Archive for January, 2007

ORIGINAL INVESTIGATION: Impact of Rapid Diagnosis on Management of Adults Hospitalized With Influenza

Background  Rapid influenza testing decreases antibiotic and ancillary test use in febrile children, yet its effect on the care of hospitalized adults is unexplored. We compared the clinical management of patients with influenza whose rapid antigen test result was positive (Ag+) with the management of those whose rapid antigen test result was negative or the test was not performed (Ag0).

Methods  Medical record review was performed on patients with influenza hospitalized during 4 winters (1999-2003). Hospital policy mandated influenza testing (antigen or culture) for all patients with acute cardiopulmonary diseases admitted from November 15 through April 15. A subset of patients participated in an epidemiological study and had reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction or serologic testing performed. Clinical data from Ag+ and Ag0 patients were compared.

Results  Of 166 patients with available records, 86 were Ag+ and 80 were Ag0. Antibiotic use (74 [86%] of 86 patients vs 79 [99%] of 80 patients; P = .002) was less and antibiotic discontinuance (12 [14%] of 86 patients vs 2 [2%] of 80 patients; P=.01) was greater in Ag+ compared with Ag0 patients. No significant differences in antibiotic days, length of hospital stay, or antibiotic complications were noted. Antiviral use (63 [73%] of 86 patients vs 6 [8%] of 80 patients; P<.001) was greater in Ag+ than Ag0 patients. Antigen status was independently associated with withholding or discontinuing antibiotics in multivariate analysis. Of 44 Ag+ patients deemed low risk for bacterial infection, 27 continued to receive antibiotics despite positive influenza test results. These patients more commonly had pulmonary disease and had significantly more abnormal lung examination results (P = .005) compared with those in whom antibiotics were withheld or discontinued.

Conclusions  Rapid influenza testing leads to reductions in antibiotic use in hospitalized adults. Better tools to rule out concomitant bacterial infection are needed to optimize the impact of viral testing.

Published online January 22, 2007 (doi:10.1001/archinternmed.167.4.ioi60207).

One-third Of Children Having Surgery Overweight Or Obese

A very high proportion of children who are having surgery are overweight or obese, and because of the excess weight have a greater chance of experiencing problems linked to the surgery, as per a new study from the University of Michigan Health System. Scientists looked at a database of all 6,017 pediatric surgeries at the U-M Hospital from 2000 to 2004, and they observed that nearly a third of the patients - 31.5 percent - were overweight or obese. More than half of those children qualified as obese, as per the study, which appears in the new issue of the Journal of the National Medical Association........

Legislature considers KU Med partnerships

Debate about whether the University of Kansas Medical Center should partner with hospitals on the Missouri side of the state line is moving to the Kansas Legislature.

RehabCare to partner on $20M Peoria hospital

RehabCare Group Inc. and Methodist Medical Center said Friday they plan to form a joint venture to develop, own and operate a new long-term acute care hospital (LTACH) in Peoria, Ill.

Analysts give health care stock favorites, market insights for 2007

Health care industry analysts spoke to a full house at a Nashville Health Care Council luncheon at the Renaissance Hotel on Thursday, pointing out issues and stocks to watch in the coming year.