Program: Wednesday, 5/20/09
Program: Thursday, 5/21/09
Conference Faculty
Description of Topics
CME Information
Conference Information
Registration Form
44th ANNUAL
Riley Hospital MULTIDISCIPLINARY
CHILD HEALTHCARE CONFERENCE
May 20 and 21, 2009
Building a Healthy Future for Indiana's Children
Sponsored by
Indiana University School of Medicine
Department of Pediatrics and
James Whitcomb Riley Hospital for Children
Held at the
Sheraton Indianapolis Downtown Hotel
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Register now for outstanding CME on important pediatric topics and connect with colleagues and professionals who care for children. NOTE: Special breakfast tribute to retiring Chair, Dr. Richard L. Schreiner on Thursday morning, May 21, 2009
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Web Site Address: http://www.rileypeds.org/ChildCare/default.aspx
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Registration Form—Riley Hospital Annual Child Healthcare Conference Please do not use this form for more than one person.
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There are 9 two-hour sessions and 3 one-hour Plenary Sessions; the Children’s First Luncheon and the Indiana Chapter AAP Luncheon are accredited for 1 hour CME each. You must pick only one of the sessions that are provided in the morning and only one in the afternoon.
The Plenary Sessions are for all registrants and included in your registration. Please indicate those Plenary Sessions you are attending. Use the seminar numbers when marking the form. Do not use check marks or X’s for the seminars you have chosen.
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| Program: Wednesday,
May 20, 2009 |
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7:00 - 8:15 AM
General Pediatric Section Breakfast Meeting
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| Wednesday
Morning Sessions |
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Plenary Session A:
8:30
AM - 9:30 AM
How Children Come to Understand Illness
and
How We Can Learn to Explain it Better
David Schonfeld, M. D.
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BREAK - Exhibit Room: 9:30 AM - 9:45 AM
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Morning Seminars: 9:45
AM - 11:45 AM
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Seminar #1
Dermatoses in Children of Color
Patricia Treadwell, M.D.
and
Infantile Hemangiomas - 2009 Update
Anita Haggstrom, M.D.
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Seminar #2
Discipline and Behavior
Management of Preschool Children
David Schonfeld, M.D.
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12:00 - 1:30 PM - Children First Luncheon The Emerging
National Agenda for Children
Jay Berkelhamer, M.D. |
| Wednesday
Afternoon Sessions |
Plenary Session
B: 1:45 PM – 2:45 PM
Autism - Practical Information and Strategies for Identification and Treatment
Naomi Swiezy, Ph.D., HSPP
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BREAK - Exhibit Room: 2:45 PM - 3:00 PM
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Afternoon Seminars: 3:00
PM - 5:00 PM
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Seminar #3
Immunizations Myths and
Communicating with Parents
Jay Berkelhamer, M.D.
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Seminar #4
When Animals and Arthropod
Fight Back: Zoonotic and Tick Borne Infections
John Christenson, M.D.
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RECEPTION Hors d'oeuvres: 5:30 PM - 7:00 PM
All Registrants Invited |
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| Program: Thursday,
May 21, 2009 |
7:30 - 9:00 AM -
Department of Pediatrics Residency Alumni Breakfast
Sponsored by the Riley Children’s Foundation
Join us in Tribute – Dr. Richard Schreiner
Retiring as Chair of the Department of Pediatrics
December, 1987 – June, 2009
ALUMNI BREAKFAST – Honor Years
1939, 1944, 1949, 1954, 1959, 1964, 1969, 1974, 1979, 1984, 1989, 1994, 1999, 2004
All Registrants Invited |
| Thursday
Morning Sessions |
Plenary Session
C: 9:15 AM – 10:15 AM
Third-hand Smoke and How to Help Every Family Member Quit Smoking
Jonathan Winickoff, M. D.
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BREAK - Exhibit Room: 10:15 AM - 10:30 AM
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Morning Seminars: 10:30
AM - 12:30 PM
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Seminar #5
Antimicrobial Resistance in
Pediatric Practice: Where Have All the Cheap Pens Gone?
John Christenson, M.D.
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Seminar #6
Pediatric Toxicology
Blake Froberg, M.D.
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Seminar #7
Effective Tobacco Control in Your Practice
Jonathan Winickoff, M.D.
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INDIANA CHAPTER, AMERICAN ACADEMY OF PEDIATRICS BUSINESS LUNCHEON
12:45 AM - 2:45 PM
Understanding Legal Issues in Adolescent Health Care: A Case Based Perspective
Abigail English, J.D. |
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BREAK - Exhibit Room: 2:45 PM - 3:00 PM
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| Thursday
Afternoon Sessions: 3:00
PM - 5:00 PM |
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Seminar #8
Minors, Consent and Sexual Health:
Understading the Law - Past, Present, and Future
Abigail English, J.D.
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Seminar #9
Thyroid Disease in Infants, Children, and Adolescents
Todd Nebesio,M.D.
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Seminar #10
What’s the Idea with IDEIA?
Indiana’s Revised
Special Education
Regulations
Steve Koch, Ph.D.
Angela Tomlin, Ph.D.
Mary Ciccarelli, M.D.
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| Conference
Faculty |
Jay Berkelhamer, M. D., Chief Academic Officer and Senior Vice President, Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta; Past President of the American Academy of Pediatrics, Atlanta, Georgia.
John Christenson, M. D., Director, Ryan White Center for Pediatric
Infectious Disease, Professor of Clinical Pediatrics, Indiana University School
of Medicine, Director, Pediatric Travel Medicine Clinic, Riley Hospital for
Children, Indianapolis, Indiana
Mary Ciccarelli, M. D., Associate Professor of Clinical Medicine and Pediatrics, Departments of Medicine and Pediatrics, Indiana University School of Medicine; Indianapolis, Indiana.
Abigail English, J.D., Director, Center for Adolescent Health and the
Law, Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Blake A. Froberg, M. D., Assistant Professor of Clinical Pediatrics , Department of Pediatrics, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana.
Anita Haggstrom, M. D. Assistant Professor in Dermatology and Pediatrics,
Arthur L. Norins Investigator in Dermatologic Research, Indiana University
School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana
Steve Koch, Ph.D., Adjunct Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, Department of Pediatrics, Indiana University School of Medicine, Child Development Section, Riley Hospital for Children, Indianapolis, Indiana.
Todd D. Nebesio, M. D., Assistant Professor of Clinical Pediatrics, Section of Pediatric Endocrinology/Diabetology, Department of Pediatrics, Indiana University School of Medicine, Riley Hospital for Children, Indianapolis, Indiana.
David J. Schonfeld, M. D., Thelma and Jack Rubinstein Professor of
Pediatrics, Director, National Center for School Crisis and Bereavement,
Director, Division of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics, Cincinnati
Children’s Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio
Naomi Swiezy, Ph.D., HSPP, Alan H. Cohen Family Scholar of Psychiatry, Associate Professor of Clinical Psychology in Clinical Psychiatry, Clinical Director, Christian Sarkine Autism Treatment Center, Program Director, HANDS in Autism, Riley Hospital for Children, Indianapolis, Indiana.
Carol Touloukian, M. D., Volunteer Assistant Professor of Clinical Pediatrics, Department of Pediatrics, Indiana University School of Medicine, Bloomington, Indiana.
Angela Tomlin, Ph.D., Adjunct Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, Department of Pediatrics, Indiana University School of Medicine, Child Development Section, Riley Hospital for Children, Indianapolis, Indiana.
Patricia Treadwell, M. D., Professor of Pediatrics, Department of
Pediatrics, Riley Hospital for Children, Indiana University School of Medicine,
Indianapolis, Indiana
Jonathan Winickoff, M. D., M.P.H., Dr. Winickoff is the Harvard site PI for the AAP Julius B. Richmond Center of Excellence, serves as a Scientific Advisor to the Massachusetts Tobacco Control Program, Chair of the AAP Tobacco Consortium. Dr. Winickoff is a practicing general pediatrician with training and research experience in health services research, clinical research, medical ethics, medical education and biostatistics. He is the Associate Fellowship Director, MGH Center for Child and Adolescent Health Policy Harvard Pediatric Health Services Research Fellowship Program. He and his team have developed CEASE – the Clinical Effort against Secondhand Smoke Exposure. |
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Description of Topics |
Wednesday, May 20, 2009
Morning Sessions
Plenary Session A – How Children Come to Understand Illness and How We Can Learn to Explain it Better
This session will review what children understand and often misunderstand about illness especially misconceptions, liberal misinterpretations and over generalization. Practical suggestions will be given about how to explain illness to children and their parents. The process by which children come to understand illness will be discussed extensively and ample examples of understanding, misunderstanding, and interpretation will be provided.
Seminar #1 - Dermatoses in Children of Color and Infantile Hemangiomas
Dermatoses in Children of Color:
This session is designed to review the clinical presentations of Dermatoses specifically in children of color. Specific differences will be highlighted with photographs of cases.
Infantile Hemangiomas:
The purpose of this session is to provide an update on identification, diagnosis and treatment of hemaginomas in infants in high risk group. Work ups, diagnosis and treatment options will be discussed.
Seminar # 2 – Discipline and Behavioral Management of Preschool Children
This session will use cases to review the principles of learning theory and behavior modification and highlights how they can be applied to promote successful parenting of preschool age children. Developmental characteristics of the preschool child that limits the child’s ability to understand instructions, principles of positive/negative reinforcement and various types of punishment and effectiveness of each type will be discussed.
Children’s First Luncheon – The Emerging National Agenda for Children
In this session the American Academy of Pediatrics strategic priorities as relate to physical and mental health of American children will be presented and discussed. In addition, the concerns of current advocacy efforts in general and America’s Promise Alliance in particular will be reviewed.
Afternoon Sessions
Plenary session B – Autism: Practical Information and Strategies for Identification and Treatment - Practical Tips and Supports
This session will present practical information and strategies related to autism screening, referral, and ultimate effective interaction and tools for use with the individual and family. Each participant will gain access to the Toolkit for Medical Professionals and companion DVD.
Seminar #3 – Immunizations, Myths and Communicating with Parents
In this session, the history of immunization in the United States will be reviewed first and then issues related to access to vaccines, quality and safety of vaccine and financial considerations will be discussed.
Seminar #4 – When Animals and Arthropod Fight Back: Zoonotic and Tick-borne Infections
In this session epidemiology and clinical features that suggest presence of a zoonotic infection will be presented and diagnostic and therapeutic approaches to zoonotic infection will be discussed.
Thursday, May 21, 2009Morning Sessions
Plenary Session C – Third-hand Smoke and How to Help Every Family Member Quit Smoking
In this session clinical importance of third-hand smoke will be defined and new information about contamination of space even after cigarette is extinguished will be shared. Practical methods such as Ask, Assist, Refer, implementation of CEASE initiative and overcoming barriers to effective control will be presented and discussed.
Seminar # 5 – Antimicrobial Resistance in Pediatric Practice: Where Have All the Cheap Pens Gone?
In this session, how antimicrobial resistance affects the selection of antimicrobial therapy, recognition of specific clinical scenarios suggestive of an infection caused by resistant organism and multiple newer and older agents used to treat these infections will be presented and discussed.
Seminar # 6 – Pediatric Toxicology: Management of a Poisoned Patient
This session will review the work up of a poisoned patient and will discuss common therapies/antidotes for the poisoned patient.
Seminar # 7 – Effective Tobacco Control in Your Practice
In this session, case-based examples and video clips will be used to present methods to approach parents, grandparents and other caregivers regarding smoking cessation.
Afternoon Sessions
IN State Chapter of AAP Business Luncheon Presentation – Understanding Legal Issues in Adolescent Health Care: A Case Based Perspective
This session will review the history of minors’ right to consent for sexual and reproductive health services will explain the relationship between consent and confidentiality protections in adolescent health care and will discuss legal interpretation when laws are silent or unclear and will explore the potential for new ways to extend legal protections.
Seminar # 8 – Understanding Legal Issues in Adolescent Health Care: A Case Based Perspective
This workshop will explore critical legal issues in adolescent health care using a case based perspective. A juvenile court judge, a hospital legal counsel, and a lawyer from the community will each present a challenging case from their experience. The two panelists will comment on the case and then the moderator will present additional viewpoints.
Seminar #9 – Thyroid Disease in Infants, Children and Adolescents
The focus of this presentation will be on diagnosis of hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism in pediatric patient. Appropriate treatment options, diagnostic tests and interpretations of tests of thyroid function in those who disease is suspected and manifestation of thyroid disease in children with Down Syndrome will be discussed.
Seminar #10 – What’s the Idea with IDEIA? Indiana’s Revised Special Education Regulations
Starting with the 2008-2009 academic year, several significant changes were made in Article VII,
Indiana’s regulations governing special education in the state. This presentation will discuss the more salient changes and give physicians ideas on how to talk with parents about navigating the schools related to these revisions. How to request an evaluation, process and eligibility for specific learning disability and the Individual Transition Plan (ITP) will be discussed in-depth.
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COURSE DESCRIPTION AND OBJECTIVES/CME INFORMATION
COURSE DESCRIPTION:
This two day course provides the registrant with an opportunity to participate in a variety of presented topics prepared by recognized leaders to add to their skills in the primary care of children and adolescents.
COURSE OBJECTIVES:
At the conclusion of this course participants should be able to:
- Describe the process by which children come to understand, misunderstand and interpret illness and explain how illness and treatment can be explained to children;
- Review clinical presentations of dermatoses in children of color and hemangiomas in infants and describe diagnosis and treatment options for each disorder;
- Describe developmental characteristics of the preschool child that limits the child’s ability to understand instruction and explain to parents how to apply basic principles of conditioning for effective behavior modification;
- Summarize the AAP strategic priorities and discuss the concerns of the America’s Promise Alliance;
- Explain how autism is diagnosed and identify information important to share with
Families;
- Discuss the issues related to access to immunizations in the United States as well as quality and financial issues;
- Recognize the clinical features of zoonotic and tick-borne infection and explain treatment options;
- Define third-hand smoke and its clinical importance and explain how to overcome barriers to effective tobacco control in clinical practice and methods of approach to parents, grandparents, and other caregivers regarding smoking and smoking cessation;
- Describe the workups for the poisoned patient and common therapies/antidotes appropriate for different types of poisoning;
- Describe the relationship between consent and confidentiality in adolescent care and explain how to address legal questions particular when laws are silent or unclear;
- Recognize the features of hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism in pediatric patient and describe appropriate treatment options for each disorder; and
- Identify the changes in Article VII of regulations governing special education in Indiana and advise families in regard to evaluation, process and eligibility for a specific learning disability and the individual transition plan.
ACCREDITATION STATEMENT
The Indiana University School of Medicine is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education to provide continuing medical education for physicians.
DESIGNATION STATEMENT
Indiana University School of Medicine designates this educational activity for a maximum of 13
AMA PRA Category 1 CreditsTM. Physicians should only claim credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.
FACULTY DISCLOSURE STATEMENT
In accordance with the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) Standards for Commercial Support, educational programs sponsored by Indiana University School of Medicine (IUSM) must demonstrate balance, independence, objectivity, and scientific rigor. All faculty, authors, editors, and planning committee members participating in an IUSM-sponsored activity are required to disclose any
relevant financial interest or other relationship with the manufacturer(s) of any commercial product(s) and/or provider(s) of commercial services that are discussed in an educational activity.
NOTE
While it offers CME credit hours, this activity is not intended to provide extensive training or certification in the field.
CONFERENCE INFORMATION
QUESTIONS PRIOR TO CONFERENCE
Contact the staff at 317-278-7571 or e-mail maunder@iupui.edu (Mary Ann Underwood) or sjdailey@iupui.edu (June Dailey).
EXHIBITS/REFRESHMENTS
Refreshments will be available in the Exhibit area. This will be available beginning at 8:00 AM each day. Scheduled breaks are noted on the program schedule.
HOTEL
The Sheraton Indianapolis Downtown Hotel has located a block of rooms at a special rate under the title of Child Healthcare Conference (or Child Care Conference). Reservations: 800-333-3333 or direct at 317-635-2000. Valet parking is available as well as self-parking at the hotel. There are other garages in the area including the Circle Center Mall. The hotel is located at 31 West Ohio Street at the corner of Meridian and Ohio just north of the Circle.
EMERGENCY PHONE
We ask that pagers and cell phones be turned off or placed on vibration during the meetings. If you wish to provide a contact person for your office at the meetings, please have them contact the hotel at 317-635-2000 and ask for the Child Healthcare Conference Registration Desk.
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| Return to: |
Mary Ann Underwood, Coordinator, Child Healthcare Conference, Riley
Hospital, Room 5867, 702 Barnhill Drive, Indianapolis, IN 46202
prp@iupui.edu Phone: 317-278-7571
Fax: 317-274-1476 (Completed Form. Please print clearly. Thank you.)
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| For overnight accommodations, please call the Sheraton Hotel City Centre Downtown Indianapolis for reservations at 317-635-2000 or 800-333-3333. A block of rooms have been reserved for the Child Healthcare Conference. (Riley Child Care Conference) |
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