Journal of hospital medicine : an official publication of the Society of Hospital Medicine
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Rigorous evidence for antibiotic management of pediatric complicated pneumonia is lacking, likely contributing to variation in empiric antibiotic(s). Using the Pediatric Health Information System database, we sought to describe use and clinical outcomes of children hospitalized with complicated pneumonia who received empiric antibiotic regimens with and without methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) coverage. We evaluated empiric antibiotic selection on Day 0-1, grouping based on use of an antibiotic with or without MRSA coverage. ⋯ Across 46 children's hospitals, 71.5% of children (N = 1279) received an empiric antibiotic regimen with MRSA coverage. In adjusted analyses, length of stay, need for repeat pleural drainage procedures, 7-day emergency department revisits and 7-day readmissions were similar between groups. Future prospective studies examining the need for MRSA coverage may assist in refining national treatment guidelines for complicated pneumonia in children.
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Diagnostic codes can retrospectively identify samples of febrile infants, but sensitivity is low, resulting in many febrile infants eluding detection. To ensure study samples are representative, an improved approach is needed. ⋯ Findings suggest rule-based algorithms can accurately identify febrile infants with greater sensitivity while preserving specificity compared to diagnostic codes. If externally validated, rule-based algorithms may be important tools to create representative study samples, thereby improving generalizability of findings.
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Evaluation and Management of Well-Appearing Febrile Infants 8 to 60 Days Old RELEASE DATE: August 1, 2021 PRIOR VERSION(S): n/a DEVELOPER: American Academy of Pediatrics FUNDING SOURCE: American Academy of Pediatrics TARGET POPULATION: Well-appearing, otherwise healthy infants with fever, ages 8 to 60 days, excluding those with prematurity (<37 wk gestation), focal bacterial infections except acute otitis media, high suspicion for herpes simplex virus (vesicles), clinical bronchiolitis.
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Multicenter Study
Bedspacing and clinical outcomes in general internal medicine: A retrospective, multicenter cohort study.
Admitting hospitalized patients to off-service wards ("bedspacing") is common and may affect quality of care and patient outcomes. ⋯ Overall, bedspacing was associated with no significant difference in mortality, slightly shorter hospital length-of-stay, and fewer 30-day readmissions to GIM, although potential harms in high-risk patients remain uncertain. Given that hospital capacity issues are likely to persist, future research should aim to understand how bedspacing can be achieved safely at all hospitals, perhaps by strengthening the selection of low-risk patients.