Clinical medicine (London, England)
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Multicenter Study
Recurrent (or episodic) fever of unknown origin (FUO) as a variant subgroup of classical FUO: a French Multicenter Retrospective study of 170 patients.
Recurrent FUO (fever of unknown origin) is a rare subtype of FUO for which diagnostic procedures are ill-defined and outcome data are lacking. ⋯ This study extends the known yield of recurrent FUO and highlights the importance of repeated complete clinical examinations to discover potential diagnostic clues during follow-up. Moreover, their overall prognosis is excellent.
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The Chief Medical Officer's annual report 2023 presents an incomplete and skewed picture of the geography of older people in England. We show that there are higher absolute numbers of older people in urban areas in England and Wales, in contrast to key messages from the CMO report which suggest greater need in rural areas based on relative metrics. ⋯ The absolute number and prevalence of older adults in poorer health is also higher in urban areas, leading to greater healthcare needs. Policy-makers need to consider both absolute and relative demographic trends as well as making use of direct measures of health when planning how healthcare services for older adults are distributed geographically in England.
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Imposter phenomenon (IP) is the internalised experience of self-doubt or mediocracy that leads an individual to believe they do not belong. IP is increasingly recognised across the medical field, from medical school to consultancy, but likely affects different groups to varying extents. The transition in role from medical student to junior doctor can be a time of particularly high stress and insecurities about one's ability can act as a trigger or exacerbator of IP. Foundation doctors can arm themselves against IP by first acknowledging its existence and then actively attempting to dismantle these flawed misconceptions, as well as accessing support and resources available ubiquitously through the foundation programme.
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Review Case Reports
Austrian Syndrome: report of one case and a systematic review of case reports - new insights.
The objective of this review was to gain new insight into the rare condition, Austrian syndrome: the triad of endocarditis, meningitis and pneumonia caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae. ⋯ Austrian syndrome is rare but deadly. The true incidence is unknown but is commoner in middle-aged men and in alcoholics. Affected patients are usually critically unwell, often requiring ICU admission and prolonged hospital stays. Treatment is aggressive including prolonged courses of antibiotics and often, surgery. Despite these, the case fatality rate is high, with death occurring in over a quarter of patients. Surgery appears to be associated with better prognosis.