268 Dr. Pallavi Patel College of Health Care Sciences—Department of Anesthesia ANED 5901—Anesthesia Principles and Practices I This course discusses principles involved in the formulation of anesthetic plans based upon data obtained during the preoperative evaluation. It includes the formulation and practices of different anesthetic plans and techniques as related to specific surgical procedures and pathophysiology. (2 credits) ANED 5902—Anesthesia Principles and Practices II This course is a continuation of ANED 5901. It discusses the principles involved in the formulation of anesthetic plans based upon data obtained during the preoperative evaluation and includes the formulation and practices of different anesthetic plans and techniques as related to specific surgical procedures and pathophysiology. (2 credits) ANED 5903—Anesthesia Principles and Practices III This course is a continuation of ANES 5902. It discusses the principles involved in the formulation of anesthetic plans based upon data obtained during the preoperative evaluation and includes the formulation and practices of different anesthetic plans and techniques as related to specific surgical procedures and pathophysiology. (2 credits) ANED 6003—Clinical Anesthesia V This course is a continuation of ANED 6002. It encompasses the student’s clinical experience in required rotations through all subspecialty areas of anesthesia. Clinical rotations are assigned in two-week and four-week intervals and will require being on-call during some nights and weekends. Clinical practice of anesthesia is gained through one-onone supervised instruction in the operating room and other ancillary anesthetizing locations. Monthly required readings are assigned. Monthly comprehensive examinations are administered. Each course’s grade is composed of clinical evaluations and comprehensive examination scores. (12 credits) ANED 6110—Anesthesia Review This course consists of lectures; required readings; and discussions with faculty members, visiting faculty members, and current residents on clinical and research topics. It includes correlation of case management and complications. (2 credits) MHS 5205—Writing for Medical Publications This course provides a study and review of quality medical writing techniques, issues, and procedures with emphasis on cultivating personal style and content. Focus will be on writing for peer- and evidence-based publications. (3 credits) Master of Science in Anesthesia—Fort Lauderdale M.S. in Anesthesia— Fort Lauderdale Facilities Students are trained in state-of-the-art AA facilities. Our classroom features high-definition technology—providing crisp visual presentation of course materials—and video recording capabilities, which allow students to review course lectures. The student’s educational experience is enhanced by two of the largest fully functional operating rooms. The NSU AA programs are the only ones in the country to have four high-fidelity anesthesia simulators (two adult, one pediatric, and one infant). A student library, lounge, and study center area complete the AA facilities. The first year of study focuses on the foundations of anesthesia practice through classroom, mock operating room scenarios and studies, and laboratory work. M.S. in Anesthesia— Fort Lauderdale Accreditation The Master of Science in Anesthesia Program at NSU is accredited by the Commission on Accreditation of Allied Health Education Programs (CAAHEP: 9355 113 Street North, #7709, Seminole, FL 33775, 727-210-2350; fax 727-210-2354). M.S. in Anesthesia—Fort Lauderdale Admissions Requirements 1. completion of a baccalaureate degree from a nationally recognized and regionally accredited college or university prior to matriculation, including above average performance in courses required in a premed curriculum (refer to the following required courses) Required Courses* • A natomy and physiology with lab (8 semester hours) • G eneral chemistry with lab (8 semester hours) • O rganic chemistry I with lab (4 semester hours) • B iochemistry (3 semester hours) • G eneral physics with lab—trigonometry or calculus based (8 semester hours) • C alculus (3 semester hours) • E nglish composition (3 semester hours) *Required courses can’t be survey courses.
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