CO-HOSTED BY: HOT TOPICS IN PEDIATRICS 2013 CONFERENCE Practical Approaches for Managing and Preventing Pediatric Obesity OVERVIEW: In Minnesota, approximately 23 percent of children ages 10-17 are overweight or obese. This conference offers practical approaches for managing and preventing pediatric obesity both inside and outside the clinic. AUDIENCE: General pediatricians, family physicians and other pediatric providers. AGENDA: 12:30 1:00 p.m. Registration, Networking, & Exhibits 1:00 1:15 p.m. Welcome and Introductions 1:15 2:15 p.m. KEYNOTE Robert Jacobson, MD, FAAP, Pediatrician, Mayo Clinic Aaron Kelly, PhD, Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, University of Minnesota Medical School Next Steps: Planned Themed Visits What To Do Beyond 5210 for Childhood Obesity Jonathan Fanburg, MD, MPH, Pediatrician, Medical Advisor, Children Health Initiatives Maine Medical Center 2:15 3:00 p.m. COMPLICATIONS OF PEDIATRIC OBESITY Obesity and Mental Illness: Cause or Effect? Claudia Fox, MD, MPH, Director Pediatric Weight Management Program University of Minnesota Amplatz Children s Hospital 3:00 3:30 p.m. Break Networking & Exhibits 3:30 5:00 p.m. COMPLICATIONS OF PEDIATRIC OBESITY 5:00 p.m. Closing & Exhibits Prediabetes, Insulin Resistance and Type 2 Diabetes Brandon Nathan, MD, Pediatric Endocrinologist University of Minnesota Amplatz Children s Hospital Sleep and Obesity: A Co-dependent Relationship Keith Cavanaugh, MD, Pediatrician Children s Respiratory and Clinical Care Specialists, Children s Hospitals and Clinics of Minnesota
EDUCATIONAL OBJECTIVES At the conclusion of this conference, participants should be able to: Next Steps: Planned Themed Visits What To Do Beyond 5210 for Childhood Obesity Explain the basics of childhood obesity interventions with 5210. Determine when to schedule planned, themed visits using AAP's Next Steps Toolkit. Describe how to incorporate 5210 and Next Steps techniques into office visits with families. Obesity and Mental Illness: Cause or Effect? Recognize the prevalence of mental illness among children and adolescents with obesity. Understand the cause and effect relationship between mental illness and obesity. Identify the implications of mental illness on the treatment of childhood obesity. Prediabetes, Insulin Resistance and Type 2 Diabetes Discuss the cellular factors that lead to insulin resistance, prediabetes, and eventually type 2 diabetes in children. Understand the appropriate diagnostic tests to screen children at risk for type 2 diabetes and the associated metabolic co-morbidities of insulin resistance/obesity. Recall differences in prevalence rates of type 2 diabetes among children of different ethnic backgrounds in the United States. Sleep and Obesity: A Co-dependent Relationship Discuss the physiologic changes that occur with breathing both awake and asleep due to obesity. Identify the relationship between insufficient sleep and obesity. Understand the relationships between obesity and sleep disordered breathing. AGENDA AND CONFERENCE MATERIALS Agenda and conference materials are available for download at: http://www.mnaap.org/obesityed130531.html. CME This conference is designated for 3.5 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s). In order to receive your certificate for CME credit, be sure to turn in your evaluation form at the registration desk before leaving. EXHIBITORS AND POSTERS Exhibitors will be available with resources and materials before and after the conference as well as during networking breaks. Scientific posters will also be displayed for viewing during these times. INTERNET ACCESS Free internet access will be available to all registrants. Please stop by the registration table for an access code.
SPEAKER BIOGRAPHIES Keith Cavanaugh, MD, Pediatrician Children s Hospitals and Clinics of Minnesota 2530 Chicago Avenue S., Suite 400 Minneapolis, MN 55404 612-813-3300 Dr. Cavanaugh is a pediatrician at Children s Hospitals and Clinic of Minnesota and is board certified in Pediatric Pulmonary Medicine and Sleep Medicine. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in History at the University of Notre Dame, his Medical Degree at the Loyola University Stritch School of Medicine in Chicago, then completed his residency in Combined Internal Medicine and Pediatrics at the University of Minnesota. After serving as Chief Resident in Internal Medicine at the Minneapolis Veterans Affairs Medical Center for one year, Dr. Cavanaugh completed 2 fellowships: Pediatric Pulmonary Medicine at the University of Colorado Denver and Sleep Medicine at National Jewish Health. Before joining Children s Respiratory and Critical Care Specialists, Dr. Cavanaugh was an Assistant Professor in Pediatric Pulmonary Medicine and the Associate Director of the Children s Hospital Sleep Center at the Children s Colorado. His interests include educating others on the important of sleep and treating sleep disorders in individuals with chronic illness. Jonathan Fanburg, MD, MPH, Pediatrician, Medical Advisor with Children Health Initiatives Maine Medical Center 75B John Roberts Road South Portland, ME 04106 207-775-4151 jonathanfanburg@gmail.com Dr. Fanburg is a pediatrician and adolescent medicine specialist who has practiced in Maine for over 14 years. His education has occurred at Bowdoin College, Vanderbilt University (MD), The Children s Hospital Denver (Pediatrics Intern/Residency), Children s National Medical Center in Washington DC (Fellowship Adolescent Medicine), and George Washington University (MPH). He sees children and young adults at Maine Medical Center s offices in South Portland, Maine. He also works as a medical advisor with children health initiatives for MaineHealth and is the past-president of the Maine Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics. For the last 8 years Dr. Fanburg has been involved with the Maine Youth Overweight Collaborative, ran a childhood weight loss clinic, was a contributing editor to the 5210 Flip Chart, and is the lead author for the soon to be published Next Steps guide to Planned Themed Visits for Childhood Obesity. Dr. Fanburg is also on the medical faculty for Tufts University. He is a strong advocate for the health care needs of adolescents in Maine. Claudia Fox, MD, MPH, Director Pediatric Weight Management Program University of Minnesota Ampltaz Children s Hospital 2512 Building, Third Floor 2512 S. 7 th Street Minneapolis, MN 55454 612-365-6777 lusc0001@umn.edu Dr. Fox is a pediatrician and the Director of the Pediatric Weight Management Clinic at the University of Minnesota Amplatz Children s Hospital. She is also a certified bariatrician by the American Board of Obesity Medicine. Dr. Fox completed her medical school training, residency and fellowship in Academic General Pediatrics at the University of Minnesota. She is active in clinical trials evaluating the safety and efficacy of pharmacotherapy for extreme pediatric obesity. She is also conducting studies examining the social and environmental influences of obesity in children with severe mental illness and is particularly interested in examining the bio-behavioral phenotypic variants of obesity.
Brandon Nathan, MD, Pediatric Endocrinologist University of Minnesota Ampltaz Children s Hospital 2450 Riverside Drive East Building, MB 677 Minneapolis, MN 55454 612-624-5409 natha039@umn.edu Dr. Nathan is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Pediatrics at the University of Minnesota. Dr. Nathan attended Dartmouth Medical School and completed his Pediatric Residency at the University of Wisconsin where he also served as Chief Resident. He completed his Pediatric Endocrinology and Metabolism Fellowship at Case Western Reserve University and Rainbow Babies and Children's Hospital. Dr. Nathan specializes in clinical care, clinical trials and education for Pediatric Endocrinology and Diabetes. Dr. Nathan serves as the director for the pediatric endocrinology fellowship program. He is a co-investigator for the Type 1 Diabetes TrialNet Prevention Study and the local principal investigator for the Type 1 Diabetes Exchange. His other interests are in the utilization of web-based modules for education and clinical care in type 1 diabetes and the prevention and treatment of medical co-morbidities associated with pediatric obesity.
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