Overview
VCOM and the Institute of Consultative Bioethics proudly partner to provide a Medical Ethics and Religion 1.50-hour CME.
Healthcare professionals train for situations ranging from fact-based, logical decision-making in non-urgent cases to triage in critical life-and-death scenarios. This education is essential for practitioners who often lack training for ethical triage situations.
Today’s society is diverse, with varied values and ethical ideals. Medically speaking, what place does ethics play in patient care? How can physicians and health care professionals determine which values or ethical dilemmas require immediate attention? "Patient- and family-centered care is becoming an integral component of modern medicine due to forces from within the profession and external pressures. This approach is grounded in the ethical value of embracing patients and families as 'essential partners.' It systematizes this ethical imperative by enabling clinicians to uncover issues important to patients and devise genuinely patient-centered solutions, ultimately translating ethical good intentions into ethical conduct" (Journal of Ethics, American Medical Association, 2022).
This CME consists of eight topics essential for medical ethics and religion.
The Topics are:
Cultural Competence
Amish Views on Healthcare Bioethics
Catholic Healthcare Ethics
Introduction to Islamic Bioethics
Introduction to Jewish Views on Healthcare
Jehovah’s Witness and Pediatric Patients
Jehovah’s Witness: The Right to Refuse
Religion and Healthcare Ethics
The course is completed with an assessment.
Target Audience
The enduring CME is designed for anyone seeking more knowledge in this critical communication element. It benefits alumni, faculty, and staff who want to expand their understanding of medical ethics.
Learning Objectives
Understanding the U.S.’s diverse population requires analyzing frameworks like the Diversity Leadership Council’s diversity wheel, examining diversity across ethnicity, gender, age, language, and religion, and implementing systemic approaches to enhance cultural competency.
Analyze Amish views on healthcare, evaluate the impact of health insurance on their healthcare choices, compare their religious beliefs with ethical and legal standards, and assess specific health issues affecting the Amish community.
Identify the principles of Islamic bioethics, explain key Islamic ethical principles, and understand the rules of Islamic medical ethics.
Analyze Jewish ethics and its interpretative flexibility and examine Jewish bioethics' legalistic and formal aspects.
Examine the right to refuse treatment, analyze decision-making capacity, and explore the relationship between religious freedom, autonomy, informed refusal, and the use of “No Blood” cards.
Evaluate emergency care for Jehovah’s Witnesses, assess protections for vulnerable patients, explain the “Free Exercise Clause,” and analyze legal cases involving Jehovah’s Witness pediatric patients.
Understanding the intersections of religion and healthcare ethics, analyzing the impact of religion, culture, and technology, and comparing ethical codes and quality-of-life perspectives.
Course Summary
Available CME credits:
1.5 hours of Category 1-A CME provided by the American Osteopathic Association
1.5 hours of PRA Category 1 Credits ™ provided by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education
Enrollment is open.
Access to this online course is available on demand. The learner has 90 days from payment to complete the certificate. A digital acknowledgment will be sent upon completion, and VCOM will send a completion certificate to all learners.
Official reporting of the certificate to the American Osteopathic Association (AOA) will be reported in four-month intervals and for the ACCME annually. The certificate may be utilized for CME self-reporting for other medical specialists.
Course Opens: 07/01/2025
Course Expires: 07/30/2028
Cost: $ 75.00
CME Accreditation
This activity has been planned and implemented in accordance with the accreditation requirements and policies of the American Osteopathic Association (AOA), the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), and the Edward Via College of Osteopathic Medicine.
AOA
The Edward Via College of Osteopathic Medicine (VCOM) designates this enduring material for a maximum of 1.50 AOA Category 1-A Credits. It will report CME and specialty credits commensurate with the extent of the physician’s participation in this activity.
ACCME
The Edward Via College of Osteopathic Medicine (VCOM) designates this enduring material for a maximum of 1.50 AMA PRA Category 1 Credits TM. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of the physician’s participation in this activity.
Disclaimers
Completing this certificate does not correlate to a state or national licensure for a health board or medical specialty association.
Completing this certificate does not equate to any academic credit for degree completion.
Utilization of this VCOM online (enduring materials) course does not indicate nor guarantee competence or proficiency in any procedures or suggested therapies that may be in the course.
Due to the nature of the information provided in the certificate, which is dictated by state or governmental agencies, please contact your state medical board and current employment guide to verify updated medical guidelines and mandates.
Disclosures
There have been no disclosures or relationships in the last 24 months with any ineligible company to present to the planning committee or faculty.
Planning Committee: Deborah West, EdD; Paula Shipper, EdD; Kathy Gennuso, MS. DHCE, MSBLE; Rich Gennuso
Faculty: Kathy Gennuso, MS. DHCE, MSBLE; Gregory Dobar, MA, MA
Acknowledgment of Commercial Support
No commercial support was received in the production of this activity.
About EthAssist
The Institute of Consultative Bioethics (ICBioethics) provides comprehensive training and knowledge delivery platform, EthAssist®, and consulting services that support health care, other highly regulated industries, and academic organizations. The Institute of Consultative Bioethics delivers unique content that provides knowledge and ethics training for any healthcare organization's students or staff affected by healthcare compliance, patient safety, and patient-centered care.
ICBioethics Faculty
Dr. Kathy Detar Gennuso, MS, DHCE, MSBLE, Chief Executive Officer and Founder of The Institute of Consultative Bioethics (ICBioethics)
Education:
DHCE, Doctorate in Healthcare Ethics – Duquesne University
MS, Business Leadership and Ethics – Duquesne University
BS, Library and Information Science – University of Pittsburgh
Certificate - Carnegie Mellon Tepper School of Donald H. Jones Center for Entrepreneurship
Affiliations
Institution – Institute of Consultative Bioethics
Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine (LECOM)
University of Wisconsin
Kettering Health System
Award
Recipient of the 2022 Leadership Award from Health 2.0.
Greg Dober, MA, Contributor and Consultant
Education:
MA in Health Care Ethics - Duquesne University
MA in Bioethics and Health Policy from Loyola University
BS in Accounting and Economics from Duquesne University
Rich Gennuso, Chief Operating Officer