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Opioid Use in Pediatric Surgery

Video Published 2020-03-03 Updated 2026-06-02

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Topic Overview

Discussion of opioid prescribing practices in pediatric surgery, highlighting persistent overuse despite known risks. Presents intervention data showing successful reduction in postoperative opioid prescriptions for common procedures like appendectomy and umbilical hernia repair through scheduled non-opioid analgesics.

Key Takeaways

  • Scheduled alternating acetaminophen and ibuprofen every 4 hours while awake eliminates opioid need for routine pediatric procedures like appendectomy and umbilical hernia repair.
  • Opioid prescribing after pediatric surgery remains problematic: 68% of patients received opioids 2006-2014, with increased ED visits for constipation in the opioid group.
  • Hospital-wide education interventions (nurses, anesthesiologists, surgeons) successfully reduced post-op opioid orders and increased non-opioid analgesic use.
  • Prescribing a few doses of standalone oxycodone for breakthrough pain (1-2 days only) addresses middle-of-night callback concerns without routine opioid use.
  • Pediatric opioid deaths increased 3-fold over 18 years with 9,000 deaths; even children 0-4 years have 7% mortality rate from opioid exposure.

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