Journal of hospital medicine : an official publication of the Society of Hospital Medicine
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Randomized Controlled Trial
A behavioral intervention to promote use of multimodal pain medication for hospitalized patients: A randomized controlled trial.
The use of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) can reduce pain and has become a core strategy to decrease opioid use, but there is a lack of data to describe encouraging use when admitting patients using electronic health record systems. ⋯ Requiring an active decision to order an NSAID at admission had no demonstrable impact on NSAID ordering. Multicomponent interventions, perhaps with stronger decision support, may be necessary to encourage NSAID ordering.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Comparing two durations of medically tailored meals posthospitalization: A randomized clinical trial.
Medically tailored meals (MTM) may be beneficial to patients after hospital discharge. ⋯ Different durations of short-term MTM did not affect patient-centered or utilization outcomes.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Antibiotic clinical decision support for pneumonia in the ED: A randomized trial.
Electronic health record-based clinical decision support (CDS) is a promising antibiotic stewardship strategy. Few studies have evaluated the effectiveness of antibiotic CDS in the pediatric emergency department (ED). ⋯ Effectiveness of ED-based antibiotic CDS was greatest among those discharged from the ED. Longitudinal interventions designed to target both ED and inpatient clinicians and to address common implementation challenges may enhance the effectiveness of CDS as a stewardship tool.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Early intervention model of inpatient diabetes care improves glycemia following hospitalization.
Admission to hospital provides an opportunity to optimize long-term diabetes management, but clinical inertia is common. We previously reported the randomized study of a proactive inpatient diabetes service (RAPIDS), investigating an early intervention model of care and demonstrated improved in-hospital glycemia and clinical outcomes. ⋯ There was a greater change in HbA1c in the early intervention group (mean -0.9% [95% CI -1.3 to -0.4]) versus the usual care group (-0.3% [-0.6 to -0.1]), p = .029. The value of acute care by dedicated inpatient diabetes teams can extend beyond improving inpatient clinical outcomes and can lead to sustained improvement in glycemia.