Acute Flaccid Myelitis is Rare, but Growing; CDC Wants You to Learn More About It

Acute Flaccid Myelitis is Rare, but Growing; CDC Wants You to Learn More About It

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is devoting more resources to gathering and sharing intelligence about acute flaccid myelitis (AFM) as the number of cases continues to rise across the United States. Next up in the CDC’s information campaign will be a Clinician Outreach and Communication Activity (COCA) call next Tuesday, November 13, 2 to 3 pm Eastern. AFM, whose symptoms have been likened to a number of other viruses, including polio, tends to …

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Urgent Care Centers: Get on Message for Antibiotic Awareness Week

Urgent Care Centers: Get on Message for Antibiotic Awareness Week

Antibiotic stewardship has become something of a buzz phrase in many healthcare settings. Don’t forget what it really means or what’s at stake, though. According to the latest data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, at least 30% of antibiotics in the United States are prescribed unnecessarily. And for every misguided script, the risk of antibiotic resistance increases. At least 2 million people become infected with bacteria that are resistant to antibiotics every …

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Drug-Resistant Salmonella Infection Spreads to 29 States

Drug-Resistant Salmonella Infection Spreads to 29 States

Patients in 29 states have been diagnosed with Salmonella infection attributed to consuming tainted chicken products. Worse, public health officials say testing shows this particular strain to be resistant to multiple antibiotics often used to treat patients with severe Salmonella infections. No deaths have been reported, but scores of patients have been hospitalized. Ask patients who present with diarrhea, fever, and abdominal cramps what they’ve eaten in the past 12–72 hours, and consider giving a …

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As Flu Visits to Urgent Care Start to Climb, FDA Clears a New Treatment

As Flu Visits to Urgent Care Start to Climb, FDA Clears a New Treatment

For the first time in two decades, the Food and Drug Administration has approved use of a new drug to treat acute uncomplicated influenza in patients 12 years of age and older who have been symptomatic for ≤48 hours. While that’s great news in the wake of last year’s rough flu season, urgent care providers must be aware of the need for timely diagnosis—and pass that message along to patients. With less than 2 days …

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Can the HEART Score Guide Next Steps for Urgent Care Patients Presenting with Chest Pain?

Can the HEART Score Guide Next Steps for Urgent Care Patients Presenting with Chest Pain?

The words chest pain get the immediate attention of clinicians in any practice setting, including urgent care. The question of calculating risk for a major event is not quite as clear-cut, however. One assessment tool, the HEART Score for Major Adverse Cardiac Events (MACE), has been validated to predict 6-week risk of major adverse cardiac events in patients 21 years of age and older presenting with symptoms suggestive of acute coronary syndrome. Michael Weinstock, MD, led a live …

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Warn Parents: Don’t Let Young Children with a Cold Have Decongestants

Warn Parents: Don’t Let Young Children with a Cold Have Decongestants

Especially now that flu season is upon us, nervous parents may be visiting urgent care centers with children who are suffering from a cold out of concern that it could be influenza. Relieved as they may be to learn that it’s “just” a cold, urge Mom and Dad to let their offspring ride out the symptoms instead of giving them decongestants. Children under 6 years of age should not take decongestants at all, and parents …

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Are You Equipped to Talk Vaccines with Adult Urgent Care Patients?

Are You Equipped to Talk Vaccines with Adult Urgent Care Patients?

Financial barriers and difficulty in assessing immunization histories are among the toughest subjects for clinicians to tackle when talking to adult patients about vaccinations, according to a study just published in the The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine. The report, which focused on pneumococcal vaccination, noted that over 95% of respondents reported they “routinely” check adult patients’ vaccination status, and 88% said they found the recommendations of the Centers for Disease Control …

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Evolving Hep A Transmissions Could Spur More Vaccinations. Why Not in Urgent Care?

Evolving Hep A Transmissions Could Spur More Vaccinations. Why Not in Urgent Care?

An abstract presented at ID Week in Atlanta recently paints a grim picture of the evolution of hepatitis A transmissions. Between 2007 and 2017, the incidence of hepatitis A attributed to outbreaks (as opposed to common-source exposure) increased steadily—to the point that in 2017, 43% of hep A infections were associated with outbreaks, compared with only 5% between 2007 and 2011. In the past, large community outbreaks were most likely to be associated with asymptomatic …

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Flea-Borne Typhus Reaches Epidemic Proportions in Southern California

Flea-Borne Typhus Reaches Epidemic Proportions in Southern California

Los Angeles County in California is beset by a major outbreak of typhus—so much so that area health officials have called it an epidemic, with no signs that it’s going to abate any time soon. Pasadena, CA has seen 20 cases, mostly in the past 2 months; in an average year, they might see five cases. Long Beach has confirmed 12 cases, double the typical annual number, with more than 2 months left in the …

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Yearning to Satisfy Urgent Care Patients Could Encourage Antibiotic Overprescribing

Yearning to Satisfy Urgent Care Patients Could Encourage Antibiotic Overprescribing

Want to make patients happy? Prescribe an antibiotic and send them on their way. If you actually want to practice good antibiotic stewardship and help protect them against future resistance problems by prescribing an antibiotic only when it’s truly warranted, however…well, that’s another story. A study just published in JAMA Internal Medicine reveals that patients rate themselves happiest with a physician visit when they receive an antibiotic prescription they asked for to treat a respiratory …

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