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Preventing Medical Errors
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

You know the medical error statistics all too well, and, at times, they occur too close to home. The purpose of this course is to help you recognize error-prone situations and the factors that impact medical errors so you can prevent them. 

Learning Objectives

Identify at least two types of medical errors. 

Describe what risk management is and how it is used to prevent medical errors. 

Explain how to use root cause analysis in the prevention of medical errors.

Preventing Medical Errors: Culture of Safety
AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ Duration: 0.50 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

Medical errors and substandard care occur often in today’s complex healthcare organizations. Errors are usually due to multiple factors at the system-level rather than a single factor from an individual. Healthcare organizations that are committed to patient safety are high-reliability organizations. These organizations remain alert for ways to protect patients from harm even though they have few adverse events. This course will offer suggestions for reducing medical errors and maintaining a culture of safety.

Learning Objectives

Describe how the culture of healthcare organizations and the roles of healthcare professionals affect patient safety. 

Identify three examples of medical errors and how they may occur.

Preventing Suicide Among Veteran Populations
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.50 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

Veterans are 1.5 times more likely to die by suicide than non-veterans (U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs [VA], 2022). This course will explain the specific factors that increase suicide risk in veterans. You will also learn about assessment and intervention approaches used to manage suicide risk in this population.

The goal of this course is to provide knowledge to addictions, behavioral health counseling, case management/care management, marriage and family therapy, nursing, psychology, social work professionals, and physicians in health and human services settings about suicide prevention strategies for veterans.

Learning Objectives

Identify three factors that specifically increase suicide risk in veterans.

Recall screening and assessment strategies to identify veterans at risk for suicide.

Define three effective ways to intervene to reduce suicide risk among veterans.

Principles of Risk Management
Duration: 1.00 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

Risk managers, administrators, and managers should be aware that there are always risks involved with business operations. Consequently, they must have solid risk management practices and programs to help identify, assess, and manage risks of all sorts. Risk management practices should be integrated across major organizational departments, initiatives, and programs, such as service delivery, safety, security, business and public communications, and supply chain, to name a few.

The goal of this course is to provide administrator professionals with an overview of risk management principles.

Learning Objectives

Define risk management. 

Identify at least four concepts related to risk management. 

Name at least two risk response strategies used in risk management programs.

Psychopharmacology in the Emergency Department
AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ Duration: 1.00 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

As a healthcare professional transporting patients to the ED, you may serve patients with symptoms indicative of behavioral health disorders, such as depressive, bipolar, and anxiety disorders. In some situations, the ED provider must administer psychiatric medications. However, if possible, it is prudent to defer their use until the patient is admitted to an inpatient mental health facility or seen as an outpatient. In many instances, the reason for presentation in the ED is an adverse reaction to psychiatric medications.

Learning Objectives

Identify some of the most common medications in each major category, their indications, and their usage in treating mental health disorders. 

Recall adverse reactions to psychiatric medications.

Quality Data Presentation
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 0.50 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

Interpreting and using data are essential components of evidence-based nursing practice, which has been linked to improved patient outcomes and quality of care. However, many nurses do not use evidence-based practice (EBP) or participate in nursing research efforts. 

Understanding data collection and presentation methods is an important first step to greater nurse participation in EBP and quality improvement (QI) initiatives.

Learning Objectives

Identify data collection and presentation methods that are best for understanding quality of care performance and making timely and actionable decisions. 

Recognize the relationship between nursing research, data presentation, and evidence-based practice.

Quality Series: Safety First - Culture and Patient Impact
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

A ‘culture of safety’ is an often-heard term in clinical settings. Most patients require complex care, with many interprofessional teams working together. Large patient volumes, an expectation for rapid delivery of care, the consumer’s ability to choose providers, and government reimbursements all drive acute care facilities to invest in preventing or reducing errors. Improving safety is beneficial to the patient primarily, with less risk of injury or death, but also to the facility and staff, improving retention and job satisfaction, with the added benefit of extensive cost-savings.

Learning Objectives

Describe the identifying factors and benefits to a culture of safety.

Discuss organizations responsible for driving patient safety changes on a national level.

Evaluate barriers to patient safety, and how these can be reduced or eliminated.

Recognizing and Treating Stroke
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

By understanding the causes of stroke and how to treat and prevent it, you can make a significant difference in the lives of those you care for. This course will help you identify the symptoms of a stroke and provide you with the necessary knowledge to provide care during and after the stroke.
 

Learning Objectives

Recall the pathophysiology of a stroke. 

Recognize at least three interventions for someone experiencing a stroke. 

Identify strategies for achieving quality of life after a stroke.

Recovery Principles and Practices in Behavioral Health Treatment
Duration: 1.00 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

This is an exciting time to work in the field of behavioral health treatment. The field has changed dramatically in the direction of operating on the principles of recovery. Recovery treatment involves changing our attitudes and beliefs about serious mental illness and the long-term effects of these illnesses over the lifespan to reflect the belief that recovery is the expected outcome. The field continues to expand into areas of advancing the integration of mental health to physical health, connecting to multiple dimensions of wellness and alternative medicine, as well as incorporation of peer recovery specialists. Each of these areas supports the recovery of persons with behavioral health issues.

Learning Objectives

Recall the defining principles of the wellness and recovery movement in the treatment of persons with serious mental illness (SMI).

Indicate at least three ways you can align your practices with the guiding principles of recovery when working with individuals with SMI.

Identify three things you can do to help individuals overcome the stigma of diagnosis of SMI.

Reducing Medical Errors in the OR
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

The OR is a complex environment. Highly trained individuals interact in a specialized setting with sophisticated and technically complicated devices, instruments, and equipment. There are also substantial differences among team members related to education, experience, skill level, influence, and formal and informal power. This course will inform nurses and surgical technologists of the evidence-based steps to take to create a culture of safety in the OR.

Learning Objectives

Identify the communication processes that aid in reducing medical errors and review recommendations for the safe transfer of patient care information.

Name organizations that are helping to create a culture of patient safety and their recommendations to meet this goal.

Determine the components of a just culture that promote trust and accountability and recall a 10-step process for creating a culture of safety in the OR.

Reducing Suicide Risk in Adolescents and Transition-Age Youth
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.50 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

In 2020, suicide was the third leading cause of death for young people ages 15 to 24 (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [CDC], National Center for Injury Prevention and Control [NCIPC], 2020). Rates of suicide among youth continue to increase, making it essential for behavioral health clinicians and other professionals working with adolescents and transition-age youth to understand the dynamics of suicide among young people.


After providing a foundation on how widespread the problem is and the prevailing theories about the drivers of suicidal behaviors, this course will teach you about how to effectively screen potentially suicidal youth and ways you can intervene to lower their risk.

Learning Objectives

Identify warning signs as well as risk and protective factors that affect vulnerability to suicide in youth.

State three assessment strategies to identify suicide risk in adolescents and transition-age youth.

Describe interventions that reduce the risk of suicide in adolescents and transition-age youth.

Responding to Employee Incidents
Duration: 1.00 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that in 2019, 5,333 work-related injuries resulted in death. These numbers show a 2% increase over 2018 figures and represent the most significant one-year increase since 2007 (BLS, 2020a). This course discusses the story behind the statistics. The key to reducing incidents and injuries in your organization is to prevent incidents from happening. To prevent incidents, you must understand what causes them. This course will help you to understand the significant role you play in incident investigation and prevention. 

Learning Objectives

Describe the importance of workplace safety. 

Explain the process in investigating an incident. 

Identify the importance of timely, accurate, and through incident investigations.

Review of Active Shooter Response
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

Though active shooter events are rare, it is practical and necessary to be well-prepared for the possibility, especially when you work with the public. Between 2010 and 2020, The Joint Commission (TJC) received 39 reports of active shootings that resulted in 39 deaths at accredited hospitals (TJC, 2021). As a result, the Center for Medicare Services (CMS) and TJC require hospitals to prepare for all hazards, including active shooter or hostage events, and to work with their local law enforcement and emergency response agencies to prepare for and respond to active shooter events. Understanding the risks and motivations behind active shooter events, how your body and mind may respond to stress, and how best to prepare for an active shooter event is the best way to protect yourself and others should the unthinkable occur in your facility.

Learning Objectives

Identify the definitions, signs, and trends of an active shooter event. 

Discuss the appropriate response to an active shooter situation. 

Evaluate ways in which training and preparation can be incorporated into institution protocols.

Screening and Prevention for Cervical Cancer
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 2.00 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Self-Care Strategies for Frontline Professionals
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.25 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

Healthcare and behavioral health professionals providing services on the front lines of a sustained health crisis are exposed to traumatic events on a regular basis. Staff deemed essential have little escape from the grueling demands of their daily work. Professional self-care routines are often insufficient or seemingly impossible during times of heavy demand. Without healthy work-life balance, effective self-care practices, and social connection, maladaptive coping mechanisms may surface or return. Many professionals experience feelings of helplessness when, despite their best efforts, they are unable to provide clinical solutions for their clients or patients. Based on what is known about trauma, it is imperative for professionals to effectively address self-care needs in a timely manner, for themselves and for those they serve.

Learning Objectives

Define the psychological and biological effects associated with trauma and stress reactions.

Identify signs and symptoms of moral injury, vicarious trauma, secondary traumatic stress or compassion fatigue, and burnout.

Recall methods to enhance psychological resilience via self-care practices that can be applied to work and/or home.

Septic Joint: Diagnosis and Treatment
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

Septic arthritis is caused by infection and inflammation in the joint and can result in significant damage to the joints. Early recognition and treatment are critical to the preservation of joint function. This course will discuss how to quickly identify and treat septic arthritis.  

The goal of this course is to provide physicians, nursing professionals, and radiologic technologists with information about septic arthritis.

Learning Objectives

Recall how septic arthritis is acquired and its typical presentation.

Identify the laboratory and radiological tests used to make a diagnosis of a septic joint.

Recognize the principles of septic joint treatment.

Sexual Assault and Rape for Healthcare Professionals
AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ Duration: 1.00 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

Survivors of rape and sexual assault will experience a variety of physical and emotional comorbidities as a direct result of their experience. This means survivors will enter the healthcare system through a variety of specialty clinics in addition to their primary care provider. It is important healthcare providers of all disciplines, be familiar with the signs that a patient may have been raped or sexually assaulted in their past. This course will provide the legal aspects of rape and sexual assault, the emotional and physical trauma associated with the experience, and how to identify and care for survivors. 

Learning Objectives

Recall important aspects of sexual assault and its impact on the survivor. 

Indicate the role of the healthcare provider in identifying and caring for survivors of sexual assault.

Sexual Harassment: What Employees Need to Know
Duration: 0.50 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

Sexual harassment in the workplace creates an uncomfortable working environment for employees and can also create hardships for employers. This course will explain to staff working in any healthcare setting what sexual harassment is and what they can do about it.

Learning Objectives

Define sexual harassment.

Describe how sexual harassment affects employees and organizations.

Explain at least three ways to prevent sexual harassment in the workplace.

Shoulder Dystocia: Secondary Maneuvers
AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ Duration: 0.50 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

The following content is intended for all members of the obstetric team and is based on the educational theory that team performance is enhanced when all members of the team have the same understanding of the task and procedure to be performed. 

Learning Objectives

Improve obstetrical team performance in deliveries complicated by SD. 

Illustrate proper technique for performance of Rubin maneuver. 

Illustrate proper technique for performance of Woods maneuver. 

Illustrate proper technique for performance of posterior arm delivery.

Shoulder Dystocia: Teamwork and Training
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 0.50 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

This content is intended for all members of the obstetric team and is based on the educational theory that team performance is enhanced when all members of the team have the same understanding of the task and procedure to be performed.

Learning Objectives

Enhance situational awareness for patients at increased risks for shoulder dystocia (SD). Design a team-based SD simulation drill. Improve obstetrical team performance through enhanced cooperation in deliveries complicated by SD. Review methods to enhance communications with teams.

SIADH Management
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

Syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone (SIADH) is a condition that occurs when the body produces too much antidiuretic hormone (ADH), which causes fluid retention and electrolyte imbalance. SIADH can have various causes and manifestations and can lead to serious complications if not recognized and treated promptly. This course will provide you with the knowledge to thoroughly assess and manage patients with SIADH in the hospital setting.

Learning Objectives

Explain the pathophysiology, causes, and diagnosis of SIADH. 

Identify the signs and symptoms of SIADH and potential complications. 

Review common treatments and nursing interventions for patients with SIADH.

Social and Community Context as Social Determinants of Health
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

Health outcomes are influenced in myriad ways by an individual’s social environment and their community. For example, community is linked to such outcomes as body mass index, homicide rates, and suicidal behavior (Diez Roux & Mair, 2010; Bharmal et al., 2015; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [CDC], n.d.). Due to these strong influences on health outcomes, the U.S. Department Health and Human Services Healthy People 2030 campaign identifies social and community context as a domain of the social determinants of health. Social determinants of health are external conditions which exist with the potential to affect a patient’s current and future health, often beyond a patient’s direct control. Of particular importance, however, is how this domain fits into the larger picture of the social determinants of health. The elements in the social and community context have been shown to help negate potentially negative consequences of the other social determinants of health (Bharmal et al., 2015).

Learning Objectives

Define the components of social and community context in the social determinants of health.

Recognize how components in the social and community context affects overall health outcomes.

Identify problems related to the social and community context in the social determinants of health.

Social Determinants of Health: Education Access and Quality
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 0.50 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

Education access and quality is a pillar of the social determinants of health for Healthy People 2030 (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, n.d.). This course outlines the effects of education on an individual’s health. The four components of education access and quality include early childhood education and development, high school graduation, enrollment in higher education, and language and literacy.

Learning Objectives

Identify the components of education access and quality and their effects on health.

Recall patient care and education related to education access and quality.

Social Determinants of Health: Healthcare Access and Quality
AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ Duration: 0.50 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

Nearly 10% of U.S. population does not have health insurance (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion [ODPHP], n.d.a). Healthy People 2030 is a national population and public health initiative endorsed by top U.S. government health agencies, setting health goals for the U.S. healthcare system to improve the overall wellbeing of patients in their communities. This course provides an in-depth and interactive analysis of one of the five Healthy People 2030’s domains of social determinants of health (SDOH), healthcare access and quality, and its impact on patient outcomes. 

Learning Objectives

Review what SDOH are and how they impact both healthcare access and quality of care.

Identify barriers to healthcare access and care quality, how these barriers negatively impact patient outcomes, and some strategic interventions to improve these patient outcomes.

Social Determinants of Health: Neighborhood and Built Environment
AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ Duration: 1.00 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

The physical environment in which individuals live has a direct impact on their health and wellness and their ability to access healthcare. Healthy People 2030 identifies neighborhoods and the built environment as a domain of the social determinants of health tied to health outcomes. This course provides an in-depth analysis of this domain and how it affects the health and well-being of patient populations. The four components of neighborhood and built environment include access to healthy foods, quality of housing, crime and violence, and environmental conditions. Clinicians can leverage this knowledge to improve treatment planning for patients and health outcomes.

 

Learning Objectives

Identify the four components of neighborhood and built environment domain of social determinants of health. 

Recall how neighborhood and the built environment affect overall health outcomes. 

Define how clinicians can address issues related to the neighborhood and built environment.