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TZID:Eastern Standard Time
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DTSTART:20251102T020000
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TZNAME:Eastern Standard Time
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DTSTART:20250301T020000
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DESCRIPTION:University of Colorado School of Medicine\, a Continuing Medica
 l Education ProgramThis program is designed for healthcare professionals w
 ho provide patient care at all levels in transplantation. The course is de
 signed for\, but not limited to surgeons\, hepatologists\, nephrologists\,
  nurses\, social workers\, and pharmacists.The University of Colorado facu
 lty and guest speakers will address controversial topics in transplantatio
 n\, organ allocation\, and normothermic perfusion. Objectives:&nbsp\;At th
 e conclusion of this conference\, participants should be able to:&nbsp\;An
 alyze and critique national performance metrics for liver and kidney trans
 plantationEvaluate the role of normothermic regional perfusion in donation
  after circulatory deathIdentify ways of increasing donor acceptance offer
 s for kidney and liver transplantationExamine the ethical issues and risks
  of xenotransplantation&nbsp\;Debate continuous distribution in respect to
  the balance of geographic equity vs harming utility.&nbsp\;
DTEND:20230306T045900Z
DTSTAMP:20260618T035951Z
DTSTART:20230303T050000Z
LOCATION:
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Controversies in Transplantation
UID:RFCALITEM639173375919342710
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<div><div><div id="widget:e586e3b6-9322-498a-a
 3dd-31288be6d29b"><div data-cvent-id="widget-EventDescription-widget:e586e
 3b6-9322-498a-a3dd-31288be6d29b"><div><div><div><div><p><strong>University
  of Colorado School of Medicine\, a Continuing Medical Education Program</
 strong></p><p>This program is designed for healthcare professionals who pr
 ovide patient care at all levels in transplantation. The course is designe
 d for\, but not limited to surgeons\, hepatologists\, nephrologists\, nurs
 es\, social workers\, and pharmacists.</p><p>The University of Colorado fa
 culty and guest speakers will address controversial topics in transplantat
 ion\, organ allocation\, and normothermic perfusion. </p></div></div></div
 ></div></div></div></div></div><div><div><div id="widget:b6c6e388-9d6b-4b2
 4-8e3d-ec405aa695d1"><div data-cvent-id="widget-NucleusEmptyCell-widget:b6
 c6e388-9d6b-4b24-8e3d-ec405aa695d1"></div></div></div></div><div><div><div
  id="widget:e109e6a0-8ed3-42f9-88e1-5e32c6ea5888"><div data-cvent-id="widg
 et-NucleusText-widget:e109e6a0-8ed3-42f9-88e1-5e32c6ea5888"><div><div><p><
 strong>Objectives:&nbsp\;</strong>At the conclusion of this conference\, p
 articipants should be able to:&nbsp\;</p><ol><li>Analyze and critique nati
 onal performance metrics for liver and kidney transplantation</li><li>Eval
 uate the role of normothermic regional perfusion in donation after circula
 tory death</li><li>Identify ways of increasing donor acceptance offers for
  kidney and liver transplantation</li><li>Examine the ethical issues and r
 isks of xenotransplantation&nbsp\;</li><li>Debate continuous distribution 
 in respect to the balance of geographic equity vs harming utility.&nbsp\;<
 /li></ol></div></div></div></div></div></div>
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