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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 Atlanta Trauma Symposium course objectives met?

Upon completion of the course participants should be able to:

  Significantly Met Somewhat Met Not Met
Apply the most current techniques in fracture care 
Appraise the updated indications for fracture treatment selection 
Identify the complexity of fracture so as to make the best referral decisions 
Analyze how healthcare reform may impact physician practice in orthopaedic trauma 
Employ different treatment options based on expert opinion 

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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 Atlanta Trauma Symposium speakers
SESSION I: Pediatrics

  Excellent Very Good Good Fair Poor
Michael Schmitz, MD, Dana Olszewski, MD, Jorge Fabregas, MD -How to Stay Out of Trouble: 5 Pediatric Upper Extremity Fractures
Michael Schmitz, MD, Dana Olszewski, MD, Jorge Fabregas, MD - How to Stay Out of Trouble: 5 Pediatric Lower Extremity Fractures 
Michael Schmitz, MD, Dana Olszewski, MD, Jorge Fabregas, MD - Recognizing Potential Child Abuse: Recognition and Obligations
Steven Kane, MD - Gender Specific Sports Injuries: Female
Michael Schmitz, MD, Dana Olszewski, MD, Jorge Fabregas, MD - Gender Specific Sports Injuries: Male

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* 11. Please rate the OVERALL EFFECTIVENESS of each of our Atlanta Trauma Symposium speakers
SESSION II: Upper Extremity

  Excellent Very Good Good Fair Poor
Mara Schenker, MD - Olecranon Fractures: All the Ways to Fix Them
Phani Dantuluri, MD - Distal Humerus Fractures: What the Generalist Should Know 
Mel Rosenwasser, MD - Distal Radius Fractures: Current Concepts, What I Do, and AAOS CPGs
Steven Kane, MD - The Clavicle: Medial, Middle, and Distal Injuries. What I Do
Mel Rosenwasser, MD - Single Use Device Implants for Upper Extremity: The Future?
William Reisman, MD, William Min, MD, MS, MBA, William Rosenblum, MD, Bruce Ziran, MD - Case Presentations: What Not to Do, And Why I Actually Did It

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* 12. Please rate the OVERALL EFFECTIVENESS of each of our Atlanta Trauma Symposium speakers Session III: Upper Extremity 

  Excellent Very Good Good Fair Poor
Steven Kane, MD - Proximal Humerus in Elderly: Is the Pendulum Swinging Again
Phani Dantuluri, MD - Proximal Humerus Fractures: What to Do in the Young Active Patients
Jennifer L. Bruggers, MD - Humeral Shaft: How to Manage the Hard Ones
Joshua Ratner, MD, Allan Peljovich, MD, MPH - Update on Tendon Repair Techniques
Joshua Ratner, MD, Allan Peljovich, MD, MPH - Nerve Entrapment and Tendon Conditions of Upper Extremity 

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* 13. Please rate the OVERALL EFFECTIVENESS of each of our Atlanta Trauma Symposium speakers
SESSION IV: Lower Extremity

  Excellent Very Good Good Fair Poor
William Min, MD, MS, MBA - Ankle Fractures: Update and the New Attention to the Posterior Side
William Min, MD, MS, MBA - Talus Fractures: Update on Urgency, Treatment, and Long Term Issues
William Min, MD, MS, MBA - Lisfranc Injuries: Update on Current Management
John Chao, MD - The Calcaneus: When and Who to Fix, and How to Not...
Brian Abell, DO - Common Foot Conditions 

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* 14. Please rate the OVERALL EFFECTIVENESS of each of our Atlanta Trauma Symposium speakers
SESSION IV: Lower Extremity

  Excellent Very Good Good Fair Poor
Bruce Simpson, MD - Distal Extra-Articular Tibia Fractures: Update and Options
John C. Floyd, MD, FACS - The Simple Pilon: How I Do It
William Min, MD, MS, MBA - Debate: The Severe Pilon Should be Fixed and Given a Chance
William Reisman, MD - Debate: The Severe Pilon Should Get Immediate Fusion 
Robert Harris, MD - Debate: The Severe Pilon is Better off with a BKA in this Day and Age

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* 15. Please rate the OVERALL EFFECTIVENESS of each of our Atlanta Trauma Symposium  speakers
SESSION V: Hip & Thigh

  Excellent Very Good Good Fair Poor
William Rosenblum, MD - Femoral Neck Fractures in the Young: Urgency and Techniques
Michael Suk, MD - Femoral Neck Fractures in the Elderly: Implant Selection
Michael Quackenbush, DO - How I Do ORIF of Femoral Neck in the Young
Thomas Moore, Jr., MD - Debate: Peritroch Fractures Should be Treated with DHS
Robert Harris, MD - Debate: Peritroch Fractures Should be Treated with IMHS
Lawrence Webb, MD - Femoral Nailing: My Pearls for Antegrade and Retrograde Techniques
Jon Minter, MD - Periprosthetic Fractures about the Hip
Lawrence Webb, MD - Periprosthetic Fractures about the Kneww
Carlton Savory, MD - Operation Eagle Claw: The Iran Hostage Rescue Mission Lessons Learned and "What Ifs"

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* 16. Please rate the OVERALL EFFECTIVENESS of each of our Atlanta Trauma Symposium  speakers
SESSION VI: Knee/Tibia

  Excellent Very Good Good Fair Poor
William Min, MD, MS, MBA - Distal Femur: My Pearls for Plating 
Fred Flandry, MD, FACS - Extensor Mechanism Disruptions: Current Concepts
William Rosenblum, MD - Tibial Shaft: My Pearls for Nailing
Fred Flandry, MD, FACS - Tibial Plateau Fractures: One and Two Plates. Why and How
Bruce Simpson, MD - BKA: How the Optimal Technique has Changed
William Reisman, MD - Case Presentations: Common Pitfalls in Judgement

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* 17. Please rate the OVERALL EFFECTIVENESS of each of our Atlanta Trauma Symposium  speakers
SESSION VII: Technology & Practice Management

  Excellent Very Good Good Fair Poor
Thomas Moore, Sr., MD - Bone Stimulators: The Science and Voodoo
John C. Floyd, MD, FACS - Carbon Fiber: Evolution and Current Options
Stephen Becher, MD - Managing the Pathologic Fracture in the Community Setting
Doug Lundy, MD, MBA, FACS - Practice Guidelines: What the AAOS Has Done, and Not Done
Michael Suk, MD - Preparing for Bundled Care: What Our Future Report Cars Will Look Like
William Min, MD, MS, MBA - Coding Pearls From the Crypt: What I Do

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* 18. Please rate the OVERALL EFFECTIVENESS of each of our Atlanta Trauma Symposium  speakers
SESSION X: Proactive Management/Health Policy

  Excellent Very Good Good Fair Poor
Mark Baker - New Hospital Physician Partnerships 
Doug Lundy, MD, MBA, FACS - The Crystal Ball: Private Practice in 5 Years 
Michael Suk, MD - The Crystal Ball: Employed Practice in 5 Years 
William Min, MD, MS, MBA - The Crystal Ball: Hospital Partnerships in 5 Years
John Harvey, MD - Two Systems to Help Physicians in Georgia:
Georgia Trauma Care System
Medical Association of Georgia 

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* 19. Please rate the OVERALL EFFECTIVENESS of each of our Atlanta Trauma Symposium  speakers
SESSION XI: Axial Skeleton

  Excellent Very Good Good Fair Poor
John Keating, MD - Introduction to the Sacroilliac Joint
Tim Ganey, MD - SIJ Development/Anatomy 
Fred Flandry, MD, FACS - Diagnosis: Symptoms, Signs, Tests
Adam Lewis, MD - Non-Op Treatment: Injections
Shelly DiCecco, PT - Non-Op Treatment: PT
Adam Lewis, MD - Minimally Invasive
Robert Simpson, MD - Open
William Min, MD , MS, MBA - Traumatic
John Keating, MD - Operative Imaging 
When Treatment Fails 

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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. The Foundation for Orthopaedic Research and Education (FORE) is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) to provide continuing medical education for physicians. FORE designates this live activity for a maximum of 27.5 AMA PRA Category 1 CreditsTM. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.

For the purpose of recertification, the following organizations accept AMA PRA Category 1 CreditsTM from organizations accredited by the ACCME.
  • American Academy of Physician Assistants (AAPA)
  • American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC)
  • American Academy of Neurosurgeons (AANS)
Please attest to the total number of credit hours (minimum .25- maximum 27.5) that you spent in this CME activity:

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