July 2005
NCCAM offers online education for MDs
The National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM) at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) is offering a new online continuing education series for the medical community on complementary and alternative medicine.
This lecture series offers healthcare professionals and the public the opportunity to learn more about complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) therapies and the state-of-the-science about them through video lectures by leading experts in this field.
Medical doctors, nurses, and other healthcare professionals can earn continuing medical education (CME) credits. Users who complete all the test chapters can generate an online certificate.
The CME series is free and can be viewed at nccam.nih.gov/videolectures.
“With 62 percent of the American public using CAM, from dietary supplements to chiropractic, there is not only a great need to inform conventional and CAM health care professionals, but also to provide the public with information they can use to make decisions about their healthcare options,” said Stephen E. Straus, MD, NCCAM director. “This CME series is a valuable addition to the other resources on the NCCAM Web site.”
The series currently has six different lectures. Each lecture includes an overview of the CAM area, a review of research results and ongoing research, and discussion of the historical and practice perspectives.
CAM topics covered are:
• Overview of Complementary and alternative medicine;
• Herbs and other dietary supplements;
• Mind-body medicine;
• Acupuncture: An evidence-Based assessment;
• Manipulative and body-based therapies: Chiropractic and spinal manipulation;
• Complementary and alternative medicine and aging.
Source: National Institutes for Health, National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine, www.nih.gov