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Human Trafficking: A Growing Epidemic
AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ Duration: 2.00 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

Human trafficking is a significant issue in the U.S. and worldwide. Human trafficking victims are often concealed by their traffickers; however, studies show that many victims interact with healthcare professionals while they are being victimized. This places healthcare professionals in a unique position to recognize the signs and risk factors of human trafficking and take steps if they suspect a person may be a victim of human trafficking.

Learning Objectives

Identify the two major types of human trafficking. Recall how force, coercion, and fraud relate to human trafficking.

Recognize federal laws regarding human trafficking.

Select at least three barriers to identifying human trafficking.

Identify at least three signs that someone may be a trafficking victim.

Prioritize steps to take if you suspect a person is being trafficked.

Identifying and Responding to Child Abuse and Neglect
AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ Duration: 1.50 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

This course will teach you about the various types of child abuse and neglect that are currently the most common, and the physical and behavioral warning signs that may accompany different kinds of child maltreatment. You will learn some general guidelines for mandatory reporting and how you can find out the specific reporting requirements of your particular state.

Learning Objectives

Identify the behavioral and physical signs of abuse and neglect. 

Describe the role of the mandated reporter and where to access state-specific rules related to mandated reporting in your state.

Identifying and Responding to Intimate Partner Violence
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.50 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

Intimate partner violence (IPV) affects thousands of people each year. It affects people from all social and economic backgrounds, ages, sex, genders, sexual orientations, race, and ethnicities. Those who experience IPV often suffer adverse social and health outcomes that make early recognition, identification, and response a priority for professionals working in healthcare and health and human services.

Learning Objectives

Identify five types of IPV and five dynamics of survivor and perpetrator relationships.

Recall at least four types of risk factors and protective factors of IPV.

Identify best practices and key considerations for the assessment and treatment of IPV.

Infection Prevention Strategies for Healthcare Professionals
Duration: 1.00 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

Healthcare professionals are responsible for implementing infection prevention techniques. This course reviews how pathogenic organisms spread in healthcare settings, infection prevention strategies for healthcare professionals, and occupational health strategies to control the spread of infectious and communicable diseases.

The goal of this course is to provide nursing and medical assistant professionals in the healthcare setting with a general overview of infection prevention strategies.

Learning Objectives

Indicate how pathogenic organisms may be spread in healthcare settings. 

Recall infection prevention strategies healthcare professionals should employ in the work setting. 

List occupational health strategies specific to preventing human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), hepatitis B virus, and tuberculosis (TB) in healthcare providers, and resources for evaluation of healthcare professionals infected with these organisms.

IV Therapy Complications
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

Nurses deliver infusion therapy to millions of patients in hospitals, home healthcare settings, long-term care facilities, outpatient clinics, and physicians’ offices annually. Nursing professionals perform many daily activities involving peripheral catheter insertion and safe delivery of intravenous (IV) fluids and medications. The use of vascular access devices and IV therapy are commonplace in the acute care setting. With that said, clinicians must take caution due to the potentially serious and fatal complications that can occur from inappropriate IV fluid or drug delivery. Patient safety requires that nurses institute safeguards to avoid complications associated with IV treatment.

Learning Objectives

Discuss the maintenance and complications of peripheral IV (PIV) therapy. 

Identify drugs that can cause tissue damage if extravasation occurs. 

Recall the components for documenting a peripheral IV insertion.

Lockout/Tagout Procedures
Duration: 0.25 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

Every year, workers are injured or killed when the equipment they are working with unexpectedly turns on or the residual energy stored in the equipment is released. Lockout/Tagout, or LOTO, is a set of procedures used to control hazardous energy during the service or maintenance of machine and equipment. The aim of LOTO procedures is to protect workers from the release of hazardous energy.  

The goal of this course is to provide all staff with an overview of lockout/tagout procedures.

Learning Objectives

Explain key principles of lockout/tagout and why they were implemented.

Management of Needlestick Injuries
AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ Duration: 1.00 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

Needlestick injuries continue to pose a threat to all healthcare professionals (HCPs). While HIV was once the most concerning organism, today, hepatitis B and C take precedence (King & Strony, 2022). Regardless of circumstances, more than 90% of sharps injuries are preventable (International Safety Center [ISC], n.d.). Therefore, all healthcare clinicians must be diligent to avoid injury even in busy and stressful working conditions. This module will review the current literature on managing the most common bloodborne pathogens (BBP) transmitted by needlestick injuries and evaluating post-exposure prophylaxis.

Learning Objectives

Discuss procedures to follow after a needlestick or sharps injury. 

Identify factors that can lead to a needlestick or sharps injury. 

Identify factors that can prevent a needlestick or sharps injury.

Managing Coagulopathies
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

The focus of this course is coagulopathies. In general, the term coagulopathy refers to bleeding disorders. This course will provide a review of the components of a clot. It will also provide you with valuable information about how to care for those with coagulopathies such as immune thrombocytopenia (ITP), disseminated intravascular coagulopathy (DIC), heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT), and warfarin-induced coagulopathy.

The goal of this course is to provide nurses in the critical care setting with a general overview of coagulopathies, including the recognition and nursing management of ITP, DIC, HIT, and warfarin-induced coagulopathy. 

Learning Objectives

Describe the etiology and presentation of DIC, ITP, HIT, and warfarin-induced coagulopathy.

Identify proper nursing care for those with DIC, ITP, HIT, and warfarin-induced coagulopathies.

Identify emergency findings in those with coagulopathies and discuss the appropriate nursing interventions.

Managing Peripheral Artery Disease
AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ Duration: 1.25 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

The goal of this course is to provide the clinician with up-to-date best practices for identifying and treating patients with PAD. It includes symptoms, complications, risk factors, and modifications of PAD. In addition, diagnostic tests, assessment, and treatment strategies will be discussed.

Learning Objectives

Identify risk factors and complications related to PAD.

Discuss two assessment findings and tools used to diagnose PAD.

Describe two disease management and education techniques for patients with PAD.

Medical Management of Operative/Assisted Vaginal Delivery
AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ Duration: 2.00 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

This course discusses best practices in operative vaginal delivery techniques—forceps-assisted delivery and vacuum-assisted delivery (OAVD), as well as episiotomy.

The course is case-based, so you will have an opportunity to apply the principles covered to particular patient scenarios. The cases are branched, with different outcomes based on different choices.

Use of OAVD techniques vary from organization to organization. You may, for example, work in a hospital in which forceps techniques are no longer taught to residents. Each section has been organized so that you can move through it quickly or delve into it more deeply, depending on its relevance to your clinical practice.
 

Learning Objectives

Discuss the steps, indications, contraindications, and potential complications associated with vacuum-assisted vaginal delivery, forceps-assisted vaginal delivery, and episiotomies. 

Describe the circumstances in which an episiotomy is and is not an appropriate intervention. 

Explain the importance of the flexion point when placing a vacuum cup and how it is located. Identify the criteria for correct placement of the forceps during a non-rotational delivery, as well as guidelines regarding the number of pulls.

Medication Error Prevention
AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ Duration: 1.00 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

Medication errors and substandard care occur often in today’s complex healthcare organizations. High-reliability organizations remain alert to potential errors and ways in which they can be prevented, regardless of how few adverse events occur. Healthcare organizations with a culture for patient safety focus on identifying the cause of errors and applicable prevention strategies rather than blaming or punishing the people involved in an error. Organizations that focus on patient safety in this manner have higher rates of error reporting and are better positioned to address problems at the systems level.

The goal of this course is to educate healthcare professionals about approaches to prevent medication errors.

Learning Objectives

Discuss how a culture of patient safety influences reporting and resolving errors. 

Define the types of medical errors and their impact on healthcare. 

Explain strategies to reduce medication errors.

Minimizing Trips, Slips, and Falls
Duration: 0.25 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

This course is about workplace slip, trip, and fall hazards. It alerts you to the serious consequences that can result even from a simple fall or a near fall and provides information about measures that can help you prevent these incidents and reduce potential injuries.

Learning Objectives

Identify common hazards that might lead to trips, slips, and falls.

Explain how to prevent injuries from trips, slips, and falls.

Multiple Sclerosis: Treatment and Care Considerations
AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ Duration: 1.00 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

It is estimated that there are more than 2.8 million people worldwide living with multiple sclerosis (MS). In the United States, there are almost 1 million people living with the disease (National Multiple Sclerosis Society [NMSS], 2020). MS is a chronic, progressive autoimmune disease of the central nervous system (CNS) caused by damage to the protective myelin sheath covering neurons. MS lesions, or plaques, disrupt electrical impulses from neurons in the CNS to muscles that can affect mobility, elimination, energy, vision, and other functions (DynaMed, 2022). 

Learning Objectives

Recall the overarching disease pathophysiology and main symptoms with discernable interventions of MS.

Identify the disease classifications and the diagnostic algorithm, including the McDonald Criteria for MS.

Review therapeutic approaches for treating the underlying disease of MS.

Natural Disasters and Workplace Emergencies: Earthquakes and Tsunamis
Duration: 0.50 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

Earthquakes and tsunamis unleash powerful forces of nature. They cause catastrophic infrastructure and property damage and can result in tremendous loss of life. This course presents some basic facts about earthquakes and tsunamis, including considerations for preparedness and protective actions.

The goal of this course is to provide all staff with a basic overview of earthquakes and tsunamis.

Learning Objectives

Explain where and how earthquakes and tsunamis occur.

Identify potential hazards before an earthquake.

Employ protective actions to enhance safety during and after an earthquake or tsunami.

NIH Stroke Scale
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

This course is designed to provide nursing professionals with a comprehensive understanding of the NIH stroke scale. The course will cover the purpose of the NIH stroke scale, how to administer the scale, and how to interpret the results. The course will also include case studies that illustrate the use of the NIH stroke scale in clinical practice.

Learning Objectives

Identify the purpose of the NIHSS and how it is used in clinical practice. 

Recall the significance of NIHSS scores to patient outcomes. 

Apply the NIHSS to assess patients with stroke or stroke-like symptoms including how to score each section of the NIHSS.

Obstetric Hemorrhage: Mitigating Risk to Improve Outcomes
AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ Duration: 0.50 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

Two cases are presented. Risk factors, including recurring and nonrecurring, for obstetrical hemorrhage, are reviewed. Delivery preparations and preventative strategies are discussed. Methodologies that better quantify blood loss, allowing for earlier recognition of excessive blood loss, are presented. Management of the patient experiencing obstetric hemorrhage, including a review of current guidelines for blood component replacement therapy, are reviewed.

Learning Objectives

List recurring and nonrecurring risk factors for obstetrical hemorrhage. List the four Ts of OH.

Identify low, medium and high risk patients for OH.

Review blood component therapy for large volume blood loss.

Optimizing Patient Outcomes in Acute Heart Failure
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

Heart failure (HF) treatment is costly and requires a multidisciplinary approach. Evidence-based treatment guidelines improve patient outcomes, and it is essential to become familiar with these guidelines to reduce patient mortality. Healthcare team members play a significant role in treating acute HF (AHF), helping to reduce the morbidity and mortality of the disease and decrease the use and costs associated with care. This course aims to educate nurses and nutrition and dietetics professionals in the acute care setting about evidence-based heart failure treatment guidelines.

Learning Objectives

Describe heart failure, including its classification systems, presentation, treatment, and evidence-based therapies.

Describe strategies for patient self-management.

Perioperative Pediatric Conditions
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

Perioperative professionals must have a fundamental understanding of the anatomical, physiological, psychological, and emotional differences of children compared to adults and how these differences impact the care needs of pediatric patients in the perioperative period.

Learning Objectives

Identify anatomical, physiological, psychological, and emotional differences in pediatric patients and how those differences impact care needs in the perioperative setting. 

Recognize strategies for preventing and responding to medication errors and adverse drug events involving children in the perioperative setting. 

Recall surgical considerations for pediatric patients.

Perioperative Series: Communication in the OR
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

In the operating room, patient safety depends on high quality communication and shared knowledge among the surgical team. Several factors in this setting can contribute to communication failures like time constraints, shift changes, environmental barriers, the complex nature of surgical procedures, and clashing communication styles. All members of the surgical team must understand the risks to patient safety associated with communication failures, what information must be communicated and when, and how to use an assertive communication style.

The goal of this course is to equip nurses and CSTs with best practices for effectively communicating in the operating room. 

Learning Objectives

Describe best practices for facilitating communication in the OR.

Identify four communication styles and which style is most effective for ensuring patient safety.

List common barriers to effective communication in the OR.

Perioperative Series: Emergencies in the OR
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 2.00 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

Perioperative providers can BEST prepare for emergencies in the operating room by knowing the responsibilities of each team member and rehearsing interventions ahead of time. When you are in the moment and your heart is racing, it’s easy to forget how to respond or even where supplies are located. Practicing your responsibilities and team interventions ahead of time will help to prepare you for the unexpected. This course provides you with an opportunity to participate in five emergency scenarios to test your knowledge. Time is of the essence when an emergency happens so you must think and act fast to save the patient!

The goal of this course is to equip nurses and STs with knowledge of the responsibilities of the team during a range of OR emergencies. 

Learning Objectives

Recognize evidence-based strategies for treating and preventing a range of OR emergencies. 

Describe the roles and responsibilities of members of the surgical team when emergencies occur. 

Recall the best practices for improving patient outcomes during an emergency.

Perioperative Series: Intro to Perioperative Nursing
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 0.75 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

As defined by the Association of periOperative Registered Nurses (AORN) (2019), the perioperative nurse’s goal is to help patients achieve or exceed the level of well-being they had at the pre-procedural baseline. The nurse is required to have the clinical knowledge, judgment, and clinical reasoning skills necessary to safely plan, deliver, and evaluate care for surgical patients.

The goal of this course is to equip perioperative nurses with knowledge of the nursing process and the roles and responsibilities within the perioperative team.

Learning Objectives

Identify the perioperative nursing process throughout the phases of surgery. 

Define the roles and responsibilities of the members within the surgical team and the AORN standards of perioperative practice.

Perioperative Specimen Handling
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: May 2025 Expiration: May 2025
Launch Course

Proper surgical specimen handling is essential for patient safety. This course covers best practices for intraoperative personnel to prepare, label, and transfer specimens accurately. Adhering to these protocols ensures that specimens are identified and handled appropriately, minimizing the risk of harm to the patient.

This course provides OR nurses and surgical technologists with knowledge of best practices for specimen handling.

Learning Objectives

Describe the considerations and methods of preparing specimens for various pathologic and examination types. 

Recall care standards for the appropriate handling, labeling, and transportation of specimens. 

Identify common mistakes made during specimen management and prevention methods to avoid these 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.

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.

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.