Shriners Children’s Anesthesiologist Sundeep Tumber Conducts Groundbreaking Opioid Research

Sundeep Tumber, D.O.
This article is part of an ongoing series spotlighting the innovative research of providers throughout the Shriners Children's system. Read another.
The first thing Sundeep “Sunny” Tumber, D.O., tells me when we get on a call to discuss his system-wide study of opioid use in patients at Shriners Children’s is that he has two teen daughters.
“It’s very scary raising children in today’s world,” said the chair of the department of anesthesiology at Shriners Children’s Northern California in Sacramento. “You know that it doesn’t matter from what socioeconomic background they come from – they could easily get access to some sort of tablet from a friend, and then they could die.”
As a doctor who prescribes such painkillers to teens every day after sports injury surgeries, the probability of opioid abuse is top-of-mind for Dr. Tumber. So, for an upcoming QI (quality improvement) project, he and a team of colleagues are tackling the problem head-on.
The system-wide research project, which focuses on at-risk patients in pediatric sports medicine, is three-pronged. First, he and his team are analyzing practices at 10 Shriners locations nationwide to conduct a retrospective review of opioids prescribed for some of the most common sports procedures.
Next, they’re working to create standardized prescription care sets for specific procedures as well as improved patient education to emphasize the importance of balanced pain control through both opioid and non-opioid means.
Finally, through a mobile software program called RXCheckIn, the study will contact patients regularly to collect data on opioid use and pain levels. Dr. Tumber hopes to collect about three years’ worth of data this way.
It’s very scary raising children in today’s world. You know that it doesn’t matter from what socioeconomic background they come from – they could easily get access to some sort of tablet from a friend, and then they could die.
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Sundeep Tumber, D.O., holds a syringe in a Shriners Children’s hospital room.
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