Articles matching the ‘Patient Care’ Category

January 6th, 2026

How the Z-Pak Took Over Outpatient Medicine, Part 2: The Reckoning

Part 1 of this azithromycin series explained how the drug became ubiquitous. In Part 2, we’ll explore why many of us infectious diseases physicians now groan when they hear the words, “They already started a Z-Pak.” Because what began as a genuine pharmacologic advance became, through sheer volume of use, an antibiotic that doesn’t work […]


December 29th, 2025

How the Z-Pak Took Over Outpatient Medicine

Chances are, across this great land of ours, right at this very moment, someone is coughing, or sneezing, or struggling with a sore throat, or some combination of the above, and taking the antibiotic azithromycin. Or they might be just fevering, with no discernible cause, and still they’re taking azithromycin. They might have obtained it […]


December 17th, 2025

What Use Is the Physical Examination in Current Medical Practice?

A very interesting, quite scholarly perspective appeared in the NEJM last month called, “Strategies to Reinvigorate the Bedside Clinical Encounter.” Drawing plenty of attention on social media, it elicited the usual hand-wringing from clinicians who bemoaned the way modern medicine has evolved — away from direct care of patients and toward an ever-expanding reliance on […]


October 28th, 2025

Two Covid Vaccine Studies — One Actionable, the Other Not So Much

As we await the results of placebo-controlled Covid-19 vaccine studies, what are we clinicians to do when our patients ask us whether they should get a booster this fall? What once was a no-brainer in the early days of limited immunity to the virus — and the spectacular results of the first placebo-controlled trials — […]


October 10th, 2025

DOTS: Optimism Around a “Negative” Dalbavancin Trial

The DOTS randomized clinical trial of dalbavancin versus standard-of-care for Staph aureus bacteremia (SAB) just landed in JAMA, where it undoubtedly will be featured in numerous ID, hospitalist, and medical resident journal clubs over the next several months. Proof:  one of our great second-year ID fellows tagged it immediately for his journal club literally the […]


August 16th, 2025

Anal Cancer Screening in HIV: When Guidelines Get Ahead of the Evidence

Should every person with HIV over age 35 (if MSM or transgender woman) or 45 (everyone else) have an anal Pap smear, a digital anal rectal exam (DARE), and possibly a high-resolution anoscopy every 1–2 years? According to recent guidelines, yes. But here’s the problem: we don’t know if this screening effort actually prevents cancer. […]


July 25th, 2025

Who Gets Sent to ID Clinic? A Field Guide to Outpatient Referrals

Sometimes people ask me what kind of cases get referred to ID doctors in the outpatient setting. Despite what the latest television series might suggest, it’s rarely suspected Ebola (fortunately) or Tsutsugamushi fever — a disease that is much more fun to say by its Japanese name than its common one, scrub typhus. (In Japanese, “tsutsuga” […]


June 27th, 2025

The Mystery of the Isolated Hepatitis B Core Antibody, Solved

(A post inspired by years of doing eConsults, an extremely common query about hepatitis B testing, and the latest BritBox series, “Core Antibody Confidential,” starring a grizzled detective with a faded suit and a haunted past.) Your electronic medical record lists “deficiencies” in health care maintenance for one of your patients, so you order hepatitis […]


June 12th, 2025

Why the Sudden Firing of ACIP Members Should Put Every Clinician on High Alert

There are certain irrefutable verities when, like me, you’re an infectious diseases specialist married to a pediatrician. Here are our top two, which are deeply interrelated: Infectious deaths in children, or severe illnesses that lead to lifelong disability, are more devastating than similar events in adults. Each such case in a baby or child is […]


June 6th, 2025

How ID Doctors Get Paid, Part 3: The Grab Bag Edition

If you’ve made it this far, congratulations! You’re now deep into the ID Reimbursement Rabbit Hole. Part 1 and Part 2 covered how ID doctors contribute immense value through patient care, stewardship, infection control, travel clinics — proudly fighting along the way for appropriate compensation as the “Loss Leaders” of the hospital. (Did you get […]


HIV Information: Author Paul Sax, M.D.

Paul E. Sax, MD

Associate Editor

NEJM Clinician

Biography | Disclosures & Summaries

Learn more about HIV and ID Observations.