Predicting at-risk opioid use three months after ed visit for trauma: Results from the AURORA study. Brittany E Punches , Uwe Stolz , Caroline E Freiermuth , Rachel M Ancona , Samuel A McLean , Stacey L House , Francesca L Beaudoin , Xinming An , Jennifer S Stevens , Donglin Zeng , Thomas C Neylan , Gari D Clifford , Tanja Jovanovic , Sarah D Linnstaedt , Laura T Germine , Kenneth A Bollen , Scott L Rauch , John P Haran , Alan B Storrow , Christopher Lewandowski , Paul I Musey , Phyllis L Hendry , Sophia Sheikh , Christopher W Jones , Michael C Kurz , Nina T Gentile , Meghan E McGrath , Lauren A Hudak , Jose L Pascual , Mark J Seamon , Erica Harris , Anna M Chang , Claire Pearson , David A Peak , Roland C Merchant , Robert M Domeier , Niels K Rathlev , Brian J O'Neil , Leon D Sanchez , Steven E Bruce , Robert H Pietrzak , Jutta Joormann , Deanna M Barch , Diego A Pizzagalli , Jordan W Smoller , Beatriz Luna , Steven E Harte , James M Elliott , Ronald C Kessler , Kerry J Ressler , Karestan C Koenen , Michael S Lyons PloS one(2022)
摘要
ED opioids were associated with subsequent at-risk opioid use within three months in a geographically diverse cohort of adult trauma patients. This supports need for prospective studies focused on the long-term consequences of ED opioid analgesic exposure to estimate individual risk and guide therapeutic decision-making.
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trauma, predicting, at-risk
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