Review The Latest Anesthesiology Advances and Earn CME with Anesthesiology Review On Demand!
The Cleveland Clinic’s annual Comprehensive Anesthesiology Review course is designed to help improve performance on written and oral anesthesiology examinations. If you missed this year’s meeting, you can now participate in the important education presented anytime, anywhere with Cleveland Clinic Anesthesiology Review On Demand!
Cleveland Clinic Anesthesiology Review On Demand is the only online CME accredited program with approximately 40 hours1 of presentations. The following topics are addressed in your On Demand program:
- Airway Management
- Ambulatory Anesthesia
- Anesthesia and Coexisting Disease
- Anesthesia and Gastrointestinal Disease
- Anesthesia for ENT Surgery
- Basic Science
- Blood / Coagulation
- Critical Care
- Equipment
- Geriatrics
- Heart, Lungs and Vascular I, II and III
- Monitoring
- Neuroanesthesia
- Obstetric Anesthesia
- Orthopedic Anesthesia and Acute Pain
- Pain Medicine
- Pediatric Anesthesia
- Pharmacology
- Post-Anesthesia Care Unit
- Pre-Anesthesia Testing
- Regional Anesthesia
- Urologic Anesthesia
This course is designed to be a comprehensive review of anesthesia, including clinical anesthesia and subspecialties. Included in perioperative medicine is coverage of the most common co-morbidities relevant to anesthesia and the basic science associated with anesthesia.
Program Objectives
By attending you will be able to:
- Manage anesthesia-related challenges associated with airway management, anesthesia equipment, and potential catastrophic occurrences in the operating room
- Address anesthesia challenges associated with patients undergoing surgery for cardiovascular, hematologic, thoracic, urologic, neurologic, and ENT conditions
- Describe the challenges associated with anesthesia for pediatric patients, critically ill patients, obstetric patients, and patients with acute or chronic pain
- List the steps for a comprehensive preoperative patient evaluation
- Identify the issues associated with anesthesia in ambulatory care facilities including temperature regulation, postop nausea and vomiting, and implications for sleep apnea
- Critically review the pharmacology and clinical indications for inhaled anesthesia agents, intravenous agents, opioid, and neuromuscular blocks