lupus medications
Activities tagged with "lupus medications"
Lupus Virtual Provider Education Series: All Activities
$000
Activity OverviewFrontline providers need targeted education on the initial presentation, manifestations, and demographics of lupus to identify, diagnose, and refer patients with suspected lupus more effectively. The seven activities in this series can increase your awareness, knowledge, and self-efficacy regarding the diagnosis, referral, treatment, and possible co-management of a lupus patient.Lupus Virtual Provider Education SeriesThis activity is part of a series. See the other activities in the series below.Lupus Virtual Provider Education Series: All ActivitiesLupus Virtual Provider Education Series Activity 1: Lupus IntroductionLupus Virtual Provider Education Series Activity 2: Laboratory Testing in LupusLupus Virtual Provider Education Series Activity 3: Medications in LupusLupus Virtual Provider Education Series Activity 4: Lupus FlaresLupus Virtual Provider Education Series Activity 5: Lupus NephritisLupus Virtual Provider Education Series Activity 6: Pregnancy and LupusLupus Virtual Provider Education Series Activity 7: Health Maintenance and Preventive Care Considerations in LupusRegistration is complimentary.Target AudiencePrimary care providers, physician assistants, advanced practice nurses.Learning ObjectivesUpon completion of this activity, participants should be able to:Activity 1: Lupus IntroductionIdentify the demographics of lupus and highest-risk populations for lupus complicationsIdentify classic and atypical presentations of SLEDiscuss the differential diagnosis of patients presenting with symptoms that may suggest SLEIdentify high-yield lupus-specific symptoms Activity 2: Laboratory Testing in LupusRecognize the autoimmune serologic associations of SLEIdentify when to order lab tests to evaluate SLE Activity 3: Medications in LupusIdentify the different categories of drugs used in managing lupusRecognize the different components of the EULAR 2023 Guidelines and its application in lupus management Determine the severity of lupus disease activity and how this influences treatment protocols Recognize the importance of hydroxychloroquine in the lupus management armamentarium Identify medications are used for different clinical manifestations of lupus, using different case study scenariosIdentify that non-pharmacological interventions are important along with medications for lupus management Activity 4: Lupus FlaresRecognize symptoms and signs that may indicate a lupus flareIdentify high acuity signs and symptoms that may warrant hospital admission Activity 5: Lupus NephritisDescribe the epidemiology of lupus nephritis Recognize how to diagnose lupus nephritisDiscuss the pathology in lupus nephritisRecognize when to refer to nephrologyDescribe treatment paradigms for lupus nephritis Activity 6: Pregnancy and LupusIdentify important considerations for fertility and family planning in patients with lupus including medications and lupus activityDiscuss the implication of antiphospholipid antibodies in pregnancyDiscuss the role of SSA/SSB antibodies in pregnancy and neonatal lupus Activity 7: Health Maintenance and Preventive Care Considerations in LupusIdentify the risk factors for premature coronary artery disease in lupus patients and risk modification strategiesRecognize osteoporosis risk factors and various treatment considerations in women of childbearing ageIdentify appropriate immunization schedules for lupus patients and understand contraindications to immunization among patients on immunosuppressive medicationsCE & MOC InformationCMEACCME Accreditation StatementThe American College of Rheumatology is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) to provide continuing medical education for physicians.See the ACR's CME Mission Statement. For more information, download the AMA PRA Booklet.AMA Designation StatementThe American College of Rheumatology designates this Enduring Material for a maximum of 7.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)™. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.CME credit must be claimed by March 30, 2028, at 11:59 PM ET.MOCMOC Recognition Statement: American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM)Successful completion of this CME activity, which includes participation in the evaluation component, enables the participant to earn up to 7.00 MOC points in the American Board of Internal Medicine's (ABIM) Maintenance of Certification (MOC) program. It is the CME activity provider's responsibility to submit participant completion information to ACCME for the purpose of granting ABIM MOC credit.By completing this activity, you provide the ACR permission to share completion data with the ACCME and the certifying board. After submitting a reflective statement with key takeaways from the activity, MOC points will be applied for ABIM diplomates to the ABIM diplomate number and date of birth provided when you registered. Points are sent nightly to ACCME and then transferred to the ABIM Physician Portal. Please allow at least 48 hours for points to display in the portal.MOC points must be claimed by March 30, 2028, at 11:59 PM ET.Financial Relationship DisclosuresACR Disclosure StatementIt is the policy of the American College of Rheumatology (ACR) to ensure that Continuing Medical Education (CME) activities are independent and free of commercial bias. To ensure educational content is objective, balanced, and guarantee content presented is in the best interest of its learners and the public, the ACR requires that everyone in a position to control educational content disclose all financial relationships with ineligible companies within the prior 24 months. An ineligible company is one whose primary business is producing, marketing, selling, re-selling or distributing healthcare products used by or on patients. Examples can be found at accme.org.In accordance with the ACCME Standards for Integrity and Independence in Accredited Continuing Education, ACR has implemented mechanisms prior to the planning and implementation of this CME activity to identify and mitigate all relevant financial relationships for all individuals in a position to control the content of this CME activity.Nature of Financial RelationshipsAll individuals that participate in an ACR-sponsored activity and are able to change content or influence the content of the activity must disclose to the planning committee and audience all financial or other relationships with ineligible companies including, but not limited to:Advisor or review panel memberConsultantEmployeeOfficer or Board MemberGrant/research supportSpeaker/honoraria includes speaker’s bureau, symposia, and expert witnessIndependent contractorExecutive role and/or ownership interestRoyalties and/or patent beneficiaryIntellectual property/patentsStock options or bond holdings in a for-profit corporation or self-directed pension planPrivate investigatorExpert witnessEquity interestOther: specify detailsNone: Has no relevant financial relationship(s) with ineligible companies to disclose.All participants that created and/or were able to influence the content and delivery of this activity reported the following disclosures. All of the relevant financial relationships listed have been mitigated.Tanmayee Bichile, MD (Planner) – GSK1Parastoo Fazeli, MD (Planner) – Amgen6, AstraZeneca1, Janssen1, Novartis1Nilasha Ghosh, MD, MS, RhMSUS (Planner) – GoodRx2, Musculo2Schartess Culpepper Pace, MD (Planner) – NoneNina Ramessar, MBBS (Planner) – GSK6, AstraZeneca6, AbbVie2Supraja Yeturi, MBBS (Planner) – NoneKimberly DeQuattro, MD, MM (Reviewer) – NoneElizabeth Frame, MD (Reviewer) – NoneLauren Smith, MD (Reviewer) – BMS Foundation5Acknowledgement of Commercial SupportThis activity is supported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) as part of a financial assistance award of $7 million with 100 percent funded by CDC/HHS. The activity content was provided by the author(s) and does not necessarily represent the official views of, nor an endorsement by, the CDC/HHS or U.S. Government.Educational PoliciesSee ACR educational activity policies, including the online enduring activity refund policy.