Test Your Knowledge of Urgent Care Evaluation and Management of Acute Bronchitis (Postscript 2 of 2)

Evidence-Based Urgent Care Postscript
Urgent Care Evaluation and Management of Acute Bronchitis | May 2026

A 35-year-old woman, mother of 4 young children, presents to urgent care with 7 days of cough, now productive of yellow-green sputum. She reports that 2 of her children were home sick last week with “the flu.” She reports fevers, increasing fatigue, and shortness of breath over the past 2 days. She thought the cough would “go away,” but now her symptoms have worsened.

Her past medical history is unremarkable, except for being a former smoker. Her vital signs are: temperature, 38.5°C; blood pressure, 120/72 mm Hg; heart rate, 112 beats/min; respiratory rate, 24 breaths/min; and O₂ saturation, 92% on room air. She appears ill and coughs frequently. On lung examination, she does not have wheezing but there are focal crackles in the right lower lung field.

Which of the following findings most strongly supports pneumonia rather than acute bronchitis in this patient?

  1. Focal crackles on lung examination
  2. Yellow-green sputum
  3. Duration of cough for 7 days and progressive symptoms
  4. Fatigue and that her children had been ill

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