Northwest Anesthesia
Seminars, Inc.
Continuing Education for the Medical Professional
Presents
Fresh Ideas In Anesthesia
San Francisco, California
May 5-8, 2008

| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
| LOCATION: |
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA |
| San Francisco, our most requested destination, offers travelers two built-in advantages. It's one of the most scenic cities in the world and one of the most compact. The Bay is spanned by two landmarks, the Golden Gate and San Francisco-Oakland Bay bridges, and is graced by four islands, Alcatraz, Angel, Yerba Buena and Treasure. San Francisco's history is a mixture of Spanish colonialism and rowdy American romanticism. Great, cleansing drafts from the Pacific wash the city in all seasons, giving it an aura of perpetual spring. When much of the rest of the nation is sweltering in summer heat, San Francisco's natural air conditioning system -- the morning and evening fog -- make the city a welcome respite. Its principal attractions are the century-old cable cars, Fisherman's Wharf, Alcatraz, Chinatown, Golden Gate Park, Mission Dolores, the pagoda-crowned Japan Center, the Victorian shopping sector known as Cow Hollow, Ocean Beach and Seal Rocks, Union Square and North Beach. The City has more restaurants per capita than any other in the U.S. San Francisco also supports an opera with a glittering tradition, a world-class symphony orchestra, a ballet that has won international acclaim, an annual International Film Festival, four public art museums, dozens of galleries and legitimate theaters presenting top offerings from New York, London and the local production circuit. The modern San Franciscan's appetite for cultural phenomena outside America has fostered a demand for geographically-disorienting experiences from heartstopping Spanish flamenco dance to moody French noir films and ancient Mesopotamian cuisine to utterly proper English high tea. San Francisco lies within easy driving distance of the high Sierra resorts of Lake Tahoe and Yosemite, the Monterey/Carmel peninsula, California's wine country, the Redwood Empire and the spectacular Mendocino Coast. San Francisco's visitors have access to a wide range of sightseeing services, including bus tours, boat tours, museum tours, night club tours, personalized tours, self-guided tours, walking tours and fishing excursions. | |
| ACCOMMODATIONS: |
Hotel 480 |
Luxurious accommodations await you at Hotel 480. Enjoy the superb Union Square location filled with world-class theaters, restaurants and shopping. Wireless internet access is available in the hotel's lobby, lounge and restaurants. High speed internet connectivity is now available in each spacious and well-appointed guestroom. Each guestroom includes: Sleep Advantage bedding and amenities; iron/ironing board, hairdryer, mini fridge and two phones; complimentary access to a completely remodeled fitness center; and breathtaking views of San Francisco. Catch the historic Cable Cars right outside the front door and let them transport you to all of the Chinatown and Fisherman's Wharf attractions. A quick and easy subway ride will take you directly to AT&T Ballpark, home of the San Francisco Giants. Click here to see a slide show Rooms available only through
Northwest - Worldwide Travel |
|
CONCURRENT WORKSHOPS
Ultrasound Guided Regional Anesthesia and
Vascular Access Workshop - Friday, May 9
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 and 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, 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.
| PROGRAM SCHEDULE | ||
| FRESH IDEAS IN ANESTHESIA | ||
| San Francisco, California | ||
| May 5-8, 2008 | ||
| Monday, May 5 - Morning Open - Refresh your PALS* | ||
| 1330 | Registration - Mandatory Sign In | |
| 1400 | Welcome | NWAS Staff |
| 1410 | Cardiac Evaluation: The Cardiology Perspective | C.Ward |
| 1510 | Arrhythmias Under Anesthesia | C.Ward |
| 1610 | Break | |
| 1630 | Sleep Apnea | C.Ward |
| 1730 | Herbal Interactions in Anesthesia | D.Lin |
| 1830 | Office Based Anesthesia | D.Lin |
| 1930 | Adjourn | |
| Tuesday, May 6 | ||
| 0730 | Registration - Mandatory Sign In - Continental Breakfast | |
| 0800 | Blood Products: What Else Is in the Bag? | C.Ward |
| 0900 | Parkinsons Disease | C.Ward |
| 1000 | Break | |
| 1020 | Safety in the OR and Beyond (3 hrs) | D.Lin |
| 1320 | Adjourn | |
| Wednesday, May 7 - Morning Open - Refresh your ACLS* | ||
| 1300 | Registration - Mandatory Sign In | |
| 1320 | Guidelines Everyone Should Know: Cardiac/Vascular | D.Lin |
| 1420 | Guidelines Everyone Should Know: Glucose Management/ Surgical Site Infection | D.Lin |
| 1520 | Break | |
| 1540 | Occupational Hazards in Anesthesia | D.Lin |
| 1640 | The Diabetic Patient | C.Ward |
| 1740 | Pharmacology/Drug Interactions | C.Ward |
| 1840 | Adjourn | |
| Thursday, May 8 | ||
| 0700 | Registration - Mandatory Sign In - Continental Breakfast | |
| 0730 | Vasopressin | C.Ward |
| 0830 | Review of the Literature | C.Ward |
| 0930 | Break | |
| 0945 | Trauma Resuscitation: The Good and the Bad | J.Holmes |
| 1045 | Trauma and Pregnancy | J.Holmes |
| 1145 | Hypothermia | J.Holmes |
| 1245 | Adjourn | 20 CME 1/ 20 CEC |
| * Advanced Cardiac & Pediatric Life Support | ||
| * separate tuition applies | ||
FACULTY
James F. Holmes, MD, MPH
Associate Professor
Department of Emergency Medicine
UC Davis School of Medicine
Sacramento, California
Della Ming Lin, MD
Chief Executive Director
Continuing Medical Education
Queen's Medical Center
Honolulu, Hawaii
C.F. Ward, MD
Staff Anesthesiologist
Scripps Clinic, Green Hospital
La Jolla, California
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 #30656 EXP DATE 05/08/2008
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 Murphy, MD, Chief of Anesthesia, Mercy Medical Center, Durango, Colorado.
SCHEDULE & 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 a full refund of tuition paid. Neither NWAS nor NW-WWT will be responsible for any non-refundable airfare, hotel accommodations or other expenses you may incur. We recommend purchase of Travel Insurance.
FAP: (Frequent Attendee
Points)
FAP lets you accumulate points based on dollars spent with NWAS, including
net cruise and hotel (but not air). These points can later be redeemed for tuition*.
A great program to reward you for supporting NWAS. You must have enough FAP
to cover the full tuition.
NWAS, Inc. is going Green! With over 8 tons of paper used, hundreds of toner cartridges and the shipping impact, we want to do our part for the environment. Therefore as of January 1, 2008, NWAS will replace the printed lecture notes with a CD containing the lectures in PDF format. If you prefer printed lecture notes, we will be happy to provide one to you for a nominal fee.
Click Here For Course and Hotel Registration