Multimodality Monitoring in Clinical Care: Challenges and Opportunities - On-Demand

15sepAll Day22Multimodality Monitoring in Clinical Care: Challenges and Opportunities - On-DemandJoin this eSeminar with Dr. Brandon Foreman

Event Details

Course introduction:
Please join us for this previously recorded eSeminar presented by Dr. Brandon Foreman from the University of Cincinnati. Neurocritical care, like all intensive care, produces an incredible amount of data for physicians to interpret and make decisions for patients with acute brain injuries such as traumatic brain injury (TBI). The increasing use of multimodality neuromonitoring in clinical care adds to this complexity. How do you access brain monitoring data and put it together with the other monitors in the room? How can brain monitoring data be linked with the care being provided to our patients? What do I even do with this data? New technologies and analytic tools provide opportunities that move brain monitoring closer to being a standard for neurocritical care patients.

Learning Objectives:
At the conclusion of this seminar the participants will be able to:

  • Describe challenges to accessing data during clinical care in a clinically relevant way
  • Understand difficulties in providing clinical context and methods for communicating and annotating interventions that impact the brain
  • Define opportunities to use multimodality neuromonitoring data to guide clinical care
  • Discuss future directions: data harmonization, collaborative research, and analytic tool development

Speakers for this event

  • Brandon Foreman

    Brandon Foreman

    MD MS FACNS FNCS

    Brandon Foreman, MD MS FACNS FNCS is Associate Professor of Neurology & Rehabilitation Medicine and Neurosurgery at the University of Cincinnati and serves as Associate Director for Neurocritical Care Research with the Division of Neurocritical Care. Dr. Foreman was trained in both clinical neurophysiology and neurocritical care at Columbia University Medical Center and holds a master’s degree in clinical & translational research with a certificate in biomedical informatics from the University of Cincinnati. His research focuses on brain monitoring in the ICU. He is an expert on the use of EEG and ECoG to detect seizures and spreading depolarizations after brain injury and investigates the dysregulation of cerebral blood flow. His research goal is to integrate an understanding of cortical physiology with bedside care to inform precision critical care that improves outcome after acute brain injuries.

    MD MS FACNS FNCS

Time

september 15 (Sunday) - 22 (Sunday) EST

Location

ONLINE eSeminar

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