Introduction: Errors that harm patients often have many contributing factors and ideally should be disclosed by a team rather than an individual provider. However, most health professions students learn about errors and error disclosure in a single-profession class.
Methods: We developed a 2-hour small-group session in which our students practice discussing and disclosing a medical error that involves several professions, following a communication map.
Doxycycline is a commonly prescribed medication for the management of acne vulgaris. Severe adverse reactions to this medication are uncommon. We describe an unusual case of a 20-year-old female who experienced a life-threatening hypersensitivity reaction, including fever, lymphadenopathy, hepatitis, nephritis and severe pneumonitis with respiratory failure following oral administration of doxycycline for facial acne.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHyperglycemia is common in hospitalized patients with diabetes and contributes to poor outcomes in this population. Use of intravenous insulin protocols for patients who are unable to eat, continuation of usual insulin regimens for those who are eating, pre-meal insulin supplements for hyperglycemia, and avoidance of sliding-scale insulin can help the clinician improve glycemic control. Careful attention to management of diabetes in the hospitalized patient decreases the risk of ketoacidosis, fluid and electrolyte abnormalities, and infection; in critically ill postoperative patients, tight glucose control with insulin administration decreases the risk of death.
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