Background: Hospitalizations by patients who do not meet acute inpatient criteria are common and overburden healthcare systems. Studies have characterized these alternate levels of care (ALC) but have not delineated prolonged (pALC) versus short ALC (sALC) stays.
Objective: To descriptively compare pALC and sALC hospitalizations-groups we hypothesize have unique needs.
The relationships between depressive symptoms, viral suppression, and condomless sex were examined in a prospective cohort study of 369 HIV-positive Kenyan female sex workers. Participants were screened for depressive symptoms at baseline and every six months until completion of the study (up to 66 months). HIV viral load (VL) was measured every six months and prostate specific antigen (PSA) testing in vaginal secretions was performed quarterly.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Gen Intern Med
December 2020
Hospitalists provide a significant amount of direct clinical care in both academic and community hospitals. Peer feedback is a potentially underutilized and low resource method for improving clinical performance, which lends itself well to the frequent patient care handoffs that occur in the practice of hospital medicine. We review current literature on peer feedback to provide an overview of this performance improvement tool, briefly describe its incorporation into multi-source clinical performance appraisals across disciplines, highlight how peer feedback is currently used in hospital medicine, and present practical steps for hospital medicine programs to implement peer feedback to foster clinical excellence among their clinicians.
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