General Internal Medicine s First Conference Holds Promise

Discussions ranging from ways to manage pain to the proper use of oral anticoagulants helped draw more than 85 physicians and medical professionals to the first General Internal Medicine Conference held Saturday, Sept. 9, 2017, at Manor House Banquet and Conference Center in Mason.

"This was a conference built around evidence-based education principles that support long-term retention of knowledge,” says Katie Broderick, MD, assistant professor in the Division of General Internal Medicine, and a conference organizer. "The topics covered were chosen based on a needs assessment of providers at UC and throughout the Cincinnati community. Medical updates included discussions on direct acting oral anticoagulants, hypertension, pain management, hyperlipidemia, oral diabetes medications, perioperative medicine and evidence-based medicine.”

Continuing Medical Education (CME) and Maintenance of Certification (MOC) credits were available for the conference, which Broderick says the division plans to host again in the fall of 2018. With seven breakout sessions, participants had the chance to interact with presenters during short but impactful sessions.

"Our group facilitators were prepared and the attendees were engaged and enthusiastic,” explains Broderick. "The attendees included physicians and nurse practitioners from all over the Tristate and also included professionals from Ohio State University and the University of Kentucky. Our course evaluations have been excellent.”

Benjamin Kinnear, MD, assistant professor in the Division of General Internal Medicine, says the conference was designed to force physicians to think outside of the box. He presented a talk on diagnostic reasoning aimed at helping medical professionals correctly identify an illness and craft a treatment plan.

"We covered Bayesian reasoning and how to use smartphone apps to bring these concepts to the bedside,” says Kinnear. "It pushed some attendees out of their comfort zones, and hopefully gave them new tools for patient care.”

Tags

Related Stories

1

Certain weather patterns can trigger migraines

June 8, 2026

Certain weather patterns really do trigger migraine headaches — and the incidence is more common in the Midwest. As WGN 9 in Chicago recently reported, researchers at the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine have identified two specific weather patterns associated with an increased risk of headaches.

3

At least two weather patterns increase headaches, UC study suggests

June 4, 2026

University of Cincinnati physicians and collaborators identified two specific weather patterns that increase headache and migraine risk and found the preventive medication fremanezumab (Ajovy) can reduce weather‑associated headaches. The findings will be presented at the American Headache Society Annual Scientific Meeting in Orlando.