
At home with AI
Hospitalists in San Francisco discuss the future of artificial intelligence (AI) and how it's already changing their practice.

Hospitalists in San Francisco discuss the future of artificial intelligence (AI) and how it's already changing their practice.

A pulmonologist reviewed when (and when not) to use noninvasive ventilation and high-flow nasal cannula.
Thirty percent of stroke patients had a clinical indication for primary aldosteronism testing, but only 2% were tested during hospitalization, according to an analysis of 400 patients treated at two hospitals.
The workload gender gap persisted even after implementation of a new schedule model that reduced overall work hours, a single-center study found.
In postdischarge surveys of older patients who had their cardiometabolic medications changed during hospitalization, more than a third reported not initiating or not stopping a medication as instructed or taking a dose other than that recommended at discharge.
The inpatient mortality risk of an above-the-knee amputation for peripheral artery disease increased by 7.4% annually from 2016 to 2021, while the mortality risk associated with below-the-knee amputations declined.

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Hospitalists are rediscovering the benefits of ordering subcutaneous opioids.

The FDA also announced the approval of the first generic version of rivaroxaban, among other actions.
Patients diagnosed with a bloodstream infection (BSI) caused by Candida species were more likely than those with bacteremia to have been on invasive mechanical ventilation, vasopressors, or continuous renal replacement therapy at the time.
In hypoxemic, immunocompromised patients with Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia (PJP) but not HIV, higher cumulative steroid doses were associated with higher 90-day mortality, a retrospective analysis found.
A trial randomized veterans with a hemoglobin level less than 10 g/dL after major vascular or general surgery to a transfusion trigger at a hemoglobin level less than 10 g/dL versus less than 7 g/dL and found no significant differences in mortality and complication rates.
Different interventions were effective for different health care professional roles, a review found, with mindfulness-based interventions reducing burnout among nurses and midwives but not physicians.
A hospitalist researcher talks about what happens when large language models are asked to help with tricky care decisions.

Hospitalists took on new part-time hybrid roles caring for patients in a psychiatric facility.