Clinical Center Grand Rounds

CME Information Past Grand Rounds

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Activity Description

The NIH Clinical Center Grand Rounds, which is a weekly CME activity, aims to offer its audience a wide variety of topics from a diverse group of speakers to not only help them remain current on the latest advances in medicine, but to also assist them as they continue to grow professionally. All physicians, clinicians, biomedical researchers, nurses, and all other healthcare professionals within and outside the NIH community are welcomed to attend.

*Important Note:

Please see below for important information on CME and privacy policies.

**Webcast Only:

In accordance with Office of Personnel Management's COVID-19 guidance to protect the federal workforce and ensure continuity of operations, this NIH CC Grand Rounds lecture will be held virtually via www.videocast.nih.gov.

The CME activity code will be posted at the beginning, middle, and end of the 12:00 pm lecture. If you need the code or have questions, email Rita Stevens, CME Administrator at rita.stevens@nih.gov.


April 2020 Clinical Center Grand Rounds Schedule


CANCELLED
Wednesday, April 1, 2020

Ethics Rounds

When Does the Potential for Clinical Benefit Justify the Burdens of Intensive Care?

Discussant: Douglas B. White, MD, MAS
UPMC Endowed Chair for Ethics in Critical Care Medicine and Director, Program on Ethics and Decision Making in Critical Illness, CRISMA Center, Department of Critical Care Medicine
Professor of Critical Care Medicine, Medicine, and Clinical Translational Science, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine

Case Presenter: Daniel S. Chertow, MD, MPH
Critical Care Medicine, CC


CANCELLED
Wednesday, April 8, 2020

Contemporary Clinical Medicine: Great Teachers

State of the Art in Transition from Pediatric to Adult Health Care: Evidence, Clinical Care and Research Recommendations

Patience White, MD, MA, MACR, MACP, FAAP
Co-director, Got Transition™ and Professor Emeritus of Medicine and Pediatrics, George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences


Wednesday, April 15, 2020
12:00 noon – 1:00 pm **Webcast Only

Paving the Way: Developing and Implementing Gene and Transcript Directed Therapies for Neurogenetic Disorders of Childhood

Carsten G. Bonnemann, MD
Chief, Neuromuscular and Neurogenetic Disorders of Childhood Section and Senior Investigator, Neurogenetics Branch NINDS

  • Please log on the day of the lecture from 12:00 pm to 1:00 pm on NIH Videocast (HHS Only)
  • Lecture will also be archived on NIH Videocast (HHS Only)
  • Evaluation form with activity code
    *Please see below for directions on how to use the Hopkins CloudCME recording keeping system to receive CME credit for attending this lecture live in Lipsett or live online. In addition, please use the attached evaluation form to provide feedback about the lecture which will be conveyed to the speaker and will also be used by the organizers of Clinical Center Grand Rounds as they plan future content. Please email your completed evaluation form to rita.stevens@nih.gov.

Wednesday, April 22, 2020
12:00 noon – 1:00 pm **Webcast Only

Experimental Blood Stage Infection to Study Malaria

John Woodford, MD
Physician-Scientist, Laboratory of Malaria Immunology and Vaccinology, NIAID

Progress on Malaria Vaccines

Patrick E. Duffy, MD
Chief and Senior Investigator, Laboratory of Malaria Immunology and Vaccinology, NIAID

  • Lecture on Videocast
  • Evaluation form with activity code PDF Icon
    *Please see below for directions on how to use the Hopkins CloudCME recording keeping system to receive CME credit for attending this lecture live in Lipsett or live online. In addition, please use the attached evaluation form to provide feedback about the lecture which will be conveyed to the speaker and will also be used by the organizers of Clinical Center Grand Rounds as they plan future content. Please email your completed evaluation form to rita.stevens@nih.gov.

CANCELLED
Wednesday, April 29, 2020

The Complex Interplay of Biology and Social Determinants of Health: Stories from the Streets of Baltimore

Michele K. Evans, MD
Deputy Scientific Director and Chief, Health Disparities Research Section, Laboratory of Epidemiology and Population Science, NIA


Reasonable Accommodations

Individuals with disabilities who need reasonable accommodation to participate in this event should contact the Clinical Center Office of Communications and Media Relations at masm@mail.nih.gov or 301-496-2563 or call through the Federal Relay Service at TTY Toll free 1-800-877-8339 at least 1 week in advance.


CME Information

The NIH Clinical Center Grand Rounds is a Continuing Medical Education (CME) activity offered by the NIH Clinical Center Office of Clinical Research Training and Medical Education (OCRTME) with the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine as the CME provider.

The Clinical Center Grand Rounds CME provider, the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, has updated their CME recording keeping to a new, user friendly, CloudCME system. With the new CloudCME record keeping system, attendees will no longer have to "sign in" or manually complete a "CME Self-Report Credit Form" to obtain CME credit for attending. Attendees will also no longer have to wait until the end of the academic year to receive their transcripts/certificates for proof of CME credits earned. With the new CloudCME system, attendees can receive credit for attending an NIH CME activity instantly by simply sending a text message from their mobile phone to the Hopkins CME phone number: (443) 541-5052.

* To receive credit for attending an NIH CME activity, each attendee must:

  1. Register with the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine Office of CME. You will provide your name, email address, and cell phone number. If you have attended a NIH CME activity in the past, and requested CME for your attendance, then your email address should be registered with Hopkins CME.

    *Note: The Hopkins CloudCME website is a third party website which is not managed by the NIH. The Johns Hopkins School of Medicine privacy policies will apply, and they have been reviewed and approved by the NIH Clinical Center Privacy Office. View the Johns Hopkins Privacy Policy.

  2. Next text your email address to the Hopkins CME phone number, (443) 541-5052, which will pair your mobile phone with your Hopkins CME account that had been created/ used on past CME Self-Report Credit Forms.

  3. Each NIH Clinical Center Grand Rounds has been assigned an "activity code." This code is displayed on a PowerPoint slide shown at the beginning and the end of each lecture, and announced by the introducer. It is also listed on the first page of the evaluation form for each lecture. Each lecture code is also sent out in the weekly Clinical Center Grand Rounds email announcement.

  4. After you have attended, you will text the assigned "activity code" to the Hopkins CME phone number at (443) 541-5052 to receive CME credit. Once the text message is sent, your account is updated to reflect the CME credit earned.

    *Important Note: The activity code is only valid 15 minutes prior to the start of the lecture until 60 minutes after the lecture. Afterwards, the code becomes inactive and you will not be able to submit your attendance for CME credit for that particular activity.

If you have any questions on how to use the new CloudCME recording keeping, please contact the Clinical Center's CME Coordinator, Ms. Rita Stevens, by email at rita.stevens@nih.gov or by phone at 301-435-6618.


Accreditation Statement

The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) to provide continuing medical education for physicians.

Credit Designation Statement

The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine designates this live activity for 1 credit(s) per session for a maximum of 52 AMA PRA Category 1 Credits™. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.

Policy on Speaker and Provider Disclosure

It is the policy of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine that the speaker and provider globally disclose conflicts of interest. The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine OCME has established policies in place that will identify and resolve all conflicts of interest prior to this educational activity. Detailed disclosure will be made in the instructional materials.


NIH Videocast Information

The Center for Information Technology (CIT) makes special NIH events, seminars, and lectures available to viewers on the VideoCast web site. VideoCasting is the method of electronically streaming digitally encoded video and audio data from a server to a client. Streaming files are not downloaded, but rather are broadcast in a manner similar to television broadcasts. The videos are processed by a compression program into a streaming format and delivered in a staggered fashion to minimize impact upon the network and maximize the experience of the content for the viewer. When users request a streaming file they will receive an initial burst of data after a short delay (file latency). While content is being viewed, the streaming server machine and software continues to "stream" data in such a manner that the viewer experiences no break in the content. For questions regarding NIH Videocast, please call 301-496-0080. Viewers from outside the NIH network can download the latest free tools:

Past Grand Rounds

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This page last updated on 08/03/2020

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