Overdiagnosis in the inpatient setting poses significant challenges, including unnecessary treatments and harms to patients, ...
Abdominal point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) is a vital, rapid, and noninvasive diagnostic tool used by hospitalists to detect ...
HIV treatment has significantly evolved over the past 30 years, transforming HIV from a fatal disease to a manageable chronic ...
Navigating academic promotion for hospitalists involves understanding evolving criteria, institutional variations, and the ...
Introducing the Literature Lounge! As readers of The Hospitalist know, our In the Literature column is quite popular, with ...
If you’re an SHM member interested in sharing your expertise with readers of The Hospitalist, consider applying for the editorial board. Board members develop content, recommend sources, and may write ...
This article discusses the challenges and nuances involved in using CAUTI and CLABSI rates as performance measures for ...
Abdominal ultrasound has become central in hospital medicine as a rapid, noninvasive, and radiation-free imaging modality for the evaluation of a wide range of acute and subacute abdominal... Heart ...
Tom Collins is a freelance writer in South Florida who has written about medical topics from nasty infections to ethical dilemmas, runaway tumors to tornado-chasing doctors. He travels the globe ...
CLINICAL QUESTION: Night shift work exposes medical personnel to a range of physiological and psycho-cognitive health risks. Are there evidence-based strategies that can help mitigate these ...
When hospitalists and other physicians who regularly treat patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) reflect on the infection’s initial days versus now, they are amazed at how far things ...
Staffing shortages in hospital medicine affect hospitals nationwide, presenting a critical challenge. The Association of American Medical Colleges projects a shortage of up to 86,000 physicians by ...