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Beyond the black stump: rapid reviews of health research issues affecting regional, rural and remote Australia.

Sonya R OsborneLaura V AlstonKristy A BoltonJill WhelanErica ReeveAnna Wong SheeJennifer BrowneTroy WalkerVincent L VersaceSteven AllenderMelanie NicholsKathryn BackholerNicholas GoodwinSuzanne LewisHazel DaltonGrace PraelMichael CurtinRobert BrooksSarah VerdonJudith CrockettGene HodginsSandra WalshDavid M LyleSandra C ThompsonLeanne J BrowneSabina KnightSabrina W PitMartin JonesMarianne H GillamMatthew J LeachDavid A Gonzalez-ChicaKuda MuyambiTesfahun EshetieKham Van TranEsther MayGena LieschkeVicki ParkerAngela SmithChristopher HayesAdrian J DunlopHema RajappaRuth WhitePatrick OakleySimon Holliday
Published in: The Medical journal of Australia (2021)
Rural primary care providers do not have access to resources available in metropolitan centres for dealing with patients who have chronic non-cancer pain and are taking opioid medications. They often operate alone or in small group practices, without peer support and access to multidisciplinary and specialist teams. Opioid tapering approaches described in the literature include regulation, multimodal and multidisciplinary approaches, primary care provider support, guidelines, and patient-centred strategies. There is little research to inform tapering in rural contexts. Our review provides a synthesis of the current evidence in the form of a conceptual model. This preliminary model could inform the development of a model of care for use in implementation research, which could test a variety of mechanisms for supporting decision making, reducing primary care providers' concerns about potential harms arising from opioid tapering, and improving patient outcomes.
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