Opioids and Surgery

Posted 1 year 3 months ago by UCL (University College London)

Duration : 3 weeks
Study Method : Online
Subject : Healthcare & Medicine
Overview
Gain a practical approach to perioperative opioid stewardship to minimise harms from opioids prescribed at the time of surgery.
Course Description

Discover how efficacy and likelihood of harm of opioids differ between patients.

Opioids play an important role in facilitating recovery and return to function after surgery. However, it is now well-established that surgery is a risk factor for persistent postoperative opioid use.

On this three-week course, you’ll explore the key concepts of opioid stewardship. You’ll learn how to minimise the risks associated with opioid use around the time of surgery whilst allowing safe administration to patients who are most likely to benefit from them.

Understand the use of opioids in the perioperative setting

You’ll examine the causes of the world-wide opioid crisis. This will help you understand the challenges of balancing the benefits of opioids against the risks of prescribed opioid-related harm. You’ll also discuss inadequate perioperative pain management leading to poor patient outcomes.

Learn about opioid pharmacology

You’ll learn about the mechanisms of opioid tolerance and dependence, opioid use disorder and non-opioid responsive pain, as well as persistent postoperative opioid use.

You’ll also explore the different properties of opioid drugs that are responsible for both their desired analgesic actions and the adverse drug-related patient outcomes we try to avoid.

Improve the use of opioids in your setting

Through the concept of opioid stewardship, you’ll learn how to promote appropriate safe opioid prescribing and minimise adverse drug events and persistent postoperative opioid use.

You’ll discuss practical strategies including opioid-free and opioid-sparing anaesthesia and analgesia.

Learn with pain management experts at UCL

Throughout the course, you’ll learn from experts at University College London (UCL) and the University College London Hospitals (UCLH) Pain Management Centre, Complex Pain Team and Department of Anaesthesia and Perioperative Medicine.

This course is for all members of the multidisciplinary team involved in providing pain relief for patients who are having, or have had, surgery. This includes an international audience of:

  • Doctors, nurses and physician associates providing anaesthesia, surgical or perioperative care
  • Nurses and specialists caring for patients recovering from surgery in the Recovery room, Post-Anaesthetic Care Unit, Critical Care Unit and on surgical wards
  • Specialist pain nurses
  • General practitioners
  • Physiotherapists, clinical psychologists, chiropractors, osteopaths and other allied health professionals with an interest in pain medicine
  • Students who are still training in these individual professions Healthcare professionals might find the Certificate of Achievement for this course useful for providing evidence of Continuing Professional Development (CPD) or commitment to their career.
Requirements

This course is for all members of the multidisciplinary team involved in providing pain relief for patients who are having, or have had, surgery. This includes an international audience of:

  • Doctors, nurses and physician associates providing anaesthesia, surgical or perioperative care
  • Nurses and specialists caring for patients recovering from surgery in the Recovery room, Post-Anaesthetic Care Unit, Critical Care Unit and on surgical wards
  • Specialist pain nurses
  • General practitioners
  • Physiotherapists, clinical psychologists, chiropractors, osteopaths and other allied health professionals with an interest in pain medicine
  • Students who are still training in these individual professions Healthcare professionals might find the Certificate of Achievement for this course useful for providing evidence of Continuing Professional Development (CPD) or commitment to their career.
Career Path
  • Explain the reasons for persistent postoperative opioid use and its contribution to the development of the international opioid epidemic.
  • Engage in a discussion on global variation in perioperative opioid use with healthcare professionals from around the world.
  • Justify the reasons for using different opioid and non-opioid analgesics for the management of acute pain in the perioperative setting.
  • Summarise the basic pharmacology of opioids and the mechanisms associated with their therapeutic and harmful effects.
  • Evaluate the component parts of opioid stewardship which are aimed at reducing persistent postoperative opioid use and its subsequent harms.
  • Reflect upon the challenges of managing perioperative pain in patients with opioid tolerance and/or dependence.
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