Friday, January 29, 2027

  • 01/24/2027 - 6:30am to 01/29/2027 - 1:00pm
    January 24 - 29, 2027 - Hyatt Regency Maui Resort and Spa - Lahaina, Hawaii This course offers Live (in-person) and Livestream (virtual) attendance options Mayo Clinic's Selected Topics in Internal Medicine (STIM) is a postgraduate course designed to update general internists, internist-subspecialists, family medicine specialists, and other primary healthcare professionals on selected internal medicine topics. Some of the most common problems encountered in clinical practice are represented. Course focus is clinical pearls and practice updates. Presentations are made by experts from various disciplines in internal medicine and faculty members are available during breaks to answer questions and to discuss cases with course participants.
  • 01/29/2027 - 8:00am to 01/30/2027 - 4:00pm
    January 29, 2027 - Mayo Clinic Franke Education Center - Phoenix, Arizona This course offers Live (in-person) and Livestream (virtual) attendance options Primary care represents the “front entryway” into the healthcare system. Primary care, family medicine, and pediatric teams are tasked with not only caring for the medical needs of their patients but with identifying and addressing the mental health needs of their patients as well. Embedding evidence-based mental health interventions within the primary care environment represents a unique opportunity to promote overall health in a less stigmatized environment, with opportunities for earlier intervention and improved outcomes. Considerable variability exists across primary care clinics in terms of populations served, patterns of medical and psychiatric conditions and comorbidities, internal and community-based mental health resources, and barriers to care. Even with minimal resources, strategic investments can be made in designing, implementing, and evaluating integrated programs within primary care. A growing evidence base also exists for brief, single-session mental health interventions that can be delivered right at the point of care. Quality improvement skills can increase the ability of teams to translate researched approaches into practice and make sure they deliver on their promise. IBH teams of social workers, psychologists, nurses, and psychiatric prescribers all bring a unique skill set that can deliver highly targeted interventions to help serve the entire primary care population in a resource-efficient manner.