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Methadone Perception Survey Targets Pediatric Surgical Caregivers

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Summary

An observational survey study (NCT07537608) examining methadone perceptions among caregivers of pediatric outpatient surgical patients, orthopedic surgeons, and anesthesiologists has been registered on ClinicalTrials.gov. The study will investigate associations between social determinants of health and attitudes toward methadone use for postoperative pain. Healthcare providers and clinical researchers should monitor this registry for emerging evidence on potential disparities in pain management perceptions.

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What changed

An observational survey study examining methadone perceptions among caregivers of pediatric outpatient surgical patients, orthopedic surgeons, and anesthesiologists has been registered on ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT07537608). The study will investigate potential associations between social determinants of health (neighborhood disadvantage, language preferences, race/ethnicity) and attitudes toward methadone use for postoperative pain.\n\nHealthcare providers and clinical researchers should monitor this registry for upcoming research on pain management perceptions across different populations. This listing represents a research transparency requirement and does not impose any immediate compliance obligations on regulated entities.

Archived snapshot

Apr 17, 2026

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Methadone Perception Survey Study

Observational NCT07537608 Kind: OBSERVATIONAL Apr 17, 2026

Abstract

This is a cross-sectional survey study to describe the perception of methadone in various groups, caregivers of pediatric outpatient surgical patients, surgeons, and anesthesiologists.

There is little information about perceptions of methadone use for outpatient surgery of the caregivers of children presenting for surgery, as well as orthopedic surgeons and anesthesiologists. Therefore, this study aims to describe the caregiver perception for children presenting for surgery and its associations with the social determinants of health. The investigators hypothesize that children with caregivers residing in disadvantaged neighborhoods, preferring a language of care other than English, and who are of minority race and ethnicity are more likely to have a negative view of methadone use. Similarly, they hypothesize that orthopedic surgeons and anesthesiologists will also have a negative view of methadone use despite its potential postoperative pain benefits.

Conditions: Pain, Postoperative

Interventions: Survey

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Classification

Agency
NIH
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor
Document ID
NCT07537608

Who this affects

Applies to
Healthcare providers Patients
Industry sector
6211 Healthcare Providers
Activity scope
Clinical research Postoperative pain management
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Healthcare
Operational domain
Regulatory Affairs
Topics
Pharmaceuticals Public Health

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