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* 1. Check appropriate title.

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* 2. Please rate your overall satisfaction with the organization of this meeting.

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* 3. The ACCME defines commercial bias as presentations giving an unbalanced view of therapeutic options by promoting a specific proprietary business interest of a commercial interest.

Was this CME course free of commercial bias?

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* 4. Did the faculty disclose significant relationships with commercial support?
(One or more of these methods: Syllabus / Opening Remarks / Verbally / On Slides)

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* 5. Please rate the quality of the meeting facilities.

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* 6. How well were the Orthopaedic Trauma & Fracture Care: Pushing the Envelope course objectives met?

Upon completion of the course participants should be able to:

  Significantly Met Somewhat Met Not Met
Know several emerging techniques in Trauma & Fracture Care with discussion of where they stand relative to evidence-based medicine and standard of care
Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of surgical treatment options for fractures of the extremities and pelvis
Recognize the benefits (and limitations) of Operative Dogma and Evidence-Based Medicine as it pertains to Trauma & Fracture Care
Know and discuss useful fracture repair techniques, even those not yet in the textbooks
Debate and understand controversies in Trauma & Fracture Care, such as those related to surgical timing 
Know emerging strategies for surgeon wellness and burnout prevention

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* 7. Did you meet your personal goal/objective for what you intended to get out of this course?

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* 8. Do you intend to integrate what you learned at this conference into your current practice?

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* 9. Please rate the relevance of this program to your scope of practice:

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* 10. Please rate the OVERALL EFFECTIVENESS of each of our Orthopaedic Trauma & Fracture Care: Pushing the Envelope speakers
SESSION I: Surgeon Challenges Fireside

  Excellent Very Good Good Fair Poor
Jeffrey M. Smith, MD - Passion for Performance Improvement
Philip Stahel, MD - How to Know Our Own Complication Rates without Lying to our Patients
Taylor Riall, MD, PhD - Responding vs Reacting to Your Environment
Payem Tabrizi, MD - My Worst Cases of My Career and Why
David Dalstrom, MD - A Case Gone Wrong: STOP and RECOVER
Performance Psychology: The Science of Mental Toughness

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* 11. Please rate the OVERALL EFFECTIVENESS of each of our Orthopaedic Trauma & Fracture Care: Pushing the Envelope speakers
SESSION II: Emerging Techniques

  Excellent Very Good Good Fair Poor
Anthony Sanzone, MD - Pain Management Update
Payam Tabrizi, MD - Patellar Plating
Emily Benson, MD - Antibiotic Cement Spacers
John Scolaro, MD - Antibiotic Covered Plates and Nails

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* 12. Please rate the OVERALL EFFECTIVENESS of each of our Orthopaedic Trauma & Fracture Care: Pushing the Envelope speakers
SESSION III: Fractures of the Pelvis & Lower Extremity 

  Excellent Very Good Good Fair Poor
Geoff Maracek, MD - Early Weight Bearing of Acute Jones Fractures
Emily Benson, MD - Compartment Syndrome of the Foot: To Release or Not to Release
Brian Solberg, MD - Talus Fractures: Key Decisions
Jackson Lee, MD - Tibial Pilon Fractures: Key Decision 

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* 13. Please rate the OVERALL EFFECTIVENESS of each of our Orthopaedic Trauma & Fracture Care: Pushing the Envelope speakers
SESSION IV: Injuries of the Hip & Pelvis

  Excellent Very Good Good Fair Poor
Philip Stahel, MD - What is the Role for Pelvic Packing
Payam Tabrizi, MD - Hip Dislocations: Could Modern Medicine Have Saved Bo Jackson's Career 

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* 14. Please rate the OVERALL EFFECTIVENESS of each of our Orthopaedic Trauma & Fracture Care: Pushing the Envelope speakers
SESSION V: The Patient & Provider Team

  Excellent Very Good Good Fair Poor
Don Wiss, MD - The Patient Perspective 
Paul Tornetta, MD - What is a Patient Advocate?
Todd Swenning, MD - Patient Advocacy 
Dan Coll, PA - Maximizing Value Out of PA's and NP's
Joe Mahon, PT - Common Communication Errors Between Surgeon, Patient and Therapist

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* 15. Please rate the OVERALL EFFECTIVENESS of each of our Orthopaedic Trauma & Fracture Care: Pushing the Envelope speakers
SESSION VI: Geriatric Fracture Management

  Excellent Very Good Good Fair Poor
Damayea Hargett, MD - Vitamin D Deficiency for the Orthopaedic Fracture Surgeon
Don Wiss, MD - Bisphosphonate Fractures: What (Must) Should You Know
Oke Anakwenze, MD - Total Elbow vs ORIF in Elbow Fractures

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* 16. Please rate the OVERALL EFFECTIVENESS of each of our Orthopaedic Trauma & Fracture Care: Pushing the Envelope speakers
SESSION VII: Treatment of Fractures About the Upper Extremity

  Excellent Very Good Good Fair Poor
Don Wiss, MD - Clavicle Fractures: Limiting Complications 
Charles Moon, MD - Humeral/Ulnar Shaft Fractures: You Can;t Handle the Truth
Oke Anakwenze, MD - Proximal Humerus Fractures: When and How to Reverse It
Todd Swenning, MD - Treating Proximal Humerus Fractures with Nitinol Cage

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* 17. Please rate the OVERALL EFFECTIVENESS of each of our Orthopaedic Trauma & Fracture Care: Pushing the Envelope speakers
SESSION VIII: Business of Trauma & Fracture

  Excellent Very Good Good Fair Poor
Dan Coll, PA - Musculoskeletal Urgent Care Leveraging PA's
Alexe Page, MD - Got TRUMPed! What to Expect Now?
Joe Mahon, PT - Is Physical Therapy Going by the Wayside?
Alexe Page, MD - MACRA - MIPS vs APMs for Ortho Fracture Surgeons

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* 18. Please rate the OVERALL EFFECTIVENESS of each of our Orthopaedic Trauma & Fracture Care: Pushing the Envelope speakers
SESSION IX: Patient Safety & Risk Management

  Excellent Very Good Good Fair Poor
Jefferey Smith, MD - What is Safety to You?
Todd Swenning, MD - Medicolegal Risks of the Curbside Consult
Charles Moon, MD - The Surfing Surgeon: My Patient Safety Pearls
Philip Stahel, MD - Why Our Current Patient Safety Protocols are Unsafe
Philip Stahel, MD - Checklists- Pro
Jeffrey M. Smith, MD - Checklists- Con

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* 19. Please rate the OVERALL EFFECTIVENESS of each of our Orthopaedic Trauma & Fracture Care: Pushing the Envelope speakers
SESSION X: Surgeon Wellness & Burnout Prevention Workshop- Drs. Stahel, Smith, & Riall

  Excellent Very Good Good Fair Poor
Learning Empathy Pearls & Discussion
Learning Accountability Pearls & Discussion 
Learning Positive Attitude Pearls & Discussion
Learning Communication Pearls & Discussion
Learning Time Management Pearls & Discussion

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* 20. Based on your CME needs, please give suggestions for future program topics/formats.

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* 21. What barriers do you foresee that may hinder your implementation of changes learned at this activity? What educational strategies could help to overcome these barriers?

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* 22. What do you see as your BIGGEST challenge in improving patient safety, patient care and/or patient outcomes? What educational strategies could help to overcome this challenge?

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* 23. How did you hear about this CME Program?

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* 24. Please provide your contact information.

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* 25. This activity has been planned and implemented in accordance with the accreditation requirements and policies of the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) through the joint providership of the Foundation for Orthopaedic Research and Education (FORE) and Unite Orthopaedics. FORE is accredited by the ACCME to provide continuing medical education for physicians.

FORE designates this live activity for a maximum of 21 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)TM. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.

Physician Assistants: The American Academy of Physician Assistants (AAPA) accepts AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)TM from organzations accredited by the ACCME. 

Nurses: For the purpose of recertification, the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC) accepts AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)TM issued by organizations accredited by the ACCME.

Please attest to the total number of credit hours (minimum .25- maximum 21) that you spent in this CME
activity:

T