MCE Conferences – Primary Care Update: Adult and Pediatric Emergency Medicine 2025

MCE Conferences – Primary Care Update: Adult and Pediatric Emergency Medicine 2025

Regular price€120,00
/
Tax included. Shipping calculated at checkout.

  • Free Shipping on orders over 45$
  • In stock, ready to ship
  • Inventory on the way

Primary Care Update: Adult & Pediatric Emergency Medicine (Aug 29–31, 2025 · Big Sky, MT)

Objectives

  • Apply guidelines in the management of children with head injury (including when to order a head CT) and Return-to-Play/Return-to-Learn decisions.

  • Summarize which conditions can be identified by each step of a thorough pediatric eye exam and when to refer.

  • Use rapid decision-making for children with signs of surgical emergencies; choose appropriate diagnostics and avoid delays.

  • Improve diagnostic accuracy using the SPIT differential and Four-Stops medical decision-making tools, prioritizing high-risk and common conditions.

  • Describe implicit bias and its impact on clinical decisions, patient interactions, and outcomes.

  • Discuss age-related factors complicating decisions in older adults and recognize emergencies in cancer patients and elder abuse.

  • Recognize barriers to clinical reasoning and understand how AI can help (and its limitations, including bias/hallucinations).

Topics Covered

  • Concussions & Head Injury in Children: Return-to-Play/Return-to-Learn; imaging utilization.

  • Pediatric Eye Emergencies: Exam steps; infections/trauma; periorbital vs orbital infections; referral thresholds.

  • Minimizing Medical Error: Implicit bias; common cognitive errors; SPIT & Four-Stops tools.

  • A Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing (Parts 1 & 2): Benign complaints (sore throat, musculoskeletal pain, headache) that may hide serious disease; structured evaluation using SPIT/Four-Stops.

  • Evaluating High-Risk Patients: Older adults’ pitfalls; emergencies in oncology patients; recognizing elder abuse.

  • AI as a Partner in Clinical Reasoning: Real-case use, benefits, challenges, limitations.

  • The Febrile Young Infant (<8 weeks): Current evidence; decade of practice evolution; AAP guidance.

  • Does My Patient Need Surgery? (Pediatrics): Rapid recognition; appropriate tests; preventing diagnostic delay.

  • Visual Diagnosis (Pediatrics): Pattern recognition; key history questions.

  • Travel-Related Illnesses: Risk factors; malaria workup; prevention strategies.

  • In-Flight Emergencies: Good Samaritan law; clinician obligations; types and incidence of events.

- Orders under 45$ will have a shipping charge of a flat rate of 15$.

-Orders over 45$ will have Free Shipping.

This site is protected by hCaptcha and the hCaptcha Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Testimonials

★★★★★


“I find the taste of Moringa tea to be very refreshing and it definitely gives me a feeling of ‘wellness’. I appreciate the ethics of the company. Am looking forward to trying the cream”

Elain
★★★★★


”I love knowing that everything is 100% chemical-free and tested in Canada. I also respect the sustainable farming approach that supports both Canada and Ethiopia.”

Alycia
★★★★★

Since I drink Moringa Tea I feel so much better. My mouth was always so dry but since I drink this tea I have so much saliva I drool.

I cannot believe how much it has helped me with my breathing. I love it. I even eat all the leaves - Thank you for introducing me to this herbal tea. I'm 85 years old.

Richard Dorge
Winnipeg, MB

Recently viewed