E.g., 06/17/2024
E.g., 06/17/2024
Title Program description Typesort descending Credit Event date
Valvular Heart Disease: The Mitral Valve

Available until February 1, 2026

Mitral valve disorders are extremely common, one of the most common is mitral valve prolapse. The majority of these patients live their life without symptoms, but some go on to develop significant mitral regurgitation or less likely, mitral stenosis. How can we recognize mitral valve disease and what’s recommended to confirm a diagnosis? How should these patients be followed? Do they need a lifetime of cardiac imaging? When is a cardiologist needed to help manage these patients? In this podcast, we’ll discuss these questions and more with cardiologist Rekha Mankad, M.D., a cardiologist from the Mayo Clinic.

Enduring
    • 0.25 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit
    • 0.25 Attendance
Ongoing
Mayo Clinic Talks: Vestibular Schwannomas (aka Acoustic Neuromas)

Available until February 1, 2026

Hearing loss is a commonly seen symptom in a primary care office practice, as is tinnitus and vertigo. Fortunately, they’re almost always due to a benign cause. However, these symptoms may represent something more ominous, an acoustic neuroma, also known as a vestibular schwannoma. It’s important to consider this diagnosis when we see them in our patients, as there is the potential for serious consequences to develop if this remains untreated. What type of hearing loss is associated with a vestibular schwannoma? What are the other associated symptoms? How do we go about evaluating these patients and how are they best treated? I’ll be asking these questions of our guests Michael J. Link, M.D., a neurosurgeon from the Department of Neurologic Surgery and Mathew L. Carlson, M.D., a head and neck surgeon from the Department of Otolaryngology, both at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. Our topic for this podcast is vestibular schwannomas.

Enduring
    • 0.50 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit
    • 0.50 Attendance
Ongoing
Mayo Clinic Talks: Pulmonary Function Testing

Available until February 1, 2026

Pulmonary function tests are extremely useful in both diagnosing and managing patients with respiratory disease. In addition to a medical history, physical exam and imaging studies, they give us a great deal of information of the pulmonary physiology and help us understand why patients have various respiratory symptoms. However, there are quite a number of pulmonary function tests available to us and which tests we should order can be confusing. Do we know when spirometry, lung volumes or diffusion capacity will be useful for evaluating the various pulmonary conditions? Our guest for this podcast is Dr. Alexander Niven, from the Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine at the Mayo Clinic and he’ll provide answers to these questions and more as we discuss “How to Use Pulmonary Function Tests Effectively”.

Enduring
    • 0.50 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit
    • 0.50 Attendance
Ongoing
Ophthalmology Grand Rounds Episode 95: Topics of Glaucoma & What's in a name - An Orbital Cavernous Venous Malformation by any other Name; (...

Available until April 1, 2027 - Online CME Course

Mayo Clinic's Ophthalmology Grand Rounds has been repurposed as an online offering for ophthalmologists, optometrists, physicians, physician assistants, nurse practitioners and nurses who are interested in learning more about a variety of medical and surgical conditions in ophthalmology.

Enduring
    • 0.50 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit
    • 0.50 Attendance
Ongoing
Pharmacy Podcast Episode 146 : Give it a Shot! Long-Acting Injectables in HIV Therapy

Available until September 1, 2024 - Podcast Online CME Education

Christopher Cahoon, PharmD elucidates the literature pertaining to injectable cabotegravir and rilpivirine as HIV therapy options.

Enduring
    • 0.50 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit
    • 0.50 AAPA Category 1
    • 0.50 ACPE
    • 0.50 ANCC
    • 0.50 Attendance
Ongoing
Mayo Clinic Talks: Nutrition History Taking: A Practical Approach

Available until February 1, 2026

Nutrition is so important to our health. What and how much we eat can help keep us healthy or increase our risk of developing a number of health problems including cardiovascular disease, diabetes, malignancy or a variety of degenerative health conditions. Unfortunately, many of our patients obtain their information regarding nutrition from the media which is often very inaccurate. It’s our responsibility as primary care providers to assess our patients’ nutritional status and give them accurate recommendations regarding dietary changes they should make in order to remain healthy. This starts with a nutritional history. Yet very few of us have had any formal education in nutrition. How do we take a nutritional history? What are the important questions to ask? We’ll discuss this and other nutritional issues with our guest for this podcast, Tara Schmidt, M.Ed, RDN, LD, a registered dietician at the Mayo Clinic.

Enduring
    • 0.25 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit
    • 0.25 Attendance
Ongoing
SARS-CoV-2 Variants: Delta and Beyond Online CME Course

Available until August 18, 2024 - Online CME Course

Mayo Clinic experts discussed the latest information on the SARS-CoV-2 variants, how they evolve and evade the immune system as well as the implications for both the health of affected individuals and the state of the pandemic.

Enduring
    • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit
    • 1.00 Attendance
Ongoing
Nursing Grand Rounds: Laying the Foundation: Essential Concepts in the Provision of Trauma Responsive Care Effective patient services require not only an understanding of the basics of trauma, but also its effects on the human mind, body, and soul. Trauma informed care requires an ability to recognize the effects of traumatic experiences and the prevalence of those effects in individuals seeking medical and mental health care. A thorough understanding of the constellation of symptoms and mental health presentations of traumatized clients, the neurobiology of trauma, and application of Judith Herman’s Tri-phasic trauma intervention model will be addressed. Participants will learn to support clients who have difficulty making gains due to inability to regulate emotionally or physiologically, and to apply proactive strategies attuned to the complex needs of traumatized clients. Enduring
    • 1.25 ANCC
    • 1.25 ASWB
    • 1.25 Attendance
Ongoing
Psychiatric Issues Stemming From COVID-19

Available until February 1, 2026

The COVID-19 pandemic has caused innumerable health complications. One complication which hasn’t received a lot of attention has been the effect seen on mental health. Since the pandemic, the incidence of mental illness has increased dramatically, both in patients who have been infected as well as those suffering the social consequences of the pandemic. This has led to mental health disorders representing a major cause of disability. What can we learn from a historical perspective as a result of previous pandemics? How does the COVID-19 virus produce the variety of neuropsychiatric disorders commonly seen? And most importantly, how can we help our patients with their mental health disorders associated with the pandemic? This podcast will review “Psychiatric Issues Stemming From COVID-19” with our guest, Teresa A. Rummans, M.D., a psychiatrist from the Department of Psychiatry and Psychology at the Mayo Clinic.

Enduring
    • 0.25 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit
    • 0.25 Attendance
Ongoing
Diagnostic Uncertainty and Undiagnosed Illness

Available until February 1, 2026

As clinicians, we’re used to obtaining health information from our patients through a medical history, performing a physical exam and ordering a variety of lab tests or imaging studies. We then formulate a differential diagnosis and eventually a diagnosis to explain the patient’s health problem. But what happens when a diagnosis isn’t obvious or we’re uncertain what may be causing the patient’s problems. What if a patient asks us a question and we don’t know the answer? How do we express our uncertainty to our patients and how do our patients react to our uncertainty? In this podcast, we’ll discuss diagnostic uncertainty and how to approach our patients when we can’t find a specific diagnosis to explain their symptoms. Our guests include Liz A. Gilman, M.D., and Chris R. Stephenson, M.D., M.H.P.E., both from the Division of General Internal Medicine at the Mayo Clinic.

Enduring
    • 0.25 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit
    • 0.25 Attendance
Ongoing
Foundations of Critical Care Curriculum

Online curriculum providing core knowledge for entry into telemetry, progressive, and critical care nursing. Includes medication therapy, renal concepts, fluid & electrolyte management, initial cardiac concepts, and delirium.

Enduring Ongoing
Mayo Clinic Talks: Eating Disorders Edition Online CME Course

Available until March 31, 2025 - Online CME Course

This online CME course is recommended for primary care providers. The course is comprised of Mayo Clinic Talks podcast interviews about the background, medical management, and principles of treatment of child and adolescent eating disorders, including myths, identification and assessment, treatment options, and considerations of working with patients and coaching parents/families. Listen in the course or using your favorite podcast app, then return here to take a short assessment and claim credit.

Enduring
    • 3.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit
    • 3.00 Attendance
Ongoing
Pharmacy Podcast Episode 166 : Buprenorphine for Opioid Use Disorders: Should you Stop Periop?

Available until February 27, 2027 - Podcast Online CME Education

Julia Branger, PharmD discusses use of buprenorphine in the perioperative period.

Enduring
    • 0.50 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit
    • 0.50 AAPA Category 1
    • 0.50 ACPE
    • 0.50 ANCC
    • 0.50 Attendance
Ongoing
Ophthalmology Grand Rounds Episode 82: A case of droopy lids and Factors associated with blindness from glaucoma, AI model

Available until March 5, 2026 - Online CME Course

Mayo Clinic's Ophthalmology Grand Rounds has been repurposed as an online offering for ophthalmologists, optometrists, physicians, physician assistants, nurse practitioners and nurses who are interested in learning more about a variety of medical and surgical conditions in ophthalmology.

Enduring
    • 0.50 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit
    • 0.50 Attendance
Ongoing
Mayo Clinic Talks: Celiac Disease and Gluten Sensitivity: "No Loafing Matter"

Available until February 1, 2026

It’s estimated that less than 1/3 of individuals with celiac disease have been properly diagnosed. When those with celiac disease ingest gluten, an immune response develops which attacks the small intestine leading to inadequate absorption of nutrients. If left untreated, celiac disease can lead to a variety of nutritional deficiencies as well as other serious consequences. Those with celiac disease are also at increased risk for coronary disease and small bowel cancers. In this podcast we’ll review celiac disease and gluten sensitivity with our guest, Amy S. Oxentenko, M.D., a gastroenterologist at the Mayo Clinic. We’ll discuss the symptoms of celiac disease, how to diagnose the condition and how patients with celiac disease should be managed.

Enduring
    • 0.50 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit
    • 0.50 Attendance
Ongoing

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