Explore every episode of the podcast Inpatient Update
Dive into the complete episode list for Inpatient Update. Each episode is cataloged with detailed descriptions, making it easy to find and explore specific topics. Keep track of all episodes from your favorite podcast and never miss a moment of insightful content.
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 ā are PRN antihypertensives helping⦠or harming?Ā
Antibiotics for pneumonia with a positive viral panel ā do these patients actually benefit?Ā
Practical take-homes, real-world night shift scenarios, and what to change on rounds tomorrow.Ā
Articles & PubMed Links:
As-Needed Blood Pressure Medication and Adverse Outcomes in VA Hospitals
JAMA Internal Medicine (2025)
Retrospective cohort of hospitalized patients comparing:
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 ā just what you can start doing on rounds tomorrow.
Topics include:
Ā Flu shots in heart failure ā real mortality benefitĀ
Ā Stopping aspirin in patients on DOACsĀ
Ā Anticoagulation in AFib despite fall riskĀ
Ā Naltrexone for alcohol use disorder ā start inpatientĀ
Ā Phenobarbital for withdrawal ā coming soonĀ
Ā Metformin in the hospital ā dogma challengedĀ
Ā Transfusion thresholds in MIĀ
Ā āThings We Do for No Reasonā highlightsĀ
Practical take-homes and what to actually change this week.
Practice-Changing Highlights
š Flu shots in heart failure NNT ā 17 for death/readmission ā Vaccinate before discharge during flu season
š Stop aspirin with DOACs ā bleeding and mortality without benefit ā Stop aspirin ~6ā12 months post-stent (most patients)
š§ AFib + fall risk Benefit >> risk (would need >450 falls/year to offset) ā Donāt withhold anticoagulation for falls alone
šŗ Alcohol use disorder
Naltrexone: start before discharge ā ā cravings, ā readmissionsĀ
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 ā is it safe to stop vancomycin and zosyn earlier than we think?Ā
Routine peripheral IV use ā are we leaving IVs in too long and causing harm?Ā
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 vsĀ
De-escalate at day 4Ā
Key Findings
No difference in 90-day mortality (OR ā 1.0)Ā
Shorter hospital length of stayĀ Ā
~1 day shorter (MRSA de-escalation)Ā
~2 days shorter (pseudomonal de-escalation)Ā
No clear harm signal with de-escalationĀ
Takeaway
In clinically improving patients with negative or non-MDR cultures, early de-escalation at day 4 is safe and reduces hospital stay.
In this episode of Inpatient Update, Dr. Mason Turner is joined by hospitalist Dr. Kevin Baker to discuss two studies that challenge long-held dogma in inpatient medicine:
Faster correction of hypernatremia ā is the traditional āgo slowā rule actually harming patients?
Dalbavancin for Staph aureus bacteremia (DOTS Trial) ā can two long-acting antibiotic injections replace weeks of IV therapy and PICC lines?
Practical take-homes, real-world discussion, and what to change on rounds tomorrow (with a couple of bourbons).
Articles & PubMed Links
Clinical outcomes of early fast compared to slow sodium correction rate in adults with severe hypernatremia: A comparative effectiveness study
Journal of Critical Care (2025)
Key Findings
Faster correction associated with lower 30-day mortality
Shorter ICU length of stay
Shorter hospital length of stay
No signal for neurologic complications from rapid correction
Supporting data from prior studies:
2023 JAMA observational cohort Faster correction associated with lower mortality No neurologic complications reported
2025 Journal of Critical Care meta-analysis Faster correction not associated with worse outcomes
Takeaway
For adult hypernatremia, especially in critically ill patients, more aggressive correction appears safe and may improve outcomes.
Pubmed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41240509/
Dalbavancin for Treatment of Staphylococcus aureus Bacteremia: The DOTS Randomized Clinical Trial
JAMA 2025
Compared:
Standard Therapy
4ā8 weeks IV antibiotics
Cefazolin / anti-staphylococcal penicillin (MSSA)
Vancomycin or daptomycin (MRSA)
vs
Dalbavancin Strategy
1500 mg IV day 1
1500 mg IV day 8
Long-acting lipoglycopeptide with ~14-day half-life, allowing completion of therapy without PICC lines.
Population
Complicated Staph aureus bacteremia
Key Results
Clinical efficacy:
Dalbavancin: 73%
Standard therapy: 72%
Microbiologic success:
Dalbavancin: 98.8%
Standard therapy: 96.3%
Met criteria for non-inferiority.
Takeaway
For selected patients with cleared Staph aureus bacteremia, two doses of dalbavancin may replace weeks of IV antibiotics and PICC lines.
Potential advantages:
Avoids central line complications
Simplifies discharge planning
Useful in patients with difficult social situations or IV access concerns
Pubmed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40802264/
Practice-Changing Takeaways
Hypernatremia: Faster correction appears safe in adults and IMPROVES mortality.
Staph bacteremia: Long-acting dalbavancin offers a PICC-free alternative for completing therapy in selected patients.
Hospital medicine continues to move toward shorter and simpler antibiotic strategies.
Stop the Aspirin in CAD? Shorter Antibiotics for Bacteremia? (with Dr. Andres Ospina)
In this episode of Inpatient Update, Dr. Mason Turner is joined by Dr. Andres Ospina, fellow hospitalist, to discuss two recent trials with immediate impact on hospital practice:
Aspirin plus anticoagulation in chronic coronary disease (AQUATIC Trial) ā does keeping aspirin help or harm when long-term anticoagulation is started?
Seven vs fourteen days of antibiotics for bloodstream infection (BALANCE Trial) ā can we safely cut bacteremia treatment in half?
Practical take-homes, clear links to the evidence, and what to change on rounds tomorrow.
Articles & PubMed Links
Aspirin in Patients with Chronic Coronary Syndrome Receiving Oral Anticoagulation (AQUATIC Trial)
New England Journal of Medicine (October 2025)
Key Findings:
Higher morbidity and mortality with dual therapy (HR 1.53)
Bottom Line: In stable CAD >6 months from revascularization, if anticoagulation is started, stop the aspirin.
In Episode 2 of Inpatient Update, your host, Dr. Mason Turner, breaks down three studies that could change what you do on rounds tomorrow:
Phenobarbital for alcohol withdrawal ā fewer admissions and shorter ED stays during the IV lorazepam shortage natural experiment.
Conservative dialysis in AKI requiring RRT (LIBERATE-D) ā less routine dialysis, more kidney recovery?
Postoperative transfusion thresholds in highācardiac-risk patients (TOP Trial) ā is 7 still enough?
Articles & PubMed Links
Fewer Admissions, Shorter Stays: Phenobarbital Use for Alcohol Withdrawal in the Emergency Department Academic Emergency Medicine (2025) PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41147831/
A Conservative Dialysis Strategy and Kidney Function Recovery in Dialysis-Requiring Acute Kidney Injury (LIBERATE-D Trial) JAMA ( 2026) PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41201895/
Liberal or Restrictive Postoperative Transfusion in Patients at High Cardiac Risk: The TOP Randomized Clinical Trial JAMA (2025) PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41205227/
REACH OUT:
Have insight into inpatient medicine? Ā Article suggestion? Ā Interested in being a guest?
Email or DM me.Ā
Follow and subscribe wherever you listen so you never miss the next update.
Pilot Episode: ERCP Antibiotics, Apixaban Dose in Cancer, and Early Beta-Blockers in Cirrhosis
In this pilot episode of Inpatient Update, your host, Dr. Mason Turner, breaks down three clinically relevant studies that could change how you practice tomorrow on the wards:
Pre-ERCP antibiotic prophylaxis ā does it reduce post-procedure infections in biliary obstruction?
Reduced-dose apixaban after 6 months in cancer-associated VTE ā noninferior and potentially safer?
Early initiation of beta-blockers in cirrhosis with uncomplicated ascites ā early signals of benefit.
Practical take-homes, clear links to evidence, and what to tell your team on rounds.
Articles & PubMed Links
Is Antibiotic Prophylaxis Warranted in All Patients With Biliary Obstruction Undergoing Endoscopic Retrograde Cholangiopancreatography?: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40961256/Ā
Efficacy and Safety of Carvedilol in Cirrhosis Patients With New-Onset Uncomplicated Ascites Without High-Risk Esophageal Varices (CARVE-AS Trial) PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40689908/Ā