Inspire.Create.Lead. On-Demand Webinar Package including State CME Mandates and More!

This package of 13 on-demand webinars, recorded from the 2024 Michigan Family Medicine Conference & Expo, is approved for a total of 10.25 CME credits through July 17, 2025.

Purchase the package today to access the variety of webinars, some of which meet state-mandated CME requirements, at your leisure.


Intended Audience

Family physicians, family medicine residents, medical students, and life members


1. Addressing Mental Health in Primary Care Using the Collaborative Care Model

Integrating behavioral health care and general medical services has been shown to improve patient outcomes and reduce costs. After decades of research, the Collaborative Care Model (CoCM) has been shown as the most effective and efficient model for delivering integrated care. CoCM introduces two new roles, a Psychiatric Consultant (PC) and a Behavioral Health Care Manager (BHCM), as well as a new tool, the Systematic Case Review Tool, to the care team for measurement-guided care. After reviewing the essential elements of CoCM (Patient-Centered Team Care, Population-Based Care, Measurement-Based Treatment to Target, Evidence-Based Care, and Accountable Care) this session will identify patients who can be appropriately treated using CoCM and discuss the roles of each team member.

Facilitator: Dayna LePlatte, MD, Adjunct Clinical Assistant Professor, Michigan Medicine (Ann Arbor, MI)

CME: This session is approved for 0.75 Enduring AAFP Prescribed credit.


2. Answers to Women's Common Concerns of Desire, Arousal and Orgasm

Our presentation will address female sexual dysfunction, focusing on low desire. We’ll look at how to provide a thorough sexual interview, evaluate pain and emotional connection, and review medications that may cause low desire. We will compare Discordant Desire to Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder. We will consider current FDA-approved treatments for Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder and review initial diagnosis and treatment options for arousal and orgasmic dysfunction.

Facilitator: Christine Krause, MD, FAAFP, Assistant Professor, University of Michigan Department of Family Medicine-Retired (Saline, MI)

CME: This session is approved for 1.00 Enduring AAFP Prescribed credit.


3. Connected Care: Enhancing Patient Health and Practice Prosperity through Remote Patient Monitoring

From connected care to innovative strategies, this session will provide actionable insights and practical approaches for family physicians to leverage remote patient monitoring (RPM) effectively. During this session, we will explore the core principles and technologies that underpin remote patient monitoring. We will review the current RPM models, technology, and medically indicated conditions. We will then discuss how the strategic integration of technology can enhance patient outcomes while driving revenue for family physicians. Finally, we review the practice  management aspects of integrating RPM, including administrative needs, billing, and reimbursement.

Facilitators:  Erin Hendriks, MD, FAAFP, Assistant Professor, University of Michigan (Bloomfield Township, MI) and Amanda Sussex, Head of BD & Partnerships at Salvo Health (New York, NY)

CME: This session is approved for 0.50 Enduring AAFP Prescribed credit.


4. Cross-Cultural Medicine: Healthcare for Native Americans in Michigan 

Native American communities, including those in urban and tribe areas of Michigan, have historically been marginalized and underserved in terms of medical care. During this presentation, we will provide an overview of the health status of these communities and discuss ways that family medicine physicians can address these disparities in a unique and integrated manner. One such approach is cross-cultural medicine. We will also explore how Family Medicine Physicians can make their practices more inclusive and respectful of the cultural and spiritual beliefs of their Native American patients.

Facilitator: Frank Animikwam, MD, Medical Director, Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians (Petoskey, MI)

CME: This session is approved for 1.00 Enduring AAFP Prescribed credit and meets the State of Michigan's implicit bias training requirement for medical licensure.


5. Evolution of Primary HPV Screening for Cervical Cancer

The cervical cancer screening of today is not your mother's test! Because of the natural history of HPV and the development of biomarkers, a superior screening test is now available for the averaged-risk, asymptomatic woman. During this session we will look at the progression of testing and identify the risk-based strategies developed to manage abnormal results.

Facilitator: Diane Harper, MD, MS, MPH, FAAFP, Professor, University of Michigan (Ann Arbor, MI)

CME: This session is approved for 0.75 Enduring AAFP Prescribed credit.


6. Exploring Population Health Trends, Innovative Care Models, and Value-Based Payments

Participants will learn about emerging trends in population health, new models of care, and value-based payment models. We will define and discuss the concept of value, as the relationship between cost AND outcome.

Facilitator: Michael Kobernick, MD, FAAFP, MS-HAS, MS-PopH, Senior Medical Director, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan (Huntington Woods, MI)

CME: This session is approved for 1.00 Enduring AAFP Prescribed credits.


7. Hypertension: Improving Patient Care through Performance Improvement

Health plans and regulators have developed hypertension quality measures to evaluate the evidence-based quality of care provided to patients by healthcare professionals. Payors are using performance data to determine payments in incentive programs and alternative payment models. However, actual care often has wide variances, exceeding or falling short of targeted goals. This session will help attendees improve hypertension patient care. It will cover quality and performance tools and guide attendees through planning a PDSA cycle for their practices. After a review of their performance data, they will be able to submit their outcomes and learnings to ABFM as a performance improvement project for maintenance of certification credit, which will also carry AAFP PI-CME credit. More importantly, they will have gained experience in performance improvement which may be continued in other areas of practice and/or with different interventions to improve the care of their patients.

Facilitator: David Walsworth, MD, FAAFP, Assistant Chair of Clinical Affairs and Associate Professor, Department of Family Medicine, Michigan State University College of Human Medicine (East Lansing, MI)

CME Awarded: This session is approved for 1.00 Enduring AAFP Prescribed credits.


8. Legalized Marijuana: How to Navigate Challenges of Increased Use

With the explosion of change in marijuana laws, most of which decriminalize recreational use, family physicians must confront the challenges of increased use of marijuana in their practice populations. Drug and alcohol testing may be a useful tool for physicians, but it comes with inherent risks and limitations that must be recognized. We will discuss drug testing options, medical/legal considerations for physicians, and the recognition of acutely impaired individuals in the office.

Facilitator: Michael Berneking, MD, FAAFP, FACOEM, FAASM, Medical Director, Bronson ProHealth (Kalamazoo, MI)

CME Awarded: This session is approved for 1.00 Enduring AAFP Enduring credit.


9. POCUS in Your Medical Practice: Implementation Strategies and Challenges

Point-of-Care Ultrasound (POCUS) is rapidly expanding in family medicine and has significant implications for education, scholarship, and clinical practice in the United States. With recent updates to ACGME and AAFP requirements for residents to obtain POCUS training, upcoming graduates will seek employment opportunities in
academic and community settings that support the implementation of POCUS in clinical practice. This session will focus on the introduction of five common applications of POCUS to enhance outpatient clinical decision-making and share best practices in billing, acquiring POCUS equipment, standardized training, and credentialing.

Facilitator: Juana Nicoll Capizzano, MD, FAAFP, Clinical Assistant Professor, Clinical POCUS Director, Program Director of Advanced Primary Care Ultrasound Fellowship, University of Michigan (Ann Arbor, MI)

CME: This session is approved for 0.50 Enduring AAFP Prescribed credit.


10. Practical Approach to Assessing and Treating Human Trafficking Victims

Family physicians are essential care team members with the ability to identify victims of human trafficking, who span all ages, sexual orientations, ethnicities, and socio-economic backgrounds. Attend this session to develop an understanding of Michigan law, warning signs, and best resources to support both physicians and victims. Plus, gain a practical, straightforward, evidence-based approach to assessing and treating victims of human trafficking that may be integrated into the family medicine practice. 

Facilitator: Rachel Klamo, DO, FAAFP, Family Physician and Chief of Family Medicine, Ascension Providence Rochester Hospital (Oxford, MI)

CME: This session is approved for 1.00 Enduring AAFP Prescribed credit and meets the State of Michigan's human trafficking training requirement for medical licensure.


11. The Top 10 Evidence-Based Medicine Updates for 2024

Using recent research findings and medical literature, Dr. Domino will translate the most recent clinical recommendations into high-quality, evidence-based care strategies you can apply in your practice.

Facilitators: Frank J. Domino, MD is a professor and the pre-doctoral education director for the Department of Family Medicine and Community Health at the University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School in Worcester, MA. He is the editor in chief of Lippincott, Williams and Wilkins’ "5 Minute Clinical Consult" series and an author, podcaster, and blogger.

CME: This session is approved for 1.00 Enduring AAFP Prescribed credit.


12. The Value Proposition for Physician Wellness in Family Medicine

Family medicine can benefit from intentionally addressing physician wellness. In this session, we will examine how physician wellness is critical to providing primary care services to meet the health needs of communities and the nation. The COVID-19 pandemic has significantly impacted primary care and family physician practices. The pandemic resulted in increased rates of burnout and has challenged even the most resilient physicians, making it difficult for them to recover from the moral injury and stressors they face both at work and outside of work. Let's discuss how investing in sustainable family medicine (and primary care) strategies can improve physician wellness.

Facilitators: Margot L. Savoy, MD, MPH, FAAFP serves as senior vice president for education, inclusiveness, and physician well-being at AAFP. Savoy oversees all organizational activities related to medical education and continuing professional development, physician well-being, and diversity, equity, and inclusion. Her areas of focus include education and training of medical students and residents; student interest and choice of a career in the specialty of family medicine; expansion of graduate medical education in family medicine including federal policies that affect it; and development of continuing professional development opportunities, including CME.

CME:  This session is approved for 1.00 Enduring AAFP Prescribed credit.


13. Unlocking the Code: How HCC Coding and RAF Scoring affects your Practice’s Bottom Line

Providing great primary care is just one side of the family practice equation; understanding the business of medicine is the other. Attend this session to increase your knowledge of Hierarchical Condition Category (HCC) coding and how it affects Risk Adjustment Factor (RAF) scores. Learn how to code to accurately reflect patients’ overall illness and what you need to chart to justify certain codes. Leave the session with practical steps to coding that will benefit your practice’s bottom line.

Facilitators: Robert Jackson, MD, FAAFP, Physician, Western Wayne Physicians (Allen Park, MI)

CME:  This session is approved for 0.75 Enduring AAFP Prescribed credit.


Cost:

Members must log in to receive the discounted price.

  • MAFP Active, Inactive, and Life Members: $350
  • MAFP Resident Member: $250
  • MAFP Student, Transitional Members: $50
  • Non-member: $450