Target Audience: This course is designed to change physician and other health care provider competence in the prevention, diagnosis, and evaluation of work-induced or exacerbated injuries and illnesses. The course is valuable for occupational medicine practitioners, primary care physicians who may see patients with work-related disorders, occupational health nurses, and anyone involved with the worker s compensation system.
Needs Assessment: This course provides up-to-date information on the diagnosis, prevention and treatment of occupational injuries and illnesses. New diagnostic tools will be presented for disorders that may be caused or exacerbated by work, and for diagnoses that may impair a worker s ability to perform usual work activities. The course is knowledge-based and designed to change physician performance in the diagnosis, treatment, and management of work-induced disease or impairments that affect work ability. This includes the recognition and/or management of musculoskeletal disorders, neurologic dysfunction, substance abuse, vision loss, respiratory and heart disease. This year s daylong conference will specifi cally address these identifi ed educational needs and provide practitioners with state-of-the-art tools to improve the evaluation, diagnosis, and treatment options for their patients. Faculty presenting and interacting with participants at this activity have been selected on the basis of their comprehensive clinical experience and academic excellence.
Educational Objectives:
Describe the precarious worker and other contributing causes of increased occupational illness and injury among immigrants
List the American Heart Association Guidelines for Heart Disease Prevention and Treatment in Women
Discuss simple cultural awareness of injury causation and effective tools for preventing most injuries
Describe an outline strategy for how clinicians can work cooperatively with the claims administrators and employers to facilitate recovery
Name areas where occupational medicine practice will likely be different after national health care reform
Explain the toxicological evidence for potential health effects of diesel emissions
List potential ways in which biomarker technology might improve therapeutic intervention of traumatic brain injury
Describe frequently encountered workplace related eye problems
Discuss a plan of injury management that incorporates safe and effective treatment
Explain key preparedness factors that have been identified through California s natural disaster experiences
Past Events
28th Annual UC Davis Occupational and Environmental Medicine Symposium 2010 - 22 May 2010, UC Davis Cancer Center Auditorium, Sacramento, California, United States (4777)
Annual UC Davis Occupational and Environmental Medicine Symposium 2026
Important
Please, check "Annual UC Davis Occupational and Environmental Medicine Symposium" official website for possible changes, before making any traveling arrangements