Mksap Audio

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Elvisa Schimke

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Aug 5, 2024, 11:54:36 AM8/5/24
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Generalinternists and primary care physicians; subspecialists who need to remain up to date in internal medicine; residents preparing for the certifying examination in internal medicine; physicians preparing for the recertification examination.

MKSAP 19 Audio Companion Guarantee Procedure. Send a copy of your notification of failure from the ABIM to Oakstone Publishing, P.O. Box 190165, Birmingham, AL 35219. If you have answered all of the internal medicine board review questions in the MKSAP 19 Audio Companion and earned all of the CME credits, you will receive full credit of your purchase price. Your exam record will be destroyed.


Along with online access, you will also receive a USB flash drive pre-loaded with MP4 (video) or MP3 (audio) data files that can be synced to mobile devices or used when wireless connections are not optimal. (MP4s are standardized, compressed audio-visual files used for downloading and streaming both video and audio. MP3s are audio only.)


MKSAP 19 resources can help identify and fill in learning gaps in 12 subspecialty areas including nephrology, neurology, oncology, rheumatology, and more! Use MKSAP 19 to assess your knowledge and stay current in medicine, to reference in your clinical practice, and to prepare for Board exams.


MKSAP 19 can be used by residents to prepare for the ABIM Certification exam, and by practicing physicians to prepare for the ABIM Maintenance of Certification exam and the Focused Practice in Hospitalist Medicine exam.


The MKSAP 19 Audio Companion can be accessed any time, anywhere to allow for flexible learning that accommodates your schedule. Use the audio companion to learn about the latest diagnostic approaches and treatment guidelines. Earn up to 120 AMA PRA Category 1 credits and 120 ABIM MOC points with the audio companion.


MKSAP 19 Audio Companion is almost tailor-made for clinicians looking for a convenient way to consume (and retain!) a ton of high-value, clinically relevant information in satisfyingly concise intervals.


Look, I endured commuting more than three hours a day for years before I nearly lost my mind. It's not too much of an exaggeration to say audio CME literally changed my life back then. Learn from my suffering, I beg you.


This audio CME was made for general internists and primary care physicians, subspecialists needing to remain up to date in internal medicine, and residents preparing for the certifying examination in internal medicine, in addition to the lucky physicians preparing for the recertification examination.


Anesthesiology Anesthesiology for CRNAs Cardiology Emergency Medicine Family Medicine Gastroenterology General Surgery Internal Medicine Neurology Obstetrics and Gynecology Oncology Ophthalmology Orthopaedics Otolaryngology Pediatrics Psychiatry Urology All AudioDigest CME


In addition to two years of access to the entire 17-specialty library and unlimited category 1 CME credits, you are also eligible for a free $3,000 gift card or prepaid card, which you can use however you want.


Review management of: DM, HTN, COPD, CHF. DVT/PE, CKD, PNA, lyte imbalances and corrections, post op fever sources, sepsis, anemia, and blood transfusion criteria. I worked as a hospitalist for 1.5 years after feeling pretty comfortable with medicine already after working ER for years. I used UpToDate for pretty much everything.


- Subscribe to EMRAP if you like listening to podcasts. It's an ER podcast but there is a lot of crossover. You won't care about the discussions on peds fractures but you will get a lot out of discussions on sepsis, VTE, etc.


I've been a hospitalist for almost 3 years now and agree with these. Start by reviewing your bread and butter medicine. A lot of it will come with time and experience. Find a good attending or an experienced PA to mentor you and teach you. Remember you can't learn it all in a day and do your best to read up on cases as you come across them. Treat yourself like a new resident and read read read. Things I see daily which come to mind are pneumonia, copd exacerbations, acute chf, hyponatremia (you will see this a ton), DM, Dka, PE/DVT, lyte imbalances, sepsis, anemia, gi bleeds, cellulitis, AKI, CKD, CAD, afib, accelerated hypertension, and stroke to just name a few :) You will learn something new every day. Good luck! You picked a growing and very interesting career as a hospitalist. Welcome aboard!


Duh me! I can't believe I left CAD and afib off the list. Which reminded me also I had a lot of r/o MI and r/o CVA admits. So knowing about CVA workups (MRI's/lipids/statins/asa, etc) and knowing about stress tests is important. Also GI and DVT prophylaxis protocols.


If you can get the MKSAP audio files (there are some torrents online- not how I got mine though) I find them helpful to listen to when I'm driving or cleaning around the house (so long as my attention span can take it). MKSAP 17 is the most current but you'll probably only find MKSAP 16, which is what I listen to. You could also check amazon/ebay for the CDs. It's audio of a physician that works in the area being discussed and another physician who kind of leads the conversations. So it's not just one person blabbing on and on, which makes it pretty easy to listen to.


Interesting. I actually just got my hands on the mksap 17 books, an attending told me it's full of the most relevant and applicable clinical info. I have gone thru a cardio section though it is quite heavy and dense to read. I'm going to try to push through more of the texts though . Do you have any thoughts on the books?


I've got the older MKSAP books but they're outdated so I don't really use them much. I did look at some of the questions and they were decent clinical scenario type questions. If you could get the books cheap then I'd say go for it. But I really mostly like the MKSAP audio because I have a decent drive so it fills that time.


Packed with the latest diagnostic approaches and management strategies, the MKSAP 18 Audio Companion provides comprehensive, go-anywhere audio coverage of recent clinical advances and treatment guidelines across 11 internal medicine subspecialties. Listen as your host Donald L. Deye, MD, FACP, leads lively discussions with esteemed colleagues in each area. Experienced clinicians, program directors, and department chairs from some of the world's finest medical institutions share patient stories, insightful views on new treatments, and more.

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