Evaluating the population-level effects of oxycodone restrictions on prescription opioid utilization in Ontario.
David RudolerPaul KurdyakTara GomesAnjie HuangWayne JonesStephanie LittlefordNabiha ParachaBenedikt FischerPublished in: Pharmacoepidemiology and drug safety (2022)
Province-wide restrictions on access to long acting oxycodone had an impact on quantities of all opioids dispensed to chronic recipients of oxycodone, but small impacts on the full population of people dispensed oxycodone; the decline in use was partially offset by increases in use of other publicly-funded opioid formulations. This study suggests that policies limiting access to specific prescription opioids led to overall reductions in publicly funded prescription opioid use, particularly in chronic oxycodone recipients, without immediate evidence of changes in opioid-related ED visits.