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Common Brain Disorders and CT Scans
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 2025
Launch Course

Computed tomography (CT) scans of the head are essential for diagnosing brain disorders in the acute care setting. This course will cover the different types of CT scans indicated for a person with a brain disorder and the signs of abnormalities in those CT scans. A review of brain anatomy will help improve awareness of common brain disorders that can be diagnosed with a CT scan. This course also reviews how to prepare patients for CT scans and basic techniques for performing CT scans. By the end of this course, learners will be able to apply knowledge of CT scans and brain disorders to provide appropriate patient care.

Learning Objectives

Recall the basic anatomy of the brain and the changes that occur after brain disorders. 

Identify the different types of CT scans indicated for a person with a brain disorder and the preparation and care for patients undergoing CT scans. 

Apply knowledge of common brain disorders and CT scans' role in managing brain disorders.

Recognizing and Treating Stroke
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 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.

Quality Series: Safety First - Culture and Patient Impact
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 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.

Preventing and Handling Crisis Situations
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 2025
Launch Course

Healthcare professionals often encounter patients experiencing agitation or displaying hostile behavior during their careers. De-escalation is a set of approaches and techniques used to assist patients in self-calming to avoid incidents of harm to self, others, or property. Professionals should understand escalation and physiological responses to threats. After determining the risk of escalation, healthcare professionals can use various aspects of verbal communication, such as tone and pitch, and nonverbal communication skills to defuse potentially hostile situations and apply the least restrictive interventions. 

Learning Objectives

Describe what de-escalation is and why it is important. 

Recall how to use de-escalation to prevent a crisis from developing. 

Indicate specific approaches you can use during a crisis to help individuals return to pre-crisis levels of functioning and prevent harm.

The Biopsychosocial Model of Substance-Related and Addictive Disorders
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 2025
Launch Course

Addictive disorders were once seen mainly as medical issues. However, this view overlooked other important factors. The biopsychosocial model offers a more complete perspective by considering biological, social, and psychological aspects. This course will explain the main ideas of this model, how it differs from other views, and how it can help treat addictive disorders. 

Learning Objectives

Explain how addictive disorders develop according to the three primary areas of the biopsychosocial model. 

State how the biopsychosocial model differs from other perspectives on addictive disorders. 

Describe how the biopsychosocial model impacts treatment approaches for addictive disorders.

Acute Stroke and the Latest Information
AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ Duration: 1.00 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 2025
Launch Course

In patients with symptoms of acute stroke, early recognition and interventions have been identified as critical factors in stroke outcomes. Evidence-based care can identify, manage, and prevent stroke-related complications. Nurses and physicians must understand stroke management to prevent disability and death. This course aims to present the most up-to-date practices for managing patients with acute stroke.

Learning Objectives

Discuss current diagnostic practices in patients with acute stroke.

Recall best practice protocols for early identification of acute stroke.

NIH Stroke Scale
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 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.

Applying HIPAA Regulations in Behavioral Health
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 2025
Launch Course

HIPAA rules underlie every service related to behavioral health, and they change to meet evolving trends. There are potentially catastrophic organizational and individual consequences if the current HIPAA rules are not followed. This course will help you to identify potential legal and ethical issues related to HIPAA, improve your compliance approach, and develop more effective risk management strategies.

The goal of this course is to assist alcohol and drug counselors, marriage and family therapists, professional counselors, psychologists, social workers, and nurses in health and human services settings in understanding and applying current HIPAA regulations.

Learning Objectives

Indicate the purpose of HIPAA and how it applies to behavioral healthcare providers. 

Recall at least three ways that the Privacy Rule impacts the day-to-day responsibilities of behavioral health providers. 

Identify at least three steps that behavioral health providers need to take to ensure compliance with the Security Rule.

Emergency Department: HIPAA and CFR42
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 2025
Launch Course

In an emergency department, information often flows amongst providers and patients quickly because of urgent, sometimes life-threatening, situations. Due to the volume of information being shared, as well as the need for it to be shared quickly and accurately, emergency department providers must be especially careful to safeguard patient information.

The goal of this course is to update nursing professionals in the acute care setting with basic information about the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) and 42 CFR Part 2.

Learning Objectives

Identify information sharing standards under HIPAA and 42 CFR Part 2.

Define the concept of consent, when you must obtain it to share or receive information, and the types of information that may not be available to you.

Psychopharmacology in the Emergency Department
AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ Duration: 1.00 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 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.

Review of Active Shooter Response
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 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.

The Use of Telehealth in Clinical Practice
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 2025
Launch Course

Telehealth offers numerous benefits and poses several challenges when used to treat behavioral health conditions. Many challenges can be addressed through specific problem-solving and communication strategies.


This course provides an overview of telehealth as well as a discussion of both benefits and challenges. You will learn the regulatory issues you should consider when preparing and implementing a telehealth practice. Lastly, this course highlights important strategies to develop rapport and promote engagement when treating clients via telehealth.

Learning Objectives

Describe telehealth, including the benefits and challenges for service delivery using different formats.

Identify three ways to address challenges and optimize service delivery via telehealth.

Explain at least three standards providers must follow to deliver telehealth services in compliance with federal and state regulations.

Social and Community Context as Social Determinants of Health
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 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.

Nursing Documentation: Challenging Situations
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 2025
Launch Course

Nurses are required to document everything of significance that happens on their shift. This can be a straightforward process, but there are often challenges. There are all kinds of scenarios that present documentation difficulties. Patients may refuse treatment or want to leave the hospital against medical advice. Your unit may be understaffed, and you want to document a complaint. The computer system can go down and you have to document on paper. Or maybe your documentation just takes too long, and you are wondering how to document faster. This course reviews strategies for documentation in challenging situations and how to document more efficiently.

Learning Objectives

Apply documentation strategies for challenging patient care and coworker situations. 

Apply documentation strategies for challenging situations related to hospital systems. 

Identify ways to save time when documenting.

Nursing Documentation: Legal Aspects
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 2025
Launch Course

To know documentation principles and to apply them in daily practice are musts for every nurse. These are essential to protect patients and to safeguard every nurse’s license. Documentation is the foundational proof that care was provided to a patient. Requirements and methods of documenting are ever-changing amongst a variety of documentation modalities. Although nurses sometimes view documentation as a process that takes precious time away from direct patient care, it is one of the most critical skills they perform. In fact, appropriate and effective documentation is at the core of nursing practice.

The goal of this course is to provide nurses working in acute care settings with information about the value of laws and standards governing nursing documentation, legal basics for appropriate documentation, and provide awareness of documentation practices that can lead to legal issues.

Learning Objectives

Describe four characteristics of legally-credible charting. 

Discuss the legal definition of nursing negligence. 

Describe two charting practices that can lead to legal issues.

Collecting and Preserving Evidence in a Healthcare Setting
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 2025
Launch Course

Whenever a crime occurs, evidence can be transferred among the perpetrator, victim, and the crime scene. Law enforcement personnel collect and preserve crime scene evidence. Healthcare professionals can simultaneously assist with a crime investigation and provide good healthcare to patients by collecting and preserving evidence from the patient’s body. It is imperative to understand that the collection and preservation of evidence from a patient should never compromise the patient’s safety, autonomy, or legal rights. This course provides an overview of interviewing, collecting, and preserving forensic evidence, toxicology, and documentation.

Learning Objectives

Recognize how nurses and other healthcare professionals can impact the outcome of criminal investigations. 

Describe how to document information regarding the collection of evidence and forensic findings while providing patient-centered, high-quality healthcare.

 Identify the measures necessary to preserve forensic evidence and maintain the proper chain of custody.

Assessment and Intervention for Confabulation
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 2025
Launch Course

Healthcare workers will often interact with patients who make up stories or memories that are inaccurate, sometimes wildly so. These patients are not lying, they are confabulating. A nurse who knows how to manage confabulation can help these patients. With proper interventions, most patients can stop confabulating or learn to manage the condition. This course will give you a solid foundation of knowledge about and skills to handle confabulation by explaining what it is, who does it, what causes it, and how to manage it.

The goal of this course is to inform nurses in the acute care setting about confabulation and how to assess and manage patients with confabulation.

Learning Objectives

Recall the types of confabulation and the pathophysiology of confabulation. 

Identify two methods of assessing confabulation. 

Apply several approaches for managing confabulation.

Perioperative Specimen Handling
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 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.

Ethics for Licensed Professionals: 1 Hour
AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ Duration: 1.00 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 2025
Launch Course

Ethics are a significant part of high-quality clinical practice. This one hour course presents ethical principles and responsibilities of healthcare professionals. The goal of this course is to provide healthcare professionals with an awareness of how ethics impact clinical practice and an approach for analyzing ethical issues in clinical practice. 

Learning Objectives

Identify definitions, similarities, and differences of common ethics terminology and concepts. 

Describe the four healthcare ethical principles and their implications for clinical practice. 

Apply an ethical decision-making model to ethical issues and dilemmas.

Sexual Assault and Rape for Healthcare Professionals
AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ Duration: 1.00 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 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.

IV Therapy Complications
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 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.

Management of Needlestick Injuries
AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ Duration: 1.00 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 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.

The Impact of Psychedelics
AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ Duration: 1.00 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 2025
Launch Course

This course will provide healthcare professionals in the acute care setting with an introduction to the use of psychedelics for the treatment of behavioral health conditions. Healthcare professionals will learn about the types of agents used, their indications, benefits, and their associated risks and side effects.

The goal of this course is to provide health care professionals in the acute care setting with an introductory review of novel therapeutic agents used to treat behavioral health conditions.  

Learning Objectives

Recall how psychedelics are used to treat behavioral health disorders and how they impact symptoms of behavioral health disorder. 

Identify the potential risks and side effects of psychedelics. 

Recognize whether an individual is a good candidate for psychedelic treatment for behavioral health symptoms.

Culture and Women's Health
AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™, MOC, and ANCC Duration: 1.00 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 2025
Launch Course

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, minority groups will outnumber what is now considered mainstream culture by the middle of this century. Healthcare professionals need to heighten their awareness about the importance of role, culture, and tradition in preventing and treating women’s unique healthcare problems. When there is a lack of cultural sensitivity in communication, patients are less likely to be content with their healthcare experience, increasing the likelihood of miscommunication and possible cultural disparities. These factors can also cause non-compliance with treatment, worse health outcomes, and a higher incidence of adverse events.

The goal of this course is to equip healthcare professionals with knowledge of the impact of culture on women’s health beliefs and practices and their responses to current approaches to care.

Learning Objectives

Recall different cultural practices that impact women in various stages of life. Identify two cultural practices that interfere with women’s health. Recognize ways to provide culturally competent care to women.

Controlled Substances: Chronic Pain Management
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 2025
Launch Course

Chronic pain is a common condition for which healthcare providers often prescribe controlled substances, such as opioids. Prescription opioids can alleviate pain in certain patients, but the risk of misuse, abuse, and overdose means providers need to evaluate the risks and benefits for each patient. This course will educate healthcare providers on the role of prescription opioids along with other therapies for chronic pain, using recommendations from current national guidelines.

The goal of this course is to educate healthcare providers on methods for the safe and responsible use of controlled substances for the management of chronic pain.

Learning Objectives

Indicate treatment options for patients with chronic pain. 

Identify safe strategies to initiate or change opioid analgesics. 

Name patient factors and characteristics that can make prescribing opioids unsafe.