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2025 Psychopharmacology in Cancer Care: An Update for Clinicians of All Disciplines (Videos with subtitles + Slides)

2025 Psychopharmacology in Cancer Care: An Update for Clinicians of All Disciplines (Videos with subtitles + Slides)

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2025 Psychopharmacology in Cancer Care: An Update for Clinicians of All Disciplines (Videos with subtitles + Slides)

2025 Psychopharmacology in Cancer Care: An Update for Clinicians of All Disciplines (Videos with subtitles + Slides)

Regular price $40.00
Regular price $40.00 Sale price
SAVE Liquid error (snippets/price line 116): Computation results in '-Infinity'% Sold out
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    2025 Psychopharmacology in Cancer Care: An Update for Clinicians of All Disciplines

    Specialties

    Specialties - Behavioral Care, Critical Care, General and Family Practice, Geriatric Medicine, Hematology, Integrative Medicine, Internal Medicine, Medical Oncology, Neurology, Nurse Anesthetist, Nurse Practitioner, Nursing, Pain Medicine, Psychiatry, Psychology, Social Work

    Overview


    Clinicians have numerous tools at their disposal to help adult cancer patients dealing with symptoms of depression, anxiety, and other cancer sequelae. Psychiatric medications are most frequently prescribed to cancer patients by oncologists and general practitioners, however psychiatric syndromes are often underdiagnosed and undertreated. Few oncology practices have dedicated psychiatric consultants familiar with the nuances of Psycho-Oncology.

    Even when patients receive psychotropic medications appropriately, they may have problems that arise before their next oncology visit or before they see the person who prescribed their psychiatric medications. Psychologists, nurses, and social workers play an essential role in identifying psychological and physical symptoms as well as both beneficial and problematic medication effects as they provide frontline psychosocial interventions and support for cancer patients.

    This highly regarded annual course, co-sponsored by the MSK Psycho-Oncology Education and Training Institute (POETI), is designed to support non-prescribing psycho-oncology clinicians and psychiatrists new to Psycho-pharmaco-oncology. Oncologists, palliative care providers, advanced practice nurses, and oncology nurses will also find it invaluable.

    The program emphasizes effective psychopharmacological interventions for key disorders and symptoms, including anxiety, depression, delirium, sleep dsisturbances, pain, fatigue, and changes in weight or appetite. Expert faculty will provide updates on the use of novel interventions including ketamine, medical marijuana, and psilocybin for depression, anxiety, and pain. Additionally, the vital role of clinical social work in delivering psychosocial support will be examined.

    Participants will gain skills to recognize and differentiate psychological reactions to medical conditions or treatments, psychiatric manifestations of medical conditions or treatments, and medical presentations of psychiatric conditions. We'll also explore common medical complications associated with psychiatric conditions or their treatments.

    Foundational knowledge will be provided about medications used to alleviate Quality-of-Life symptoms that arise in the cancer setting from diagnosis to survivorship or end-of-life care and the interface of psychotherapy and medication management. We'll review why certain medications are used and why some are avoided, looking at potential benefits, unwanted side effects, and drug-drug interactions since you may be the first person to identify a serious adverse event. This program will enhance participants' ability to provide psychoeducation to patients regarding psychiatric medications.

    Attendees will receive access to an online syllabus after the course, which will include select PDFs of the faculty presentations (slides) and recorded videos.

    Objectives


    By attending this program, learners will be able to:
    1. Describe basic psycho-pharmaco-oncology principles for understanding and treating anxiety, depression and delirium in people with cancer.
    2. Identify the use of novel interventions including ketamine, medical marijuana, and psilocybin for depression, anxiety, and pain in people with cancer.
    3. Discuss basic psycho-pharmaco-oncology principles for understanding and improving quality of life and psychiatric palliative care in people with cancer, including managing cognitive changes, insomnia, fatigue, poor appetite and weight loss, and pain.

    Schedule

    Saturday, April 5, 2025

    Handouts
    8:25AM - 8:40AM
    William Breitbart, MD
    Depressive Disorders
    8:45AM - 9:30AM
    Andrew J. Roth, MD
    Delirium
    9:30AM - 10:15AM
    William Breitbart, MD
    Anxiety Disorders
    10:30AM - 11:15AM
    Andrew J. Roth, MD
    Sleep Disorders
    11:15AM - 12:00PM
    Yesne Alici, MD
    Cancer-Related Fatigue
    1:00PM - 1:45PM
    William Breitbart, MD
    Pain
    1:45PM - 2:30PM
    Natalie Moryl, MD
    Weight and Appetite Loss
    2:30PM - 3:00PM
    Yesne Alici, MD
    Cancer and Cancer-Treatment Related Cognitive Changes
    3:15PM - 3:45PM
    Yesne Alici, MD
    Novel Psychopharmacologic Interventions in Oncology
    3:45PM - 4:15PM
    Christian Bjerre Real, MD
    Ketamine and Esketamine for Depression
    4:15PM - 4:45PM
    Erik Bengtsen, MD
    Caring for the Whole Patient: The Role of Clinical Social Work in Psychosocial Support
    4:45PM - 5:15PM
    Christine Wilkins, PhD