• LOGIN
  • SUBSCRIBE
  • FREE E-Newsletter/Product Bulletins

Annals of Long Term Care

  • Follow us on

Search

  • Home
  • ARCHIVES
    • Issues
    • Supplements/Webcasts
  • About Us
    • Mission Statement
    • Editorial Description
    • Editorial Board
    • Publishing Staff
    • Our Partners
    • AGS Affiliations
    • Reprints/Permissions
  • SUBMIT
    • Author Guidelines
    • Copyright Transfer Form
    • Author Disclosure Form
    • Submit Now
  • CONTACT
  • ADVERTISING
    • Print Rate Card
    • Online Rate Card
    • Tablet Rate Card
    • Classified Rate Card
    • Sales Contacts
  • Supplements/Special Projects
  • Journal News
  • WEBCASTS
    • Facing Postherpetic Neuralgia in LTC
    • Treatment for Postherpetic Neuralgia Pain
    • Case Study—LTC Patient Suffering from PHN

Getting the Most Out of Your Continuing Medical Education Classes

  • Wed, 2/8/12 - 10:27am
  • 0 Comments
  • 194 reads

Neil Baum, MD

Neil Baum, MD, is Clinical Associate Professor of Urology, Tulane Medical School, New Orleans, LA, and author of Marketing Your Clinical Practice-Ethically, Effectively, and Economically, Jones Bartlett Publishers.

 

Have you ever attended a meeting and thought that there were several ideas that you planned to implement as soon as you returned to the office only to find that nothing was accomplished when you got back on the practice treadmill? Well, that can all change if you have a plan of action that you take to each meeting. You take the few ideas that you want to use or try and then commit those ideas to paper and give yourself deadlines for accomplishing those actions. A sample of an action plan is shown below. We also suggest that your staff complete the form when they attend a meeting and bring back their to-do list and what they plan to accomplish within the practice. 


Bottom line: An idea is like a slippery fish. Unless you stab it with a pencil and put the ideas down on paper, they will slip away. Using a post-meeting action plan is one of the easiest ways to take an idea from the meeting and see that the idea take root. 

 

“Action plan” sample:
 
Two things I learned from the meeting:
 1.
 2.
 
What will we implement in the practice in the next 30 days:
 
Who will be assigned to implement the project?
 
How will we measure the results of the new project?
 
What are the outcomes we could like to achieve?

 

image description image description


Post new comment

  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Use to create page breaks.

More information about formatting options

Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.

LATEST NEWS

  • April poll results are in!
  • Mediterranean Diet May Reduce Cognitive Decline in Elders
    Journal of Alzheimer's Disease
  • Study Finds Collaboration Between Nursing Staff Can Improve Patient Care
    Journal of Gerontological Nursing
  • Changes in Diuretic Prescriptions May Heighten Risk of Falls in Nursing Home Residents
    [ Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety] March 2012
more »

Classified/Recruitment Opportunities

  • Advertise Your Job Here
more »

ALTC Blogs

A Fact of Life Discussion—A Tough Love Conversation With a Referring Physician

Neil Baum MD
5/11/12 | 0 Comments | 196 reads

ACE Inhibitors Save Lives

Alvin B Lin MD FAAFP
5/9/12 | 0 Comments | 77 reads

Marketing Your Ancillary Services

Neil Baum MD
4/30/12 | 0 Comments | 189 reads
more »
banner banner banner banner banner
HMP Communications © 2012 HMP Communications
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Other Publications
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy

HMP Communications LLC (HMP) is the authoritative source for comprehensive information and education servicing healthcare professionals. HMP’s products include peer-reviewed and non-peer-reviewed medical journals, national tradeshows and conferences, online programs and customized clinical programs. HMP is a wholly owned subsidiary of HMP Communications Holdings LLC. © 2012 HMP Communications