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For immediate release: July 7, 2008 |
School of Medicine begins 'ALSO' training in Nevada |
Program helps prevent and manage medical emergencies in obstetrical care |
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LAS VEGAS/RENO, Nev.— The University of Nevada School of Medicine recently completed its first course in Advanced Life Support for Obstetrics training for the state. The program, dubbed ALSO, provided a two-day certified training program for healthcare practitioners across the state to help prevent and manage medical emergencies in obstetrical care and delivery. Forty healthcare providers including registered nurses, obstetricians, family medicine physicians, nurse midwives and labor and delivery nurses from Reno, Las Vegas, Owyhee, Lovelock, Fallon, Ely and Quincy, Calif. attended the course which was held this spring in Las Vegas. “Our goal is to train as many Nevada healthcare providers as possible right here in our “We believe that by instituting this program we will be able to substantially contribute to the number of physicians and medical personnel willing to continue to deliver babies within the state, especially in rural and frontier areas,” said Palmer. Standardized training in the management of emergency obstetrical situations can significantly increase patient’s access to safe, quality care, particularly in Nevada’s rural and frontier communities. ALSO training for maternal care providers including family medicine physicians, obstetricians and nurse midwives can improve their ability to respond to emergencies in obstetrical care. The training can also better prepare rural emergency medicine physicians to deal with unexpected problems and stabilize patients until physicians with obstetrical experience arrive. Course graduates who have been identified as excelling in teaching are recommended to be trained as ALSO instructors to grow the program with the vision of creating a network of Nevada instructors to conduct future courses across the state. |
As the state’s only public medical school, the University of Nevada School of Medicine has been a leader in healthcare, medical education and research in Nevada since 1969. The School of Medicine includes 16 clinical departments including family medicine, pediatrics, obstetrics and gynecology, internal medicine, surgery, and psychiatry and behavioral sciences, and five nationally recognized departments in basic science including microbiology and biomedical engineering. The more than 185 doctors of University Health System, the school’s clinical practice, offer care in more than 40 medical specialties and subspecialties with eight physician offices in the Reno/Sparks area and seven in Las Vegas. The school is committed to a best practices approach to medicine and is dedicated to exceptional healthcare for Nevada now and in the future. For more information visit www.medicine.nevada.edu. |