Description
Format: Videos+PDFs
Publish date: May 2025
Overview
This program provides a comprehensive update of the most important changes now impacting Internal Medicine and guidance on how to incorporate these changes into your clinical practice to improve patient outcomes.
Practical, Fast-Paced, Online Education
This live-streaming educational experience is fast-paced, relevant to the current healthcare environment, and draws upon real-life cases. The course is designed and led by Harvard Medical School’s clinical faculty, who are leaders in their respective fields and are instrumental in bringing these novel developments to clinical medicine. It offers updates and advances in diagnostic and treatment approaches, covering the broad spectrum of internal medicine specialties:
- Cardiovascular Medicine
- Pulmonology
- Oncology
- Dermatology
- Addiction Medicine
- Endocrinology
- Geriatrics
- Rheumatology
- Gastroenterology
- Neurology
- Infectious Diseases
- Nephrology
- Allergy/Immunology
- Women’s Health
- Psychiatry
Guidance to Improve Diagnosis, Treatment, and Clinical Outcomes
Highlights of this program include:
- Comprehensive updates on new anticoagulants and their antidotes
- Algorithms for the use of diabetes medications
- Update on technological aids for diabetes management
- Care of transgender and gender diverse patients
- Medical and surgical therapy for obesity management
- Latest developments on the use of SGLT-2 inhibitors in heart failure
- Update in menopause management
- Advances in percutaneous aortic and mitral valve therapies
- Current and future role of AI in medicine
- Exercise for Health 2025
- Novel therapies for lipid management
- Up-to-date guidance for management of opioid use disorder
- Optimal management of irritable bowel syndrome
- Reevaluating the role of race in medicine
- The latest in cancer screening
- Emerging therapies for Alzheimer’s disease and depression
- Best practices for responsible antibiotic use
- Update in metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD)
- What’s new in vaccines for 2025




Gantul Narmandakh –
Between rounds and clinic I rarely have time for journals. This gave me the latest in SGLT-2 heart-failure data, newer anticoagulants, obesity therapies things I could immediately apply in patient care
Eythor Bjoernsson –
Content was excellent and very up-to-date, but with so many topics covered, I had to split my study over several weeks. Still worth it if you commit time
Raj Patel –
As an endocrinologist, I found the diabetes and lipid talks very helpful. For nephrology and some rheum topics, it was good overview
Aisha Rahman –
Excellent course The best way to stay current across all of internal medicine