Illustration by David Rosenman
Newman's Notions | October 16, 2024 | FREE
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Dr. Poppins

“In every job that must be done, there is an element of fun” includes the geriatric consult service.

Internal medicine residents report high interest, limited competence in hospital medicine

More than half of surveyed residents expected to work in hospital medicine in the future, but only 30% felt confident of their competence to perform procedures or point-of-care ultrasound, and most expressed desire for more instruction in these and other areas.

Teleintensivist care didn't reduce ICU length of stay in Brazilian trial

In Brazilian ICUs without an on-site intensivist, an intervention in which a teleintensivist provided daily multidisciplinary rounds, monthly audit and feedback meetings, and evidence-based clinical protocols did not change patient outcomes compared to usual care.

4 trigger tools compared for identifying med-related readmissions

The original OPERAM tool identified the highest proportion of preventable readmissions related to medications at a Dutch teaching hospital but also required the most expert clinical knowledge.

Wearable sensor reduces heart failure rehospitalization, industry study finds

A temporary wearable device with remote monitoring reduced heart failure readmissions by 38% among high-risk patients, a manufacturer's trial found.

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Take a quiz about the Oct. 9 issue!

Every week, ACP Hospitalist posts a question about the previous week's issue. See how well you remember what you've read compared to other readers.

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Rating the ratings

A comparison of four U.S. hospital rating systems found discordant scores. Two of the study authors discuss what that means for hospitalists and patients.

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Expediting ED-to-hospice transitions

A program doubled the percentage of appropriate patients who transitioned to hospice within 96 hours of presenting to the ED, improving alignment with goals for end-of-life care.

CMS reports demographics, quality, cost from hospital-at-home initiative

Length of stay was longer in patients treated under CMS's Acute Hospital Care at Home initiative than among similar patients in participating hospitals, but complications and postdischarge costs trended lower and patients and clinicians were highly satisfied with care under the waiver.

Electronic feedback on patients whose care was escalated helpful for hospitalists

Most hospitalists at an academic medical center who received electronic feedback about their care for patients who underwent ICU transfers and rapid responses reported being highly or moderately satisfied with the experience, a survey study found.

Overdose risk doubled after patient discharge before medically advised

A Canadian study of whether discharge before medically advised was associated with drug overdose risk found that the overdose rate went up significantly after hospitalization whether the discharge was advised or not, compared to earlier no-overdose periods in the patients' lives.

U.S. heart failure hospitalizations on the rise again after pandemic drop

Admissions with a primary diagnosis of heart failure decreased from 2010 through 2014 but increased from 2014 to 2021, and associated mortality went up from 2012 onward.

Addressing partner, community violence

Hospitalists can help patients who've experienced violence by screening for the problem and offering resources to assist.

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FDA approves self-administration of nasal flu vaccine

The FDA announced that the nasal spray vaccine may now be administered by patients and caregivers, among other recent actions. A prescription is still required.


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