Skilled Nursing News November 3, 2025
Amy Stulick

Opioid prescription decreased among nursing homes between 2011 and 2022, reflecting national patterns in primary care while also possibly being an overcorrection tied to opioid-related reduction guidelines dating back to 2016.

While some nursing home residents may have benefited from opioid reductions, others may have faced barriers to adequate pain control, according to a report published Monday in JAMA Internal Medicine. Clinicians walk a fine line to ensure that residents with severe chronic pain still have their pain adequately managed while also adhering to opioid reduction initiatives, researchers said.

Out of 2.9 million nursing home residents, the adjusted probability of receiving an opioid declined from 48.1% in 2011 to 33.5% in 2022, researchers found.

The findings make sense considering efforts...

Today's Sponsors

Venturous
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

Venturous

 
Topics: Post-Acute Care, Provider
What Home-Based Care Consumers Really Want
M&Y Care LLC: The Main Differences Between Home Health Care and Non-Medical Home Care
Education, Care Coordination Move The Needle For Home-Based Care Consumers
Fighting Hospice Fraud an OIG Priority
Motivating and Enabling Factors Supporting Targeted Improvements to Hospital-SNF Transitions

Share Article