Yeah, it's Pneumonia, But How Bad is it Really?

Yeah, it's Pneumonia, But How Bad is it Really?

According to the American Thoracic Society (ATS) in 2018, 1 million patients required hospitalization for pneumonia and there were 50,000 associated deaths. Pneumonia was the leading cause of sepsis and septic shock and not surprisingly therefore qualified in the top 10 most expensive inpatient hospitalizations.(1) Given these findings, some have sought opportunity to develop mechanisms to assess and safely triage pneumonia patients to either inpatient or outpatient treatment strategies based upon pneumonia severity scores. In October 2019, the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) in conjunction with the ATS published recommendations for the assessment, treatment and disposition of immunocompetent adult patients with community acquired pneumonia which included several clinical decision rules also known as pneumonia severity scores.(2) The recommended decision rules and several associated, emerging tools are reviewed here.

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Pneumonia Alphabet Soup

Pneumonia Alphabet Soup

Pneumonia. It’s one of the first conditions we learn to diagnose as medical students. It was probably the cause of the first really sick, septic geriatric patient you saw in residency. Conversely you have also probably sent a fair share of patient’s home with an outpatient course of antibiotics and PCP follow-up.  While determining the appropriate treatment and disposition for patients on the extreme ends of illness severity is quite straight forward; that pesky majority in the middle can be a conundrum at times. Who can go home? Who needs broad spectrum? Who needs step-down? Over the last two decades there has been a smorgasbord of pneumonia related acronyms used in clinical practice to predict severity, guide therapeutics and recommend disposition. During our most recent resident Journal Club, we took a look at a handful of the more familiar acronyms as well as some new ones coming down the pipeline.

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