E.g., 06/15/2024
E.g., 06/15/2024
Title Program description Typesort descending Credit Event date
Ophthalmology Grand Rounds Episode 68: Is ocular biomechanics the key to understanding glaucoma? and Hereditary Corneal Dystrophies

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: Year Three of COVID-19: Harsh Truths, Brutal Realities & Glimmers of Hope

Available until February 1, 2026

Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2, also known as COVID-19, is a novel virus with a rapidly changing genotype. It’s responsible for over a million deaths so far. One of every 300 Americans have died as a result of the virus and infection with COVID-19, and it has been responsible for a reduction in life expectancy in the U.S. for both 2021 and 2022. There are 4 widely available, approved vaccines in the United States, yet an inadequate number of individuals have been immunized and very few are still wearing protective masks. The consequences of this include continued excess morbidity and mortality as well as the development of a variety of new variants of the virus. Our guest for this podcast is Greg A. Poland, M.D., an internist, and the director of vaccine research at the Mayo Clinic. He’s also the lead author of an article published in Mayo Clinic Proceedings in December 2022. The article is entitled “Year 3 of COVID-19: Harsh Truths, Brutal Realities and Glimmers of Hope”. We’ll be discussing some of the key points from this article.

Enduring
    • 0.50 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit
    • 0.50 Attendance
Ongoing
Pharmacy Podcast Episode 164 : Starving for Answers: Parenteral Nutrition in the Critically Ill

Available until February 13, 2027 - Podcast Online CME Education

Brandy Hernandez, PharmD reviews approaches to nutritional need assessment in critical care.

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 71: A Comparison of Marking Methods for Toris IOLS and Hidden in plain sight

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: HIV & Attitudes Towards PrEP

Available until February 1, 2026

As primary care providers, evaluating patients with a virus is a common part of our practice. This ranges from colds, a painful shingles outbreak, COVID-19, RSV bronchiolitis, influenza, and many more. Oftentimes, after a detailed physical exam, we tell our patients the cause of their symptoms are due to a virus and that their symptoms should improve in a couple days to weeks. However, we know that sometimes the symptoms of a viral infection can be a harbinger of more severe disease. In today’s talk, we will be discussing a virus. Acute infection with this virus can present with fever, fatigue, myalgias, arthralgias, lymphadenopathy, sore throat, headache, diarrhea, weight loss, and rash. This constellation of symptoms, especially when they persist for a prolonged duration of time can be representative of an acute HIV infection. Tune in to this episode to learn more about the pathophysiology of HIV, how a patient can contract HIV, the tests to perform when an acute HIV infection is suspected, how to prevent an HIV infection, and also to learn a bit more about anal Pap smears.

Enduring
    • 0.50 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit
    • 0.50 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
Pharmacy Grand Rounds Episode 26: No Gout About It: Updates in the Management of Gout

Pharmacy Grand Rounds Podcast Icon

Pharmacy Grand Rounds Podcast
Episode 26: No Gout About It: Updates in the Management of Gout

 

Enduring
    • 0.50 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit
    • 0.50 AAPA Category 1
    • 0.50 ACPE
    • 0.50 ANCC
    • 0.50 Attendance
Ongoing
Intimate Partner Violence

Available until February 1, 2026

As primary care providers, we are charged with ensuring our patients are healthy. According to the World Health Organization, “health is a state of complete physical, mental, and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity.” However, sometimes our patients will not inform us of what problems or difficulties that they may be facing in their lives, which makes it difficult to help in these situations. As result, we must screen or ask patients specific questions in attempts to make sure they are okay. One such example that we may screen for in these instances is intimate partner violence. This condition has many presentations and can affect anyone. Intimate partner violence or domestic violence is reported to be a serious, preventable, public health concern as it affects more than 32 million Americans. Tune in to this episode to learn more about what intimate partner violence looks like, the psychology behind intimate partner violence perpetrators, how we should be screening for this, and what we can do to help our patients in these situations.

Enduring
    • 0.50 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit
    • 0.50 Attendance
Ongoing
Modeling and Forecasting of the COVID-19 Pandemic Online CME Course

Modeling and Forecasting of the COVID-19 Pandemic

Recorded: April 12, 2022 at 12:00pm - 1:30pm ET

On Tuesday, April 12, from 12:00 p.m.-1:30 p.m. ET, 

Enduring
    • 1.50 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit
    • 1.50 Attendance
Ongoing
Pain Management Beyond Opioids

Available until February 1, 2026

Pain management is a combination of science and art. We have a variety of treatment options to choose from however some have significant potential for harm and some the potential to be abused and carry the risk of dependence. We need to choose our treatments carefully, based on the type of pain we are treating as well as other health conditions found in our patient. In addition to the various analgesic products, other options include injections, nerve blocks and several integrative medicine alternatives. In this podcast, we’ll discuss the various pain management options we have available and hopefully give you some new ideas to help manage pain in your patients. Our guest for this podcast is Christy L. Hunt, D.O., a Pain Medicine specialist at the Mayo Clinic.

Enduring
    • 0.25 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit
    • 0.25 Attendance
Ongoing
Mayo Clinic Talks: Determining the Source of GI Blood Loss

Available until February 1, 2026

Determining the source of GI blood loss can be a challenging dilemma. On occasion, we have clues regarding where we should start looking, but in some cases, no such clues exist. It’s best to use a stepwise approach to determining the source and in most cases, this will give us the answer we need. When a cause is found, most tend to be from an upper GI source rather than the colon. Whereas an upper endoscopy and colonoscopy will determine the source in the majority, in some cases, more aggressive techniques are required. In this podcast, we’ll be discussing GI blood loss, and which approach we should use to determine the source. Our guest is Andrew C. Storm, M.D., a gastroenterologist from the Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology at the Mayo Clinic.

Enduring
    • 0.50 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit
    • 0.50 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 72: Optic disc drusen in the ocular hypertensive patient and Make It Stick

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
    • 0.75 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit
    • 0.75 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
What’s New with C. Difficile

Available until February 1, 2026

It’s estimated that C. difficile causes about a half million infections each year in the U.S. and 1 in 6 of those will have a recurrence within a couple months. Although C. difficile typically occurs following the use of antibiotics, it can also be spread from one individual to another, especially in hospitals and skilled nursing facilities. What are the common symptoms of an infection with C. difficile? How do we test for it? How should an infection be treated and what do we do with patients who have one or more recurrences. In this podcast, we’ll be discussing “What’s New with C. Difficile?” and these are some of the questions I’ll be asking our guest, Sahil Khanna, M.B.B.S., M.S., a gastroenterologist from the Mayo Clinic.

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

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