Title
Category
Credits
Event date
Cost
- Grand Rounds
- Mood Disorders
- Psychotherapy
- 1.00 ACEP NBCC clock hours
- 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
- 1.00 Category II credits for Social Workers
- 1.00 Psychologists
- 1.00 MNA Contact Hours for Nurses
- 1.00 Participation
$0.00
This presentation was originally reviewed on December 17, 2024, and live streamed online on December 18, 2024, from 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm ET.
- Grand Rounds
- Mood Disorders
- Reproductive Health
- 1.00 ACEP NBCC clock hours
- 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
- 1.00 Category II credits for Social Workers
- 1.00 Psychologists
- 1.00 MNA Contact Hours for Nurses
- 1.00 Participation
$0.00
This presentation was last reviewed on January 16, 2025, and broadcast live online on December 14, 2022, from 12:00 PM – 1:00 PM ET.
- Mood Disorders
- Psychotherapy
- Workshop
- 1.25 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
- 1.25 Psychologists
- 1.25 MNA Contact Hours for Nurses
- 1.25 Participation
$0.00
This introductory module forms the foundation for your learning to assess and manage difficult-to-treat depression. The first part describes what depression is and specifically differentiates between the main uses of the word “depression”, which can refer to a symptom, a syndrome, or a diagnosis. The second part defines difficult-to-treat depression, explains why we prefer that concept instead of treatment-resistant depression, and describes the clinical characteristics of that population. The third part outlines the four-step approach to assessing patients with difficult-to-treat depression.
- Mood Disorders
- Psychotherapy
- Workshop
- 1.25 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
- 1.25 Psychologists
- 1.25 MNA Contact Hours for Nurses
- 1.25 Participation
$0.00
In this module, you will have the opportunity to assess a patient with suspected difficult-to-treat depression. The first part reinforces the foundational principles you learned in the introductory module: differentiating syndrome from diagnosis and recognizing suspected difficult-to-treat depression. The second part reviews the PRAT approach and then specifically focuses on how to evaluate the psychiatric diagnosis using a review of systems. The third part reviews the clinical features of bipolar disorder, which is an important diagnosis to consider in suspected difficult-to-treat depression.
- Mood Disorders
- Psychotherapy
- Workshop
- 1.25 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
- 1.25 Psychologists
- 1.25 MNA Contact Hours for Nurses
- 1.25 Participation
$0.00
In this module, you will assess a patient with major depressive disorder whose current depressive episode has not remitted despite multiple medication trials. The first part reviews the PRAT approach for suspected difficult-to-treat depression. The second describes the STAR*D trial and its implications for additional medication trials. The third part introduces neuromodulation as a treatment strategy, providing an overview of electroconvulsive therapy, transcranial magnetic stimulation, and vagus nerve stimulation.
- Grand Rounds
- Mood Disorders
- 1.00 ACEP NBCC clock hours
- 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
- 1.00 Category I credits for Social Workers
- 1.00 Psychologists
- 1.00 MNA Contact Hours for Nurses
- 1.00 Participation
03/12/2025
$0.00
Psychedelic therapy is quickly gaining recognition as a possible treatment for psychiatric illness across much of the diagnostic spectrum. This talk will focus on the early evidence for the safety and efficacy of psychedelic therapy within patients with particularly difficult to treat presentations of depression including bipolar type II depression, depression with chronic active suicidal ideation and severely treatment resistant depression. Insights will be shared from the experience of a master clinical researcher as he explored the use of psilocybin.
- Grand Rounds
- Mood Disorders
- 1.50 ACEP NBCC clock hours
- 1.50 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
- 1.50 Category I credits for Social Workers
- 1.50 Psychologists
- 1.50 MNA Contact Hours for Nurses
- 1.50 Participation
04/04/2025
$0.00
Battles over the role of “race” in education and the structures that uphold racial privilege and inequity burst into the national spotlight in the 2020s. But the origins of the debate, and the politics that undergird it, track back decades, and play out in unexpected ways. In this thought-provoking talk, Dr. Metzl provides an analysis of how, within the sociopolitical context of the 1960s and 1970s, the intersection of race and mental health altered the way that mental illness was diagnosed, understood, and treated in the United States. Once considered a nonthreatening disease that primarily targeted white middle-class women, Metzl provides an historical exploration of how schizophrenia became associated with the perceived hostility, rebellion, mistrust, and violence of Black men during the Civil Rights movement.
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