Publication Date
6-22-2020
Journal
BMC Veterinary Research
DOI
10.1186/s12917-020-02428-x
PMID
32571308
PMCID
PMC7310014
Published Open-Access
yes
Keywords
Analgesics, Opioid, Appalachian Region, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Humans, Opioid-Related Disorders, Prescription Drug Misuse, Surveys and Questionnaires, Veterinarians, Vet shopping, Opioid, Veterinarians, Attitudes, Practice, Prescription drug misuse
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The opioid crisis continues to grow in the United States with 46,700 drug overdose deaths due to opioids in 2017 alone. Vet shopping, the practice of soliciting veterinarians for prescription medications, has been receiving national media attention in recent years. A 2014 review of Prescription Monitoring Drug Programs found less than 10 veterinary shoppers nationwide. Still much is unknown about the role of vet shopping and the opioid crisis. This study sought to understand the practice of vet shopping through the eyes of veterinarians practicing in Appalachian counties within the states of Kentucky, Tennessee, and Virginia, United States.
RESULTS: Fourteen veterinarians were asked a set of 13 questions related to vet shopping. Results indicated that 13 veterinarians in the study had heard of the phenomenon of vet shopping and eight veterinarians had personally encountered vet shopping in their practices. Qualitative analysis of the interviews identified six key themes including a need for interprofessional communication and how important a valid veterinary-client-patient-relationship is within the profession.
CONCLUSIONS: The study hopefully sheds some light on the how often vet shopping is encountered in practice, concerns of veterinarians regarding vet shopping, and potential areas for improvement.
Included in
Medical Sciences Commons, Medical Specialties Commons, Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences Commons, Substance Abuse and Addiction Commons, Veterinary Medicine Commons
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