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Funding: This study was funded by the medical science and technology foundation of Guangdong province in 2010 (No. A2010553), the planned science and technology project of Shenzhen municipality in 2011 (No. 201102078) and the nonprofit scientific research project of Futian district in 2011 (No. FTWS201120).
Disclosures: All authors report no conflict of interest.
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- Notice of Overlapping Publication: Priority for Treatment and Intensive Care of Patients With Nonsevere Community-Acquired Pneumonia [Li et al. Am J Med Sci, 2018; 356(4):329]The American Journal of the Medical SciencesVol. 358Issue 2
- PreviewThe Editorial Office wishes to disclose overlapping publications. In the October 2018 issue of The American Journal of the Medical Sciences, we published “Priority for Treatment and Intensive Care of Patients With Non-Severe Community-Acquired Pneumonia” by Li et al. The database used in this manuscript overlapped or partly overlapped with databases used in other published articles including Li et al. Am J Med Sci, 2015, 350(3): 186; Li et al. Medicine, 2015, 94(36):e1474; Guo et al. Respir Res, 2019, 20(1):22; and Guo et al.
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- Putting the CAP on ICU Admissions: Can Clinical Prediction Tools Help Determine Appropriate Site of Care?The American Journal of the Medical SciencesVol. 356Issue 4
- PreviewCommunity-acquired pneumonia (CAP) is the most common cause of infectious disease related mortality and a major burden to hospital and intensive care unit (ICU) resources.1 Clinical prediction rules such as the Pneumonia Severity Index (PSI) and CURB-65 have been developed to assess severity of illness to help determine the appropriate site of treatment and potentially avoid overutilization of these finite resources.2 Patients with PSI Class IV-V and CURB-65 scores 2-5 have a predicted mortality of 8.2% and 9.2%, respectively.
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