The large COVID-19 outbreaks in prisons in the Washington (USA) State Department of Corrections (WADOC) system during 2020 highlighted the need for a new public health approach to prevent and control COVID-19 transmission in the system's 12 facilities. WADOC and the Washington State Department of Health (WADOH) responded by strengthening partnerships through dedicated corrections-focused public health staff, improving cross-agency outbreak response coordination, implementing and developing corrections-specific public health guidance, and establishing collaborative data systems. The preexisting partnerships and trust between WADOC and WADOH, strengthened during the COVID-19 response, laid the foundation for a collaborative response during late 2021 to the largest tuberculosis outbreak in Washington State in the past 20 years.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Accurate and timely prescriptions of COVID-19 therapeutics, laboratory testing, and antimicrobial stewardship have been a challenge throughout the pandemic as new evidence emerges. While universal consultation with infectious disease specialists on patients admitted with COVID-19 is desirable, it is not always feasible due to limited resources.
Observations: In this single-center study, we implemented a combined educational and laboratory stewardship intervention geared toward hospitalist practitioners resulting in improved accuracy of remdesivir and dexamethasone prescriptions, reduced laboratory use of blood cultures, interleukin 6 assay, and sputum cultures, and a decrease in antibiotic use for patients with mild-to-moderate oxygen requirements over 6 months.
Human African trypanosomiasis incidence has declined, but diagnosis remains difficult, especially in nonendemic areas. Our patient presented with fever, progressive lethargy, and weight loss for 5 months and had previously traveled to Ghana and Cameroon but had not been to areas with recently reported African trypanosomiasis. Extensive workup was negative, except for lymphocytic pleocytosis in cerebrospinal fluid; ultimately, a bone marrow aspiration revealed necrotizing granulomatous inflammation with 2 trypanosomes discovered on the aspirate smear, consistent with .
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