Locations
Program
- Target Audience
- Program Purpose
- Objectives
- Program Schedule
- Faculty
- Accreditation
- FAP
- Course Registration (Sold Out)
Nashville, Tennessee
Travel & Leisure Magazine recently named Nashville "America's Friendliest City" Come see why!
Attractions cover the spectrum from the Civil War to Faith Hill's dress to a priceless Picasso and
Warhol; there's something for everyone in Music City. Take a tour of an Antebellum home rich in
history, or take in a comedy while enjoying dinner with your date. You like the nightlife? You've come
to the right place, because the "stars" come out at night. Hear blues, rock, country, gospel, jazz, or
contemporary Christian. Only in Nashville can you step into a honky tonk on Broadway, look around
and see famous faces. Throughout the city, small dives hidden away from the limelight showcase
Nashville's true legends - songwriters. Every night the music scene in Nashville is vibrant and
contagious. Fans rush to get a seat in the clubs while the latecomers crowd the walls and dance floors.
By late evening, the clubs are alive and rocking, and there are still many hours left before the clubs
close. Let Chopin and Mozart carry you away as you watch the Nashville Ballet or listen to the
Grammy-nominated Nashville Symphony. Take in a performance of the Nashville Opera or enjoy an
off-Broadway performance at the Tennessee Performing Arts Center. Beyond the great sounds is
shopping. Posh boutiques, guitar stores filled with instruments, chic clothing and fashionable shops
- Nashville's shopping scene covers the gamut in style and appeal. When hunger strikes, Nashville's
plate has many unique options to tempt your taste buds. Known for "meat and threes" and zesty
barbecue, Nashville also specializes in New Southern and Southern fusion, a blend of down-home
cooking and uptown dining.
Are you asking yourself what makes Nashville family-friendly? Then think no further. Explore the Adventure Science Center, the Cheekwood Botanical Garden and Museum of Art, Fort Nashborough, Bicentennial Capitol Mall State Park, the Nashville Zoo at Grassmere, or Valley Amusement Park. For the sports fan, Nashville boasts three professional sports teams as well as Busch and Indy series car racing. Nashville is surrounded by lush, rolling hills and sparkling blue lakes. Walk 18 holes on Nashville's five resort courses or eight public golf courses. Ride amusement park rides or slide down Tennessee's largest waterslides. Rent a jet ski for the day or just cruise upon the world's largest showboat. Or when it's time to unwind, enjoy a day of pampering and relaxation at one of many great day spas. COURSE FULL and CLOSED FOR REGISTRATION
Hutton Hotel
Named on the 2010 Hot List by Condé Nast Traveler, The Hutton Hotel is an Nashville hotel nestled in the heart of the fashionable West End. Located near Vanderbilt University, you will be just moments from all Vanderbilt has to offer as well as the Parthenon.
Four-star luxury blends with contemporary style and sophistication. The unique guest rooms feature sumptuous bedding, granite showers, refreshment centers, laptop safes, flat panel HDTV wth media hub, and twice daily maid service. Enjoy the 1808 Grille, serving three meals per day or in-room dining. For a quick snack, try the Java Bar. To unwind, visit the state of the art fitness center or arrange for a private spa treatment. The Hutton is a convenient eight miles from Nashville International Airport. COURSE FULL and CLOSED FOR REGISTRATION
TARGET AUDIENCE
This course is designed for Physicians, CRNAs, Physician Assistants, Registered Nurses, and other medical care providers who must maintain state-of-the-art knowledge of not only the specialty, but also of all additional related disciplines which may impact it.
PROGRAM PURPOSE
The practitioner of anesthesiology must possess the scientific background for clinical practice; maintain state-of-the-art knowledge of not only the specialty, but also of all additional related disciplines which may impact it; maintain an up-to-the-minute armamentarium of knowledge and skills for the selection and use of complex equipment, pharmacological agents, and procedures necessary for the provision of quality patient care; manage self and colleagues to function toward common goals in the clinical setting, the clinical and educational institutions, and the community in which the practice resides; serve as an expert in matters involving health care delivery; serve as an informed manager of clinical and educational services provided, including the acquisition and distribution of resources necessary in meeting professional goals; and provide assistance with and support of other service providers, departments, institutions, and organizations dependent upon the professional expertise of the practitioner. Presentations are designed to facilitate the physician, nurse specialist, and other providers maintaining skills of the same kind to review and update knowledge and abilities in one or more of these areas vital to the practicing professional.
OBJECTIVES
At the conclusion of this activity, the participant will be able to:
Apply the pertinent physical and behavioral sciences - to include but not be limited to advanced anatomy and physiology, pathophysiology, chemistry, physics, psychology, and social sciences - as they impact and are affected by the planning, delivery, and monitoring of anesthesia and related services inherent in the anesthesia professions.
Explain the selection, dosing considerations with methods of administration, safe use, and contraindications and precautions of presented pharmacological agents through the understanding of their physico-chemical properties, pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics, updated uses, and more recently developed additional, related, and similar drugs.
Outline comprehensive management plans for the group of patients discussed, whether related in age, physical status, cultural background, invasive procedure, anesthetic or analgesic requirements, clinical setting, adverse reactions, and/or goals of care.
Apply the principles of safety and asepsis in the performance of anesthetic procedures and administrations, equipment use, and other applications encountered during the provision of anesthesia and analgesia whether in the surgical unit, the labor and delivery suite, the pain management clinic, or other more remote location of anesthetizing services.
Incorporate the appropriate recommendations and/or requirements of pertinent external organizations, institutions, and professional groups - recognized as serving as the authority for and/or holding the responsibility to compile and approve such tenets - in the provision of anesthesia and related services, whether medical, legal, philosophical, ethical, or health care management standards.
Apply the new techniques in the clinical setting of the participant.
Relevant Topics in Anesthesia |
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Wednesday, May 16 - Pre-conference Workshop |
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| Ultrasound Guided Regional Anesthesia and Vascular Access* | ||||
Thursday, May 17 |
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| 0700 | Registration - Mandatory Sign In - Continental Breakfast | |||
| 0740 | Welcome | NWAS Staff | ||
| 0745 | Controversies in Pediatric Preoperative Assessment | I.Landsman | ||
| 0845 | Approach to the Pediatric Difficult Airway | I.Landsman | ||
| 0945 | Break | |||
| 1000 | Pediatric Anesthesia for ENT Surgery | I.Landsman | ||
| 1100 | Hemodynamic Monitoring and Vasoactive Drugs | A.Atchabahian | ||
| 1200 | PBLD: Patient with a Hip Fracture and Aortic Stenosis | A.Atchabahian | ||
| 1300 | Adjourn | |||
| 1645 | Optional NRP (No CEC for CRNAs or RNs)* | |||
Friday, May 18 |
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| 0700 | Registration - Mandatory Sign In - Continental Breakfast | |||
| 0715 | Management of Patients with Coronary Stents | A.Atchabahian | ||
| 0815 | Update of Fluid and Blood Management | A.Atchabahian | ||
| 0915 | Break | |||
| 0930 | Thermal Control in Pediatrics: The Connection with Water Losses | L.Borland | ||
| 1030 | Pediatric Craniofacial Trauma | L.Borland | ||
| 1130 | Strategies to Prevent Perioperiatve Myocardial Infarction: Do They Work? | E.Lobato | ||
| 1230 | Adjourn | |||
| 1330 | Optional PALS (No CEC for CRNAs or RNs)* | |||
Saturday, May 19 |
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| 0700 | Registration - Mandatory Sign In | |||
| 0715 | Spinal Anesthesia: What's New, What's Still True? | A.Atchabahian | ||
| 0815 | PPBLD: Neuropathy After Peripheral Nerve Blocks | A.Atchabahian | ||
| 0915 | Break | |||
| 0930 | Patients with Heart Failure Undergoing Non-cardiac Surgery | E.Lobato | ||
| 1030 | Coronary Stents and Clopidogrel in Noncardiac Surgery: New Problems Stemming from New Solutions | E.Lobato | ||
| 1130 | Pediatric Tracheal and Laryngeal Injuries | L.Borland | ||
| 1230 | Adjourn | |||
| 1330 | Optional ACLS (No CEC for CRNAs or RNs)* | |||
Sunday, May 20 |
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| 0700 | Registration - Mandatory Sign In - Continental Breakfast | |||
| 0715 | Anesthetic Management for Aortic Stenting Procedures | E.Lobato | ||
| 0815 | Complications of Monitored Anesthesia Care: Is it Our Fault? | E.Lobato | ||
| 0915 | Break | |||
| 0930 | Valvular Disease and Noncardiac Surgery | E.Lobato | ||
| 1030 | Anesthesia for Pediatric Trauma Patients | L.Borland | ||
| 1130 | PACU Concerns for Pediatric Trauma | L.Borland | ||
| 1230 | Adjourn | 20 CME I / 20 CEC | ||
| * separate tuition and schedule applies | ||||
FACULTY
Arthur Atchabahian, MD
Associate Professor of Clinical Anesthesiology
NYU School of Medicine
New York, New York
Attending Anesthesiologist
NYU Hospital for Joint Diseases
New York, New York
Lawrence Borland, MD
Associate Professor Anesthesiology & Pediatrics
University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine
Department of Anesthesiology
Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Ira S. Landsman, MD
Chief, Division of Pediatric Anesthesia
Associate Professor, Department of Anesthesiology
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Nashville, Tennessee
Emilio B. Lobato, MD
Anesthesiology Services
North Florida/South Georgia VAMC
Gainesville, Florida
ACCREDITATION
The A. Webb Roberts Center for Continuing Medical Education of Baylor Health Care System, Dallas designates this educational activity for a maximum of 20 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)™. Physicians should only claim credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.
This activity has been planned and implemented in accordance with the Essential Areas and policies of the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education through the joint sponsorship of A. Webb Roberts Center for Continuing Medical Education of Baylor Health Care System, Dallas and Northwest Anesthesia Seminars, Inc. The A. Webb Roberts Center for Continuing Medical Education of Baylor Health Care System, Dallas is accredited by the ACCME to provide continuing medical education for physicians.
Physician Assistants AAPA accepts Category I credit from AOACCME, Prescribed credit from AAFP, and AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ from organizations accredited by the ACCME.
CME certificates will be mailed following completion of the course.
AANA approved for 20 CEC Code #1026107 Exp. Date 5/20/2012
NWAS is an approved provider by the California and Florida State Boards of Nursing, Provider number #04833 and 50-7480 respectively. This program offers 20 contact hours.
COURSE DIRECTOR
Mark T. Murphy, MD, MSN Education, Austin, Texas, and Medical Director, Northwest Anesthesia Seminars, Pasco, Washington.
SCHEDULE AND FACULTY CHANGES
Factors beyond our control sometimes necessitate changes in the schedule and faculty. If time permits, we will inform all registrants of any changes prior to the program. Changes on site due to local conditions will be announced in class.
COURSE CANCELLATION BY PROVIDER
We reserve the right to cancel a course for any reason. In such case, a minimum of 30 days notice will be given to those registered and 100% of tuition paid will be refunded. NWAS and NW-WWT will not be responsible for any non-refundable airfare, hotel, or other liabilities you may incur. We highly recommend purchase of travel insurance.
FAP (Frequent Attendee Points)
FAP lets you accumulate points based on dollars spent with NWAS including net hotel and tuition booked through NWAS (but not air). Once you have enough points to cover a full tuition they can be redeemed for tuition (no cash value). A great program to reward you for supporting NWAS!
Lecture notes will be provided on a CD in PDF format.
Please note that children and non-registered guests are not allowed to attend the lectures. Most hotel Concierges and the cruise lines we use can provide you with childcare information.
REGISTER EARLY
We recommend that you register early to assure your spot. We reserve the right to close registrations to a course at any time without notice. We may not be able to accommodate onsite registrations.
