-
Categories
-
Tags
3-gene TB score 3DQ laboratory aarhus university Aarthi Chary Academia academic community academic medicine acute myeloid addiction adipose tissue adolescents adult Adverse Events adversity africa aging AI AI in Healthcare AI-Assisted Hospital AIDS air pollution aldehyde metabolism alice milivinti ALL all department meeting all staff meeting allergies allergy allocation Allyship alyce adams AML amyloid analytics anesthesia Angioplasty annual retreat antagonism anthrax anti-hunger antibiotics antibodies antifungal antimicrobial antirac antiracism antiretroviral Antiretroviral Therapy antiviral Aortic Disorders Aortic Stenosis aortitis applied medicine applied physics arterial hypertension arthritis Artificial Intelligence ashkan afshin asian americans asthma at risk Atrial Fibrillation austin autoimmune diseases Azithromycin babies babies in uganda back pain bacteremia bacteria bacteriophages Bangladesh barbecue bartonella bbq bedside medicine bedside teaching behavior behavioral behavioral science benefit concert BeWell bias big data billing Biobanks biochemistry Biodesign bioengineering Bioethics bioinformatics Biomakers biomarker Biomedical Data biomedical ethics biomedical informatics biomedical model Biomedical Research Biomedical science biomedical workplace biomedicine biopharmaceuticals Biospecimen biotechnology bioterrorism birth cohort black and hispanic black lives matter blackburn blood and marrow transplantation blood drive bls blume lecture BMT body bollyky bone bone fractures bone health Bone scans born in bradford botulism brain gut connection Brain Health Brain Injury brain scans Breast Cancer breast cancer outcomes breast feeding Breast Oncology brian brian blackburn bubble budgeting bugs burnout bv“Genomic Landscape of Uveal Melanoma”“Genomic Landscape of Uveal Melanoma” c diff c difficile canary center Cancer cancer care cancer cells Cancer data cancer epidemiology cancer outcomes Cancer Pree cancer prevention cancer research cancer screening Cancer stage Information cancer treatment Cancer treatment needs candidiasis cannabis CAPA Cardiac Care Cardiology Cardiovascular Cardiovascular Disease Cardiovascular Institute cardiovascular medicine Cardiovascular Research cardiovascular surgery care care management career paths Careers CareEverywhere platform case case presentation case studies cases causes cdc cdh cdm dataset cec best practices CEDAR Project cell biology Cell Immune Therapy Cell Immune Tolerance Cell Rearch census census bureau census data center for asian health research and education center for digital health Center for Health Policy Center for Innovation in Global Health Center for Primary Care and Outcomes Research centre for applied education research cerc cesar vargas nunez Change changing etiology chemical and social exposure chicago chief fellows chief residents child development services child health childhood health childhood malnutrition children children's health China chronic diseases chronic fatigue chronic illness cigarettes circulatory support claims claims data Claims-Medical-Rx-Confinements clerkship climate change clinformatics clinic clinical Clinical Case Presentation clinical cases Clinical Data Clinical decision support clinical exam Clinical excellence clinical informatics clinical manifestations clinical protocol Clinical Providers wellbeing Clinical Quality Clinical Research Clinical Research Operations clinical skills clinical studies clinical teaching skills clinical trial design Clinical trials Clinicians clubhouse CME CMV cocci Coccidioidomycosis Coccidioidoycosis cognitive abilities Collecting large data collective trauma colon cancer columbia university combat injury common communication community Community Engagement Community Health community mental health community practice compensation Compliance Computational Genomics computer science Computer-interpretable Guidelines Concussion conflict in medicine conflict of interest connected health consult consultative medicine consumer health care contemplation by design continuing medical education Continuity Continuity of Care controlled trials Coronary artery disease Coronary Disease coronary stenting county public health coverage analysis COVID covid-19 covid19 creativity in medicine credence trial crispr Critical Care crohn's disease CROI culture Culture Change cushing disease CVI Cybele Renault cystic fibrosis cystric fybrosis Cytogenetics dana rose garfin danish populations data data center data quality data resources data science data sets Data sharing data training Data Warehouse datacommons datamart datasets date of death dean dean winslow deaths of despair decision making defense DEI demography dengue denied medical claims department wide event Dermatology design development Device Development diabetes diabetes research diabetes technology diabetic monitoring diagnoses diagnosis diagnostics dialysis Digestive Disease Clinical Conference digestive health digital health digital media digital phenotype digital technologies digitized health discovery discussion disease Disease States diseases disparities dissident doctor Diversity diversity week DNA DOD/SES/ZIPS dom DOM DEI domain-specific donor dora ho dosing drug Drug Combination Challenge Drug Development drug discovery Drug efficacy drug safety Drug Synergy drugs duration DVT early detection easter medicine Ebola ebv ecg interpretation ECHO ECMO economic development economic equity economics Education education outcomes education talks educators efficient health care delivery EHR EHR data EHR technology EHR-Based Studies elderly care electrocardiographic tracings Electronic Data Electronic Documents electronic health information Electronic Health Records electronic medical records Electronic Medical Reocrds electronic phenotyping Electronic Records elliot m tucker-drob ELSI emi lesure emotion employment end of life endocarditis endocrine oncology endocrinology endovascular engineering ENT environment environment-gene interaction environmental environmental health environmental influences EPIC epidemic epidemiological data epidemiology epigentics equity equity in medicine eRA Commons esophagus ethical legal and social implications ethics ethiopia etiologic studies evolution extremely large databases eye faculty faculty development faculty event faculty events faculty forum faculty happy hour faculty meeting faculty networking failure family id fatty liver fbi FDA FDA Inspection FDA Regulations febrile febrile neutropenia federal statistical research fellows didactic fellowship program fever fireside chat first 1000 days flukes fmig food allergies Food Systems Informatics foodborne illness forgive for good frederic luskin frontiers in diabetes fsrdc fungal Fungus gastric cancer gastroenterology gastroenterology and hepatology gastroesophagael reflex disease GD2 CAR T-cell Therapy gen silent gender gender dichotomies gender norm gender variables gene expression gene therapy General GI genetic genetic architecture genetic control genetic disease genetic origins genetic variants Genetics genetics and environment genome genome-wide data genomes genomic data Genomics GenoScan genotype genotypes geographic medicine Geriatrics gi GI Oncology GI Research Conference Gina Suh glenn steele global aging global burden of disease Global Health global health economics Global Oncology GMD Good Clinical Practice (GCP) google google street view vcars gram negative gram positive grand aides Grand Roun Grand Round Grand Rounds grant writing grants guatemala guide gun safety GWAS hacking healthcare handwashing HCT health health and disparities Health and Wellness Health Behaviors health care Health care information Health care insurance Health care markets health care outcomes health care systems Health data Health Disparities health educational systems Health Equity Health Information technology health initiative Health IT health metrics health mobility health outcomes health plus plus health policies health policy health related data health research health research and policy health sciences health statistics health transformation alliance Healthcare Healthcare database Healthcare information healthcare innovation healthcare IT Healthcare knowledge graph healthcare research healthcare research & quality healthcare workers Healthy Diet heart heart failure heart health heatlh policy help center hemapoetic Hematology Hematopoiesis hepatitis hepatitis c hepatology herpes herpes simplex Heterogeneous public data hewlett award hhv HIE high blood pressure high-risk Histone proteins history of medicine HIV HIV Journal Club holiday holiday party hormones hospitalist hosts howard hu hsv human human development human development survey Human genome Human Gut human mind Human Subjects Protection hypertension hypoxic IBD ICDS ichs ID ID Grand Rounds ID journal ID Lecture Series IDSA IDWeek ild illness imaging immigration immune Immune system immunity immunocompromised immunodeficiency Immunology immunomodulators immunosuppresion immunosuppression Immunotherapy inclusion inclusion 2020 inclusion 2021 inclusion 2022 inclusion 2023 inclusion 2024 inclusion rounds inclusive workplace inclusivity IncRNAs india inequities infecious diseases infection infections Infectious Diseaes infectious disease infectious Diseases Infectious GI infertility inflammation Influenza Informatics information technology Informed Consent innovative institutional approval insulin resistance intergenerational Internal Medicine internet industry internet of things internet saathi interoperability interstitial lung disease intra-abdominal ipums irritable bowel disease ISEXS jack rowe jackie ferguson james faghmous jason fletcher jerry reaven memorial jo robinson john groopman john w rowe joint Joint replacement joints jonathan fisher jonathan j king lecture jonathan kolstad Jonathan Li jose jose g montoya juneteenth junior faculty k award application kaiser permanente northern california kalanithi award kappagoda kayla kinsler keith wailoo kenetoplasts kidney Kidney Disease Kidney Stone Kidney Transplant kidneys lab lab-based research lambda language of functioning lauren gaydosh lawrence h kushi leadership leadership in healthcare learning collaborative Learning healthcare legal studies lesley park leukemia lgbtq+ life adversity line line infection line infections liver liver cancer liver inflammation long covid low returns lucy kalanithi lung cancer lung disease lupus Lupus Nephritis lyme disease lymphatic lymphoma machine learning machine-age tools MachineProse Malaria marcell alsan Marfan Syndrome marquitta white marriage patterens maternal health maternal health research MD MDS meaningful work medicaid medical medical apps medical care medical education Medical Image medical imaging medical practice medical technology Medical Terminology medicare Medicine medicine grand rounds Meditation meeting meeting with chief fellows Melanoma memorable presentations meningitis mental health mental health outcomes mental health services Mentorship meta analysis meta-data metabolic health methamphetamines methods methylation michael lindenmayer microaggressions microbes microbiology Microbiome Mindfulness minorities misdiagnoses MMSc mobile devices mobile medical apps modeling modern medicine molecular biology Molecular Genetics molecular imaging program Monitoring monoclonal montoya morbidity mortality movement MPNs mulit-ethnic birth cohort multi drug multi-disciplinary multi-omics mycobacterial disease Myeloma myocarditis narrative in medicine national center for health statistics National Disability Employment Awareness Month national immigration national longitudinal study National Lung Screening Trial national registry natural killer cells natural killers Natural language processing nba NCBI NCDs nchs neha barjatya nematodes neourology Nephrology networking Neurobiology neurodegeneration neurology neuromodulation neuroplasticity Neuroscience neurosciences Neurosurgery neutropenia new england jouranl of medicine newborn survival next generation nicole bush NIH NIH Clinical Center nipah nlp nodules Non-compliance Non-Human Subjects Research noninvasive NSCLC nuclear medicine nutrition nutrition science oakridge national laboratory ORNL obesity obesity management Observational Health Sciences and Informatics obstetrics and gynecology Oncology oncore Ontologies ophthalmology opioid opioid epidemic opportunistic infections opportunities Optimism optum optum data organ organ transplant Organ Transplantation ORSL orthopaedics orthopedics Osteoarthritis Osteoblast osteomyelitis osteoporosis otolaryngology outcomes P.Ananadan pacific islander health Pain Management Pain Medicine pain relief Palliative Care pandemic paradox parasites parasitic parent-child pairs parkinsons pathogens Pathology Pathophysiology pathways patient Patient Adherence Patient Care Patient Education patient engagement Patient Safety patient value patients Patietn Saety paul payer claims data pcha-uha pcp PCPH Pediatric Nephrology Pediatric Oncology pediatrics Peptides performance art PERFUSE perioperative care personalized health technology Personalized Medicine PGS phage-bacterial collaboration pharmaceutical Pharmacogenomics pharmacy PHATE PhDs Phenotype Phil Grant Philip Grant philipp koellinger phind PHIND seminar phs data phs trainees phsyiology phylogenetics Physical Examination physical health physician burnout Physician wellbeing physician-hospital integration physiology Placebo Placebo Effect plague plasticity pneumonia podcast policies policy policy intervention policy makers policy researchers policymakers pollutants population population based health Population Health population health sciences populations post docs post treatment Postoperative Outcomes PPCM practice-based research precision health precision medicine preclinical work prediction Predictive Models pregnancy pregnant premature death prenatal Prescription drugs presence preventative care Preventative Medicine prevention Prevention Research prevention studies Preventive Cardiology preventive care pride pride study Primary Care primary care and population health procedure codes products professional stress project baseline project brave heart promotion promotions prophylaxis Prostate cancer prostate gland prostatitis prosthetic provider tables Psychiatric Emergencies Psychiatric First aid Psychiatry psychological responses Psychology PTSD pubic safety Public Health Publication models publish Pulmonary pulmonary and critical care pulmonary critical care Pulmonary Diseases Pulmonary Fibrosis Pulmonary Health Pulmonary Hypertension quality care Quality Improvement Quality Incidents Quality Management quality oncology care quantitative imaging r2g2 racial disparities racial/ethnic minority Radiogenomics Radiology Radiology notes Radiomics rahul panicker randomize evaluations randomized controlled trial rare diseases rash reappointment recipients recovery trial Recruitment redwood city refugee health Regenerative Medicine remote learning reproductive medicine research research and infrastructure Research Human Subjects research tips researchers residency residency research program resilience Resistance resistant respirator respiratory Responsibilities returning rheumatic diseases rheumatology rhonda mcclinton-brown RIP risk factors risky behaviors robert shafer rubenstein lecture rv guha sam gambhir sampling sandro galea sanitation santa clara county santa rosa community health Sarcoma sccr school of medicine scientific writing secondary education self-care self-insured seminar SEPI sepsis septic sequencing serious illness services investment severe sex sex and gender sex differences sexual harassment sexually transmitted sgm shanthi simulation modeling skin skin/soft tissue sleep sleep health Sleep Medicine slow medicine smallpox smart sanitation social social challenges social determinants social genomics social media social mobility social services societal aging socioculture socioeconomic soft tissue spatial scales spectroscopy spectrum Spinal Conditions spine issues Spirituality Sports Medicine SPRC staff staff event staff meeting stanford 25 stanford cancer institute stanford center for clinical research stanford diabetes research center Stanford-China staph staph aureus Staphylococcal Infection startup startx state of department state of the department statistical learning statistical research statistics STD stem cells stephanie leonard stewardship STI stress stress test Stroke structural racism stuck at home concert students study study budgets Study Design suicide prevention superior canal dehiscence supplements Surgery suzan carmichael sven van egmond swelling Symposium synapse systemic Systems systems biology tata trusts teaching teaching medicine technology telemedicine temperature testosterone theranostics therapy thoracic Thoracic Oncology tick borne ticks tina hernandez-boussard Tobacco and Drug Use toxoplasmosis trainees training trans-disciplinary Transcriptional Data transgender health translational translational oncology translational research translational researcha transplant Transplant Immunology transplantation trauma Travel travelers traveling treatment trematodes trial management Trial Master File tropical diseases Tropical Medicine troponin truven Tuberculosis tularemia tumor type 2 diabetes ucla undiagnosed unique data sets university of texas unknown origin updates urban urinary tract infection Urologic Malignancy UTI vacation vaccination vaccine vaccines Valley Fever vanderbilt university variants Vascular Physiology vasculitis Veterans victoria udalova viral Viral Threats Virology virtual virtual data virtual reality virus Viruses vulnerable populations vzv wadhwani ai Wadhwani Institute wall street water water related wearable technologies wearable technology wearables Web Ontology Language Webinar weight management Wellbeing wellmd wellness western medicine when breath becomes air whsdm WikiDoc wildfires willem h ouwehand winslow women in medicine women in science and engineering women's education women's faculty luncheon women's faculty networking women's health work life balance work purpose working groups world bank World Health Organization worms writing a cv Yoga youth zika zoom tips
Presenter: Michaela Liedtke, MD
Assistant Professor of Medicine (Hematology)
Stanford University
Michaela Liedtke is an assistant professor of hematology at Stanford University. She received her medical degree from Medizinische Hochschule Hannover in Germany. View her CAP profile here.
Presenter: Andrew Pipe, MD
Chief, Division of Prevention and Rehabilitation
University of Ottawa Heart Institute
Dr. Andrew Pipe is Chief of the Division of Prevention and Rehabilitation at the University of Ottawa Heart Institute and Professor in the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Ottawa. He received his MD from Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario, in 1974.
Dr. Pipe is Canada’s foremost expert on smoking cessation. He was instrumental in the development of the widely adopted Ottawa Model for Smoking Cessation at the Heart Institute.
Recognized as one of Canada’s leading experts in cardiovascular disease prevention, physical activity and health, and smoking cessation, Dr. Pipe has addressed audiences in over 30 nations and is frequently consulted on issues related to tobacco use and smoking cessation, drug use in sport, and physical activity and health. A former Chair of Physicians for a Smoke-Free Canada, Dr. Pipe is the recipient of the Canadian Cardiovascular Society Dr. Harold N. Segall Award of Merit.
In addition to his clinical responsibilities, Dr. Pipe has been extensively involved in sports and sport medicine for many years. He is currently President of the Commonwealth Games Association of Canada. He served as a physician at ten Olympic Games and has been Team Physician for Canada’s National Men’s Basketball Team since 1978. He served as Chair of the Canadian Centre for Ethics in Sport from its inception until 2003.
Dr. Pipe is the recipient of the International Olympic Committee’s Award for Sport, Health and Well-being, and is a member of the Canadian Olympic Hall of Fame. He has received honourary degrees from Queen’s University (LLD); Brock University (DSc) in St. Catharines, Ontario; and the University of Guelph (DSc) in Guelph, Ontario. He was formerly Vice Chair of the Board of Trustees at Queen’s University. In 2002 Dr. Pipe was named to the Order of Canada.
Presenters: Mary M. Horowitz, MD, MS
Professor and Chief, Division of Hematology and Oncology
Medical College of Wisconsin
Dr. Mary Horowitz currently holds the Robert A. Uihlein, Jr. Chair in Hematologic Research and is a tenured Professor of Medicine and Chief of the Division of Hematology and Oncology at the Medical College of Wisconsin (MCW), where she is also an active blood and marrow transplant physician. She is also Chief Scientific Director of the Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant Research. She received MCW’s Distinguished Service Award in June 2006, MCW’s highest honor. In 2010, Dr. Horowitz received the American Society of Hematology Mentor Award. The award recognizes scientists who have dedicated their life to the process of guiding, supporting and promoting the training and career development of their junior colleagues. In 2014, Dr. Horowitz received the American Society of Blood and Marrow Transplant’s Lifetime Achievement Award in recognition of her contributions to the advancement of transplantation as a therapy for life-threatening diseases.
Dr. Horowitz is a member of the editorial boards of the journals Blood, Bone Marrow Transplantation, and Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation. She has served on the Board of Directors of the National Marrow Donor Program (NMDP) and as a member of the NMDP’s International Affairs Committee and, Research and Publications committees. Dr. Horowitz has served on the National Cancer Institute’s Cancer Clinical Investigation Review Committee, as well as on numerous advisory committees for public and private agencies, including the Data Safety and Monitoring Board of the National Heart Lung and Blood Institute’s Cord Blood Transplant Study, the Scientific Tumor Advisory Committee of the United Network for Organ Sharing, the Advisory Committee for the National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Disease Immune Tolerance Network and the 2005 Institute of Medicine Panel for Cord Blood Transplantation. She is the Principal Investigator of the Data and Coordinating Center of the U.S. Blood and Marrow Transplant Clinical Trials Network. She is also the Research and Project Director of the U.S. Stem Cell Therapeutic Outcomes Database, a component of the C.W. Bill Young Cell Transplantation Program, charged with collecting and assessing outcome data for all U.S. allogeneic transplants.
Dr. Horowitz has given more than 200 invited presentations on the subject of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. Her research focuses on analysis of transplant outcomes with more than 250 papers in the biomedical literature.
Presenters: Nancy Berliner, MD
Chief, Division of Hematology
Harvard Medical School
Nancy Berliner served as the American Society of Hematology President in 2009. She is currently Chief of the Division of Hematology and Brigham and Women’s Hospital and a Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School.
Presenter: Crystal Mackall, MD
Professor of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology and Medicine Stanford University
Click HERE to register!
The mission of the Stanford Center for Clinical Research (SCCR) includes offering educational resources, training, and support for investigators and research staff. We have invited Clinical Assistant Professor of Orthopedic Surgery, Emily Kraus, MD, to present on the basics of Sports Medicine and sports related injuries. Injuries in sports are common and can lead to the premature end of a season or even an athletic career. This talk will review the role of the sports medicine physician in the athlete’s care providing, followed by a discussion of the epidemiology, risk factors, types of sports injuries, and management approach.
At the conclusion of this class, you will be able to:
- Understand the role of the sports medicine physician in the care of the athlete
- Define acute and chronic sports injury
- Define a concussion (mild traumatic brain injury)
- Understand the epidemiology and risk factors of sports injuries
- Explore new research and concepts related to sports injuries
- Understand the most common types of sports injuries and approach to management
Attendance is open to all research staff
About the Instructor:
Emily Kraus, MD, is a Clinical Assistant Professor at Stanford Children’s Orthopedic and Sports Medicine Center. She specializes in Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation (PM&R) sports medicine and takes a unique approach to the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of sports injuries in athletes of all ages. She is involved in multiple Stanford IRB-approved research projects, including The Healthy Runner Project, a multicenter prospective interventional study focused on bone stress injury prevention in collegiate middle and long distance runners. Dr. Kraus also spends time performing gait analysis at the Stanford Run Safe Injury Prevention Program and serves as a medical advisors for the Adaptive Sports Injury Prevention Program at the Palo Alto VA. She has research and clinical interests in endurance sports medicine, injury prevention, running biomechanics, the prevention of bone stress injuries in collegiate athletes and the promotion of health and wellness at any age of life. She has completed seven marathons including Boston Marathon twice and one 50k ultramarathon. With running and staying physically active as one of her personal passions, she recognizes the importance of fitness for overall wellbeing and the prevention of chronic medical conditions.
Presenter: Ravindra Majeti MD, PhD
Pofessor of Hematology, Chief of the Division of Hematology, and Member of the Institute for Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine, Stanford University
Ravi Majeti MD, PhD is Professor of Medicine, Chief of the Division of Hematology, and Member of the Institute for Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine at the Stanford University School of Medicine. He was an undergraduate at Harvard, earned his MD and PhD from UCSF, and trained in Internal Medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. Dr. Majeti completed his Hematology Fellowship at Stanford, and is a board-certified hematologist. While at Stanford, he completed post-doctoral training in the laboratory of Irving Weissman, where he investigated acute myeloid leukemia (AML) stem cells and therapeutic targeting with anti-CD47 antibodies. With Dr. Weissman, he developed a humanized anti-CD47 antibody, initiated first-in-human clinical trials. Dr. Majeti directs an active NIH-funded laboratory that focuses on the molecular characterization and therapeutic targeting of leukemia stem cells in human hematologic disorders, particularly AML, and has published >90 peer-reviewed articles. He is a recipient of the Burroughs Wellcome Career Award for Medical Scientists, the New York Stem Cell Foundation Robertson Investigator Award, and the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society Scholar Award. Dr. Majeti is currently a member of the Committee on Scientific Affairs for the American Society of Hematology (ASH) and serves of the editorial board of Blood and eLife.
The 2021 Stanford Review of the 62nd Annual ASH Conference will highlight cutting-edge research and data on hematologic disorders presented at the webinar, as well as provide participants with updated treatment algorithms and strategies for optimizing the care of their patients. The webinar will utilize a variety of learning modalities, including case studies, panel discussions, and audience response questions, to facilitate meaningful interactions between expert faculty presenters and symposium participants. Click here to register.
Registration fee includes course materials and certificate of participation.
Registration Rate:
Physicians: $75
Nurses & Allied Health Professionals: $75
Tuition may be paid by Visa, MasterCard or check. Your email address is used for critical information, including registration confirmation, evaluation, and certificate. Be sure to include an email address that you check frequently. If you prefer to pay by phone or check, please contact the Stanford Center for CME at (650) 497-8554 for assistance.
STAP-eligible employees can use STAP funds towards the registration fees for this activity. Complete the STAP Reimbursement Request Form and submit to your department administrator.
AMA PRA Category 1 Credits™ (6.50 hours), Non-Physician Participation Credit (6.50 hours)
- Evaluate the use of new chemotherapeutics and biologics in subpopulations of acute myeloid leukemia patients based on patient clinical and genetic profiles
- To review new drug approvals and practical considerations for their safe and optimal use
- Evaluate optimal sequencing and combinations of novel agents for CLL and lymphomas
- To use case-based discussions to evaluate the role of new therapies in non-malignant hematology indications
- Incorporate available therapeutic options for patients with low- or high-risk myelodysplastic syndromes and utilize the revised international prognostic scoring system (IPSS-R) with new mutation data to classify patients for treatment
The Stanford University School of Medicine is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) to provide continuing medical education for physicians.
Credit Designation
The Stanford University School of Medicine designates this Live Activity for a maximum of 6.50 AMA PRA Category 1 CreditsTM. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.
The California Board of Registered Nursing recognizes that Continuing Medical Education (CME) is acceptable for meeting RN continuing education requirements as long as the course is certified for AMA PRA Category 1 CreditsTM (rn.ca.gov). Nurses will receive a Certificate of Participation following this activity that may be used for license renewal.
Cancellation Policy
Cancellations received in writing no less than 20 days before the course will be refunded, less a 20% administrative fee. No refunds will be made on cancellations received after that date. Please send cancellation requests to stanfordcme@stanford.edu.
Stanford University School of Medicine reserves the right to cancel or postpone this program if necessary; in the event of cancellation, course fees will be fully refunded. We are not responsible for other costs incurred such as non-refundable airline tickets or hotel penalties.
Accessibility Statement
Stanford University School of Medicine is committed to ensuring that its programs, services, goods and facilities are accessible to individuals with disabilities as specified under Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and the Americans with Disabilities Amendments Act of 2008. If you have needs that require special accommodations, including dietary concerns, please contact the CME Conference Coordinator.
Cultural and Linguistic Competency
The planners and speakers of this CME activity have been encouraged to address cultural issues relevant to their topic area for the purpose of complying with California Assembly Bill 1195. Moreover, the Stanford University School of Medicine Multicultural Health Portal contains many useful cultural and linguistic competency tools including culture guides, language access information and pertinent state and federal laws. You are encouraged to visit the Multicultural Health Portal: http://lane.stanford.edu/portals/cultural.html
For activity related questions, please contact
Name: Mary Sisney
Title: Marketing & Meeting Planning Specialist
Ph: (530) 680-0695
Email: msisney@stanford.edu
For CME general questions, please contact
Ph: (650)-497-8554
Email: stanfordcme@stanford.edu