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On the threshold
Although restricting blood transfusions to patients with lower hemoglobin thresholds has become the rule, there are some important exceptions.
Although restricting blood transfusions to patients with lower hemoglobin thresholds has become the rule, there are some important exceptions.
Will AI be for hospitalists what the steam drill was for John Henry?
A review found that all relevant studies examining CMS's Severe Sepsis and Septic Shock Management Bundle (SEP-1) were observational with some risk of bias and that the majority did not show a positive effect on mortality.
Inpatients who were treated with steroids and did not have an infection had a mean increase in their white blood cell count of 2.4×109 cells/L, peaking at 48 hours. With high-dose steroids, the mean increase was 4.84×109 cells/L, according to the single-center retrospective study.
Patients who had recurrent stroke, fever, pneumonia, depression, urinary tract infection, or delirium after a first mild to moderate ischemic stroke were more likely to die or have functional impairment at three months, a German study found.
U.S. veterans hospitalized with cancer, congestive heart failure, or pneumonia were more likely to die if they had a clinically significant pleural effusion, a retrospective study found.
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.
A recent review found that postdischarge contacts didn't budge readmissions. The lead author explains what that means for practice and research.
The medication, suzetrigine, is a first-in-class drug, targeting a pain-signaling pathway involving sodium channels in the peripheral nervous system, and was tested on patients with pain following abdominoplasty and bunionectomy.
Patients with ischemic stroke due to medium- or distal-vessel occlusion had similar functional outcomes and mortality with endovascular thrombectomy or usual medical therapy, two new randomized trials found.
The cross-sectional comparison of the two high-income countries found that rates of cardiovascular (CV) hospitalizations were higher among low-income adults than among higher-income adults in both places, but much more dramatically so in the U.S. than in Denmark.
When hospitalists were asked whether dysphagia diets improve quality of life for patients with dementia, a third agreed, a third disagreed, and a third had no opinion. The surveyed clinicians also did not routinely discuss goals of care for patients with dysphagia and dementia.
Adding polygenic risk scores for atrial fibrillation to existing clinical risk factors improved prediction of afib risk, a study of U.S. stroke survivors found.
Certain steps can help achieve a successful outcome when a patient wants to leave the hospital.
Geriatric patients were eager to use assistive listening devices during hospitalization.