Doctors these days are expected to keep up to date by taking regular courses. Read the materials, answer the questions, and viola! You get some credits towards your 'continuing medical education' (or CME). Just recently, one provider offered a bit-sized piece of CME asking Is Religiosity or Spirituality Protective For Heart Disease? Well, of course I had to check it out. You can too - anyone can
14 Vote(s)
July 5, 2010
Test your knowledge on religion and health
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May 20, 2010
Undue Pharmaceutical Influence on Psychiatric Practice
Within the past few years, increasing concerns have arisen about the ways in which corporate sponsorship of clinical trials and continuing medical education activities may bias the information that is published and disseminated about the benefits and risks of medications. Questions have also been raised about the extent of industry influence on the American Psychiatric Association's diagnostic an
7 Vote(s)
7 Vote(s)
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November 3, 2009
Living the Questions: Cases in Psychiatric Ethics
The past several years have been a time of radical change in the economic, technological, social, and political landscape of our country. These developments, of necessity, affect education in all its forms-including continuing medical education. Increasingly, the print medium is becoming an endangered species and previously unimagined modes of information transmission, such as blogs, RSS feeds, a
8 Vote(s)
8 Vote(s)
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