What Did I Do Last Week? How Do I Manage My Case Like The Specialists
University of Nottingham
243 views
Date: Wednesday 20th November, 2024 - Wednesday 20th November, 2024
Start time: 9:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Duration: 8 hour(s)
Cost: FREE
The course will take ‘real’ cases from the referral clinic the week before the course is due and use these to illustrate how we approach these cases in the referral setting.
The course will use an interactive approach with the cases to maximise the learning outcomes. These cases and course will re-emphasise the problem-based approach and how this can be applied to anything that is being sent for referral (or not given that we are applying this method to primary care settings).
The variety of ways in which these cases can be managed will also be discussed to suit all budgets.
Course Description
This course will further help those post-grads with a keen interest in small animal medicine to refine those key skills used by specialists in small animal internal medicine and develop their problem-based approach to challenging cases in primary care practice. Medicine benefits from a systemic and thorough approach and these courses are designed to demonstrate the fundamental aspects that underpin this approach. As before, the main objective is to make medicine more rewarding in primary care practice and to help delegates feel more empowered in the clinic they are in.
Topics to be covered.
§ Problem-based medicine and the approach to complex medical cases
§ Selecting the correct diagnostic test and asking the correct clinical question of that test
§ Generating a minimum database to investigate complex medical cases.
§ Case-based practical sessions using real recently referred cases which have clearly posed challenges in primary care practice.
Who is it for?
This course will help those post-grads with a keen interest in small animal medicine to refine those key skills used by specialists in small animal internal medicine and develop their problem-based approach to challenging cases in primary care practice.
The Speakers
Professor Mark Dunning, Clinical Associate Professor in Small Animal Internal Medicine<br /> <br /> Clinical affiliations<br /> RCVS certificate in small animal medicine.<br /> <br /> Clinical interests<br /> Gastroenterology, haematology and nephrology<br /> Evidence based medicine and collaborative research<br /> Developing non-invasive methods for disease screening and diagnosis
The Venue
The School of Veterinary Medicine and Science is based at the Sutton Bonington Campus of the University of Nottingham.
The Sutton Bonington Campus encompasses world-leading laboratories and specialist facilities for studying biosciences and veterinary medicine.
https://www.nottingham.ac.uk/vet/service-for-business/index.aspx
Number of CPD hours this event can be recorded as
8 hours
Registration and Booking
Click here to reserve your place
More from University of Nottingham