Cover image of show Inpatient Update

Inpatient Update

Podcast by Mason Turner, MD

English

Technology & science

Limited Offer

2 months for 19 kr.

Then 99 kr. / monthCancel anytime.

  • 20 hours of audiobooks / month
  • Podcasts only on Podimo
  • All free podcasts
Get Started

About Inpatient Update

Inpatient Update delivers short, practical reviews of new studies that matter to hospitalists—focused on what actually changes decisions on rounds tomorrow. Efficient, evidence-based, and built for the working clinician.

All episodes

9 episodes

episode Shorter CAP Antibiotics + The Cipro QTc Myth artwork

Shorter CAP Antibiotics + The Cipro QTc Myth

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2592753/fan_mail/new] With Special Guest Dr. Ernest Murray In this episode of Inpatient Update, Dr. Mason Turner is joined by hospitalist Dr. Ernest Murray to challenge two common antibiotic reflexes in hospital medicine: * Do hospitalized patients with community-acquired pneumonia really need 5–7 days of antibiotics? * Do we need to panic about QT prolongation every time we prescribe ciprofloxacin? Two everyday prescribing decisions. Two long-standing assumptions. Two areas where the evidence may support a more precise approach.  ARTICLES & PUBMED LINKS 3–4 Days vs ≥5 Days of Antibiotics for Community-Acquired Pneumonia Annals of Internal Medicine (2026) Target trial emulation using >55,000 CAP hospitalizations across 60+ hospitals. Compared: * 3–4 days antibiotics vs  * ≥5 days antibiotics After strict inclusion/exclusion criteria, ~5,600 clinically stable patients were analyzed. Excluded: *  Immunocompromised patients  *  Severe chronic lung disease  *  Drug-resistant organisms  *  ICU-level illness  *  COVID-19  Primary Outcomes *  30-day mortality  *  Readmissions / urgent visits  *  Antibiotic-associated C. difficile  Key Findings *  No significant difference in:  *  Mortality  *  Readmissions  *  Urgent visits  *  C. difficile infection  Interpretation In carefully selected, clinically stable CAP patients:  → 3 days may be enough pubmed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41974005/ Ciprofloxacin and QTc Prolongation Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy (2026) Prospective study evaluating QTc before and after standard-dose ciprofloxacin. *  Baseline ECG obtained  *  Repeat ECG after reaching steady-state ciprofloxacin levels  Key Findings *  No statistically significant change in QTc  *  Mean QTc remained essentially unchanged (~415 ms)  *  Patients with significant QT prolongation had:  *  Multiple competing risk factors  *  Concurrent QT-prolonging medications  *  Electrolyte abnormalities  Interpretation For most stable patients:  → Ciprofloxacin alone does not meaningfully prolong QTc The real danger appears to be: *  Polypharmacy  *  Electrolyte derangements  *  Critical illness  *  Multiple simultaneous QT-prolonging factors  pubmed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41628197/ PRACTICE-CHANGING TAKEAWAYS * Community-acquired pneumonia: *  Stable patients may only need 3 days of antibiotics  *  “Minimum 5 days” is no longer absolute dogma  * Ciprofloxacin: *  QT concern should be contextual, not reflexive  *  Don’t deny patients effective oral therapy solely out of generalized QT fear  CLINICAL PEARLS *  Antibiotics may not need to “eradicate” infection completely — just shift the balance enough for the immune system to finish the job  *  Lung microbiome preservation may become increasingly important in future stewardship strategies  *  Most dangerous QT events are multifactorial, not caused by a single medication in isolation  *  Ciprofloxacin remains an extremely valuable oral option for:  *  Gram-negative bacteremia  *  Pseudomonas coverage  *  Avoiding PICC lines and prolonged IV therapy  BOTTOM LINE If you change nothing else this week: *  Consider stopping CAP antibiotics after 3 days in carefully selected stable patients  *  Use ciprofloxacin thoughtfully — but don’t reflexively fear the QTc

20 May 2026 - 27 min
episode Fewer Bleeds, Smarter Steroids: Apixaban vs Rivaroxaban and CRP-Guided Steroids for Pneumonia artwork

Fewer Bleeds, Smarter Steroids: Apixaban vs Rivaroxaban and CRP-Guided Steroids for Pneumonia

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2592753/fan_mail/new] With Special Guest Dr. Adam Jaffe In this episode of Inpatient Update, Dr. Mason Turner is joined by hospitalist Dr. Adam Jaffe to tackle two high-impact clinical questions: * Is there a clear winner among DOACs?  * Who actually benefits from steroids in community-acquired pneumonia?  Two common decisions. New data. Practice-changing implications.  Articles & PubMed Links Apixaban vs Rivaroxaban for VTE (Head-to-Head RCT) New England Journal of Medicine (2026) Randomized trial (n=2,760) comparing: * Apixaban vs  * Rivaroxaban  Population: * Acute VTE  * Excluded: active cancer, extreme obesity, other anticoagulation indications  Key Findings * ↓ Clinically significant bleeding with apixaban  * ~54% relative risk reduction  * NNT ≈ 27  * ↓ Major bleeding (0.4% vs 2.4%)  * No difference in:  * Recurrent VTE  * Mortality  Interpretation * Same efficacy  * Less bleeding with apixaban  Takeaway → For new starts: Apixaban is the preferred DOAC pubmed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41812192/ Corticosteroids in Community-Acquired Pneumonia (IPD Meta-analysis) Lancet Large meta-analysis (n=3,224 across 8 RCTs) Compared: * Steroids vs  * Placebo  Primary Outcome: 30-day mortality * Absolute risk reduction: 2.2%  * NNT = 46  🔑 The Key Insight: CRP Matters When stratified by inflammation: CRP >200 * Mortality: 13% → 6%  * Absolute risk reduction ≈ 7%  * NNT ≈ 14  CRP <200 * No mortality benefit  Other Findings * ↑ Hyperglycemia (expected)  * ↑ Readmissions (7% vs 3.7%)  * No clear signal that severity scores (PSI) identify benefit  Interpretation * Steroids are not for everyone  * Benefit appears driven by high inflammatory states  Takeaway → Consider steroids in CAP only if CRP is markedly elevated (~>200) → Routine use in all pneumonia is not supported pubmed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39892408/ Practice-Changing Takeaways * DOACs:  * Apixaban > rivaroxaban for bleeding  * Same clot prevention → choose apixaban for new starts  * Pneumonia:  * Steroids may reduce mortality — but only in the right patient  * CRP can help identify who benefits  Clinical Pearls * The difference between DOACs is no longer “vibes” — we now have head-to-head data  * Most steroid benefit in pneumonia appears inflammatory-driven, not severity-driven  * CRP — often ignored — may actually guide meaningful decisions here  Bottom Line If you change nothing else this week: * Start apixaban for new VTE patients  * In pneumonia, check a CRP — and consider steroids if >200  Fewer bleeds. Smarter steroids. Better outcomes.

6 May 2026 - 27 min
episode Asymptomatic Hypertension & Viral Pneumonia — Stop Overtreating artwork

Asymptomatic Hypertension & Viral Pneumonia — Stop Overtreating

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2592753/fan_mail/new] With Special Guest Dr. Austin White In this episode of Inpatient Update, Dr. Mason Turner is joined by hospitalist Dr. Austin White to tackle two everyday controversies that affect nearly every admission: * Asymptomatic inpatient hypertension — are PRN antihypertensives helping… or harming?  * Antibiotics for pneumonia with a positive viral panel — do these patients actually benefit?  Practical take-homes, real-world night shift scenarios, and what to change on rounds tomorrow.  ARTICLES & PUBMED LINKS: As-Needed Blood Pressure Medication and Adverse Outcomes in VA Hospitals JAMA Internal Medicine (2025) Retrospective cohort of hospitalized patients comparing: * Received PRN antihypertensives vs  * No PRN treatment Key Findings *  ↑ Acute kidney injury (HR ~1.23)  *  ↑ Rapid BP drops >25% (HR ~1.5)  *  ↑ Composite outcome (MI, stroke, death) (HR ~1.6)  * IV meds worse than oral  Interpretation *  Treating asymptomatic inpatient hypertension is associated with harm, not benefit  *  Likely mechanism: overcorrection → hypoperfusion Takeaway For asymptomatic hypertension, especially overnight: → Don’t reflexively treat the number → Focus on symptoms and underlying cause Pubmed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39585709/  Antibiotics for Pneumonia with Positive Viral Testing Multicenter Retrospective Study (2015–2024) Compared: * Minimal antibiotics (0–1 day) vs  * Standard CAP treatment (5–7 days) In patients with: *  Positive viral assay  *  Clinical pneumonia (hypoxia, tachypnea, imaging)  Key Findings * No difference in:  *  Mortality  *  ICU admission  *  Length of stay  *  No clear harm signal either  Interpretation *  Many patients with “pneumonia” + viral panel likely have pure viral illness *  Routine antibiotics do not improve outcomes Takeaway → If viral etiology fits the clinical picture,  don’t routinely continue antibiotics Pubmed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41378862/  PRACTICE-CHANGING TAKEAWAYS * Hypertension: *  Treat the patient, not the number  *  PRN antihypertensives for asymptomatic BP may cause harm  * Viral pneumonia: *  Positive viral panel + consistent story → hold antibiotics *  Reassess if clinical course worsens  * Both topics highlight: → We often overtreat out of habit, not evidence CLINICAL PEARLS FROM THE EPISODE *  The body tolerates transient high BP better than rapid drops  *  Overcorrection → ↓ cerebral perfusion → bad outcomes  *  Viral infections (even “mild” ones like rhino/adenovirus) can cause severe illness *  Antibiotic stewardship = patient safety, not just resistance  BOTTOM LINE If you change nothing else this week: *  Stop reflexively treating asymptomatic inpatient hypertension  *  Stop reflexively continuing antibiotics for viral pneumonia  Less intervention. Better outcomes.

22 Apr 2026 - 29 min
episode Simple, High-Impact Changes Hospitalists Are Missing (SHM 2026 Takeaways) artwork

Simple, High-Impact Changes Hospitalists Are Missing (SHM 2026 Takeaways)

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2592753/fan_mail/new] With Special Guest Dr. Emily Reams In this special episode of Inpatient Update, Dr. Mason Turner is joined by hospitalist Dr. Emily Reams to break down the most practice-changing takeaways from SHM Converge 2026. No fluff — just what you can start doing on rounds tomorrow. Topics include: *  Flu shots in heart failure — real mortality benefit  *  Stopping aspirin in patients on DOACs  *  Anticoagulation in AFib despite fall risk  *  Naltrexone for alcohol use disorder — start inpatient  *  Phenobarbital for withdrawal — coming soon  *  Metformin in the hospital — dogma challenged  *  Transfusion thresholds in MI  *  “Things We Do for No Reason” highlights  Practical take-homes and what to actually change this week. Practice-Changing Highlights 💉 Flu shots in heart failure NNT ≈ 17 for death/readmission → Vaccinate before discharge during flu season 💊 Stop aspirin with DOACs ↑ bleeding and mortality without benefit → Stop aspirin ~6–12 months post-stent (most patients) 🧠 AFib + fall risk Benefit >> risk (would need >450 falls/year to offset) → Don’t withhold anticoagulation for falls alone 🍺 Alcohol use disorder * Naltrexone: start before discharge → ↓ cravings, ↓ readmissions  * Phenobarbital: increasing use, likely future standard  💊 Metformin inpatient May be safe in select patients → Consider if GFR ≥30 and no lactic acidosis 🩸 Transfusion in MI Target Hgb ~10 may reduce mortality → Evolving — keep on radar 💊 Anticoagulation updates *  Apixaban preferred over rivaroxaban  *  Reduce dose after 3–6 months for VTE  → Reassess dosing routinely Big Picture *  Biggest wins = simple changes *  Often: stop meds or use basics better *  Hospitalists have high-impact touchpoints  If You Change Nothing Else This Week *  Give flu shots in heart failure  *  Stop aspirin in DOAC patients (when appropriate)  *  Anticoagulate AFib despite fall risk  *  Start naltrexone before discharge  Small changes. Massive reach. Real impact.

8 Apr 2026 - 59 min
episode De-escalating Sepsis Antibiotics & When to Pull the IV (w/ Nicholas Linde, PA) artwork

De-escalating Sepsis Antibiotics & When to Pull the IV (w/ Nicholas Linde, PA)

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2592753/fan_mail/new] Episode 5: De-escalating Sepsis Antibiotics & When to Pull the IV w/ Nicholas Linde, PA With Special Guest Nicholas Linde, PA In this episode of Inpatient Update, Dr. Mason Turner is joined by hospitalist PA Nick Linde to tackle two everyday decisions that impact nearly every inpatient service: * De-escalating broad-spectrum antibiotics in sepsis — is it safe to stop vancomycin and zosyn earlier than we think?  * Routine peripheral IV use — are we leaving IVs in too long and causing harm?  Practical take-homes, real-world cases, and what to change on rounds tomorrow. Articles & PubMed Links Antibiotic De-escalation in Adults Hospitalized With Community-Onset Sepsis JAMA Internal Medicine (2026) Compared: * Continue broad-spectrum antibiotics beyond day 4 vs  * De-escalate at day 4  Key Findings * No difference in 90-day mortality (OR ≈ 1.0)  * Shorter hospital length of stay    * ~1 day shorter (MRSA de-escalation)  * ~2 days shorter (pseudomonal de-escalation)  * No clear harm signal with de-escalation  Takeaway In clinically improving patients with negative or non-MDR cultures, early de-escalation at day 4 is safe and reduces hospital stay. Pubmed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41428290/ [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41428290/]  Things We Do for No Reason™: Routinely Maintaining Intravenous Access in Hospitalized Patients Journal of Hospital Medicine (2026) Key Points * ~25% of inpatient IVs are idle (not in use)  * Peripheral IVs contribute to morbidity:  * ~20% of MSSA bacteremia  When to Remove * No IV medications or fluids needed  * Clinically stable patient  * Oral alternatives available  When to Keep * High risk of decompensation  * Anticipated procedures or IV contrast  * Ongoing electrolyte replacement or IV therapy  Takeaway Peripheral IVs are not benign — if you’re not using it, seriously consider removing it. Pubmed: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12865233/ [https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12865233/]  Practice-Changing Takeaways * Sepsis: At day 4, reassess. If cultures are negative and patient improving, de-escalate broad-spectrum antibiotics.  * IVs: “Use it or lose it.” Idle IVs carry real risk — don’t leave them in by default.  * These are high-frequency decisions → small changes = big impact.

26 Mar 2026 - 39 min
En fantastisk app med et enormt stort udvalg af spændende podcasts. Podimo formår virkelig at lave godt indhold, der takler de lidt mere svære emner. At der så også er lydbøger oveni til en billig pris, gør at det er blevet min favorit app.
En fantastisk app med et enormt stort udvalg af spændende podcasts. Podimo formår virkelig at lave godt indhold, der takler de lidt mere svære emner. At der så også er lydbøger oveni til en billig pris, gør at det er blevet min favorit app.
Rigtig god tjeneste med gode eksklusive podcasts og derudover et kæmpe udvalg af podcasts og lydbøger. Kan varmt anbefales, om ikke andet så udelukkende pga Dårligdommerne, Klovn podcast, Hakkedrengene og Han duo 😁 👍
Podimo er blevet uundværlig! Til lange bilture, hverdagen, rengøringen og i det hele taget, når man trænger til lidt adspredelse.

Choose your subscription

Most popular

Limited Offer

Premium

20 hours of audiobooks

  • Podcasts only on Podimo

  • No ads in Podimo shows

  • Cancel anytime

2 months for 19 kr.
Then 99 kr. / month

Get Started

Premium Plus

Unlimited audiobooks

  • Podcasts only on Podimo

  • No ads in Podimo shows

  • Cancel anytime

Start 7 days free trial
Then 129 kr. / month

Start for free

Only on Podimo

Popular audiobooks

Get Started

2 months for 19 kr. Then 99 kr. / month. Cancel anytime.