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ACEP 2017 - American College of Emergency Physicians Scientific Assembly, Walter E. Was... - 0 views

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    American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) Scientific Assembly is organized by American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) and would be held during Oct 29 - Nov 01, 2017 at Walter E. Washington Convention Center, Washington, Dist of Col, United States of America. The target audience for this medical event for Emergency Physicians, Emergency Nurses, Nurse Practitioners, Residents and Fellows, Medical Students. This cme conference has been approved with a maximum of 29 AMA PRA Category 1 Credits. This Course will consist of clinical, as well as essential management and risk management tools to aid in your day-to-day practice. With educational courses, skills labs and workshops - ACEP17 is the best source for your emergency medicine education needs! Conference Objectives are : * Abdominal Disorders * Airway, Anesthesia, Analgesia * Cardiovascular * Career Advancement Through Teaching * Critical Care * Critical ED Management * Dematologic Disorders * Emergency Imaging * Head & Neck Disorders * Health Policy * Hematologic Disorders * Infectious Disease * Knowledge Translation * Maintenance of Certification * Metabolic and Endocrine Disorders * Neurology * New Technology * Orthopedics and Sports Medicine * Pediatric Disorders * Prehospital / Disaster Medicine * Professional Skills * Pulmonary Disorders * Risk Management / ED and Law * Toxicology / Environmental * Trauma * Urologic and OB/GYN ACEP17 is the must attend event for anyone engaged in the practice of emergency medicine, including : * Emergency Physicians * Nurse Practitioners * Residents * Medical Students * Physician Assistant * Emergency Department Medical Directors * Hospital Administrators * EMTs/Paramedics
emedevents

More Than 78 Percent of Health Care Personnel Receive Flu Shot - 0 views

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    More than 78 percent of health care personnel (HCP) and 53.6 percent of pregnant women received influenza vaccination during the 2016-2017 influenza season, according to two studies published in the Sept. 29 issue of Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. Carla L. Black, Ph.D., from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and colleagues surveyed 2,438 HCP to estimate influenza vaccination coverage. The researchers found that during the 2016-2017 season, 78.6 percent of survey respondents reported receiving vaccination, similar to reported coverage in the previous three seasons. Coverage was highest for those working in hospitals compared with those working in ambulatory or long-term-care settings (92.3 versus 76.1 and 68 percent) and for those who were required by their employer to be vaccinated (96.7 percent), as in previous seasons. Helen Ding, M.D., from the CDC, and colleagues surveyed 1,893 women pregnant at any time during October 2016 to January 2017. The researchers found that 53.6 percent of respondents reported having received influenza vaccination before or during pregnancy (16.2 and 37.4 percent, respectively); this was similar to coverage during the previous four influenza seasons. Overall, 67.3, 11.9, and 20.7 percent of women reported receiving a provider offer for influenza vaccination, receiving a recommendation but no offer, and receiving no recommendation, respectively, similar to the previous influenza season; influenza vaccination coverage was 70.5, 43.7, and 14.8 percent, respectively, among these women.
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