or end-stage renal disease.
Measures: First, we measured whether beneficiaries received any opioid prescription. Second, for beneficiaries who received opioids, we measured acute (<90 d supply) and chronic (≥90 d supply) use at baseline (2009-2010) and follow-up (2012-2013). Third, we measured potential misuse of opioid prescribing using a daily morphine milligram equivalent dose of >100 mg, overlapping prescriptions of opioids >7 days, and overlapping prescriptions of opioids with benzodiazepines >7 days.
Results: Beneficiaries managed by NPs were less likely to receive an opioid [odds ratio (OR), 0.87; P<0.001], were less likely to be acute users at baseline (OR, 0.84; P<0.001), and were more likely to receive a high daily opioid dose of morphine milligram equivalent >100 mg compared with physician-managed beneficiaries (OR, 1.11; P=0.048).
Conclusions: Findings suggest educational programs and clinical guidelines may require approaches tailored to different providers. Future research should examine the contributing factors of these patterns to ensure high-quality pain management and guide policy makers on NP-controlled substance-prescribing regulations.