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Opioid Issues in Youth Pain Management for Orthopedic Injuries


Opioid Issues in Youth Pain Management for Orthopedic Injuries

CME Certificate Fee: $25.00 (USD) for certificate

Optional Maintenance of Certification Credit (MOC) Fee: $10.00 (USD) per point

1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)TM

1.00 Part II MOC points are available for these specialty board(s):

American Board of Pediatrics
  • Credit Type: Lifelong Learning & Self-Assessment
  • Practice Areas: Adolescent Medicine

Estimated time to complete this activity: 1.00 hours

Author(s)/Editor(s): Mohammad Mortazavi,MD
DISCLOSURE STATEMENT: All author(s), contributor(s), editor(s), and CME Office Reviewer(s) state that they do not have any financial arrangements with commercial interests that could constitute a conflict of interest.
Further Author/Editor Information | Further CME Information
Meets Special CME Requirements in: Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, California, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Mississippi, Nebraska, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, Wyoming     Learn More >>

New York Licensees: This course will NOT meet the NY pain management/palliative care/addiction requirement for prescribers.

Outcome Objectives:

As a result of completing this activity, the participant will be better able to:

  • Manage adolescent non-cancer pain using non-opioid therapies.
  • Cite at least two key safe opioid prescribing practices from state or CDC guidelines.
  • Review trends in opioid overdose and misuse among U.S. adolescents over the last twenty years.

Learning Format: Case-based, interactive online course, including mandatory assessment questions (number of questions varies by course or module). Please also read the Technical Requirements.

CME Sponsor: University of Arizona College of Medicine - Tucson
Credit Designation and Accreditation Statements >>
Current CME Approval Period: June 25, 2020 - June 24, 2023
Original Release Date: June 25, 2018
Most Recent Review by Author: June 25, 2020
Most Recent Review by CME Sponsor: June 25, 2020
Financial Support Received: Supported by a grant from the Arizona Governor's Office for Youth, Faith, and Families (ADHS14-067194:1)
Opioid Issues in Youth Pain Management for Orthopedic Injuries
1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)TM

1.00 Part II MOC points are available for these specialty board(s) (Optional):

American Board of Pediatrics
  • Credit Type: Lifelong Learning & Self-Assessment
  • Practice Areas: Adolescent Medicine

Current CME Approval Period: June 25, 2020 - June 24, 2023
Financial Support Received: Supported by a grant from the Arizona Governor's Office for Youth, Faith, and Families (ADHS14-067194:1)

ACCME/AMA PRA Accreditation Statement

The University of Arizona College of Medicine - Tucson is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education to provide continuing medical education for physicians.

The University of Arizona College of Medicine - Tucson designates this enduring material for a maximum of 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)TM. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.


CME Office Contact Information and CME Disclosure

The University of Arizona College of Medicine - Tucson
Office of Continuing Medical Education
520-626-7832
uofacme@email.arizona.edu

The following University of Arizona College of Medicine - Tucson CME Reviewers, Activity Directors, or Planning Committee Members have no relevant financial relationships with commercial interests that could constitute a conflict of interest with the proposed activity:

Robert Amend, M.Ed.
Randa Kutob, MD

MOC Recognition Statement(s)

Successful completion of this CME activity, which includes participation in the activity and individual assessment of and feedback to the learner, enables the learner to earn up to 1.00 MOC points in the American Board of Pediatrics’ (ABP) Maintenance of Certification (MOC) program. It is the CME activity provider’s responsibility to submit learner completion information to ACCME for the purpose of granting ABP MOC credit.


If you elect to receive MOC credit for this course, you give permission for VLH.com to share your information and activity completion data with the ACCME and the specialty board(s) chosen through the ACCME's Program and Activity Reporting System (PARS).

Opioid Issues in Youth Pain Management for Orthopedic Injuries
About the Author

Mohammad Mortazavi, MD
Dr. Mortazavi is a dual board-certified pediatric sports medicine physician who founded the first dedicated pediatric sports medicine program in Tucson (Sports Medicine, Rehabilitation, and Concussion Center, aka, SPARCC). Dr. Mortazavi received his medical degree from the University of California at Davis, where he also completed his pediatrics residency. He then earned a fellowship in pediatric sports medicine at Children's Hospital Colorado in Denver. Dr. Mortazavi's practice includes exercise prescriptions for athletes with chronic illness, sports nutrition, and injury-prevention programs.

Disclosure: Dr. Mortazavi states that he does not have any financial arrangements that could constitute a conflict of interest.

About the Reviewers/Editors

Daniel Derksen, MD
Dr. Derksen is the Walter H. Pearce Endowed Chair and Director of the University of Arizona (UA) Center for Rural Health (AzCRH). He is also Professor in the Public Health Policy and Management Program at UA's Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health. As AzCRH Director, he oversees the State Office of Rural Health (AzSORH), the Rural Hospital Flexibility Program (AzFlex), the Small Rural Hospital Improvement Program (AzSHIP), and the AzCRH Navigator Consortium.

Disclosure: Dr. Derksen states that he does not have any financial arrangements that could constitute a conflict of interest.

Randa Kutob, MD
Dr. Kutob is an Associate Professor of Family and Community Medicine at the University of Arizona College of Medicine-Tucson and Director of the Office of Continuing Medical Education. She is a board-certified Family Medicine physician and Diplomate of the American Board of Obesity Medicine with extensive teaching, clinical work, and research in the arena of cross-cultural care and chronic disease prevention and treatment.

Disclosure: Dr. Kutob states that she does not have any financial arrangements that could constitute a conflict of interest.

Opioid Issues in Youth Pain Management for Orthopedic Injuries
Ratings (2141 responses)
How would you rate this program overall?
Average Rating: 4.00/5.00
How well were the learning objectives of this program met?
Average Rating: 4.27/5.00
User Comments
by Hidden | May 3, 2023
Well put together, concise.
by Richard Dawson | Feb 24, 2023
Yes
by Francesco Cavallo | Feb 10, 2023
Great course. Succinct and well made.
by Hidden | Nov 8, 2022
that was great
by Miguel Pirela Cruz | Sep 13, 2022
Many high schools have P.E. trainers that can help with rehab.
by KATHLEEN ROBERTSON | May 2, 2022
great course was able to easily flow threw this case and it was a very relevant case to my practice for adolescent as well as adult ortho injury pain care.
Opioid Issues in Youth Pain Management for Orthopedic Injuries
This course meets general AMA PRA Category 1 CME Credit(s)TM requirements in states that have a CME requirement.

Based on information from state licensing authorities, this program meets special CME requirements in these states:

Alabama Controlled Substance Prescribing Practices CME
Alaska Pain Management, Opioid Use, and Addiction CME
Arizona Opioid-Related, Substance Use-Related, or Addiction-Related CME
California Pain Management CME
California Controlled Substance Education (Physician Assistant CME Requirement)
Required for PAs, not MD/DOs.
Connecticut Behavioral Health CME
Delaware Controlled Substance Prescribing Practices CME
District of Columbia Public Health Topics CME
Georgia Controlled Substance Prescribing Practices CME
Illinois Safe Opioid Prescribing Practices CME
Indiana Opioid Prescribing and Opioid Abuse CME
Iowa Chronic Pain Management / Prescribing Opioids for Chronic Pain CME
Was formerly Chronic Pain Management requirement. In June 2022, they want Opioid Prescribing, but they don't specify how many credits. Probably still 2 credits?
Maine Prescribing of Opioid Medication CME
Maryland Prescribing or Dispensing of Controlled Substances CME (i.e., OCSA CE Requirement)
Massachusetts Opioid Education/Pain Management CME
May be counted as risk management credits.
Massachusetts Risk Management CME
Michigan Pain and Symptom Management CME
Mississippi Prescribing Controlled Substances CME
Nebraska Controlled Substances Continuing Competency CME
Nevada Pain Management CME
Nevada Misuse and Abuse of Controlled Substances; Prescribing of Opioids; or Addiction CME
New Jersey Prescription Opioids CME
New Mexico Pain Management CME
North Carolina Controlled Substance Prescribing CME
Pennsylvania Pain Management / Prescribing or Dispensing of Opioids CME
South Carolina Safe Prescribing and Monitoring of Controlled Substances CME
Tennessee Controlled Substance Prescribing CME
Texas Medical Ethics / Professional Responsibility CME
Texas Pain Management and the Prescription of Opioids
These courses meet the pain management CME requirement for pain management clinics.
Utah Controlled Substance Prescribing CME
Vermont Prescribing of Controlled Substances CME
Virginia Pain Management and the Responsible Prescribing of Controlled Substances CME
Washington Opioid Prescribing CME
Wyoming Responsible Prescribing of Controlled Substances CME

View other courses meeting Special State Requirements
Opioid Issues in Youth Pain Management for Orthopedic Injuries
Technical Requirements

This web-based activity is offered online and requires an always-on connection to the Internet (the activity cannot be downloaded). The activity works on PC or Mac computers and most tablet computers. The activity should work with the newer versions of major Internet browsers, including Edge, Chrome, Safari, and Firefox. JavaScript should be enabled in all browsers, and Popups and first party cookies need to be accepted from www.VLH.com. You should also have the latest, free Adobe Reader installed for reading documents.

For additional information, read the Technical Assistance FAQ.

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