RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Reducing Opioid Prescribing Rates in Emergency Medicine JF Ochsner Journal JO Ochsner J FD O. P. Jindal Global University SP 42 OP 45 VO 18 IS 1 A1 Joseph Guarisco A1 Adam Salup YR 2018 UL http://www.ochsnerjournal.org/content/18/1/42.abstract AB Background: Pain management is one of the most common reasons patients visit the emergency department. Understanding the contributions of emergency medicine—and specifically Ochsner Health System's emergency providers—to the opioid crisis is important. Benchmark prescribing data indicated that Ochsner Health System emergency medicine providers' opioid prescription rates were significantly higher than the national average in emergency medicine.Methods: Data relevant to visit and opioid prescription counts were extracted from the organization's electronic health record system. Opioid prescription rates were calculated for each provider. A data transparency project was initiated in which provider opioid prescription rates were unblinded and distributed among the provider group.Results: Opioid prescription rates declined in aggregate for the emergency services from 22% to 14% during the 1-year project timeline. Some physicians demonstrated a 70% reduction in prescription rates. Importantly, patient satisfaction scores were not negatively impacted by declining opioid prescription rates.Conclusion: Provider performance transparency using unblinded and transparent data analytics can efficiently and significantly alter provider practice.