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A Tale of Congress, Continuing Medical Education, and the History of Medicine

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Specialty General Medicine
Date 2014 Apr 2
PMID 24688209
Citations 1
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Abstract

Well-intentioned attempts by the Senate Finance Committee to improve the content and quality of continuing medical education (CME) offerings had the unanticipated consequence of decimating academically oriented history of medicine conferences. New guidelines intended to keep CME courses free of commercial bias from the pharmaceutical industry were worded in a fashion that caused CME officials at academic institutions to be reluctant to offer CME credit for history of medicine gatherings. At the 2013 annual conference of the American Association for the History of Medicine, we offered a novel solution for determining CME credit in line with current guidelines. We asked attendees to provide narrative critiques for each presentation for which they desired CME credit. In this essay, we evaluate the efficacy of this approach.

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Rabasco A, Neimeyer G, Macura Z, McKay D, Washburn J Ethics Behav. 2024; 34(8):597-610.

PMID: 39554313 PMC: 11566149. DOI: 10.1080/10508422.2023.2266074.

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