Microbiome Metabolomics and Complex Disease 1.5 CNE


Nurses are unfamiliar with incorporating genomics into their program of research. The following video aims to narrow this practice gap by educating on the use of genomics in research and on how to use these analysis techniques in their science if applicable.
 
 
Accreditation Statement: University of Texas at Austin School of Nursing is accredited as a provider of nursing continuing professional development by the American Nurses Credentialing Center's Commission on Accreditation.
 
Requirements for Successful Completion: To receive contact hours for this continuing education activity, the participant must complete the entire online module and complete and submit the evaluation form. Once the evaluation form has been submitted, a “Certificate of Successful Completion” will be awarded for 1.5 contact hours and will be available in your Learning Express account under "View/Print CE Credit".

Learning outcome: Registered nurses will report desire to change practice related to knowledge increase regarding empowering patients to use health technology to address chronic disease self-management. Focus will be on challenges specific to the aging population, youth, and underserved populations, exploring digital health research possibilities and limitations within the framework of ethical and legal boundaries.
 
The activity’s Nurse Planner has determined that no one who has the ability to control the content of this CNE activity – planning committee members and presenters/authors/content reviewers – has a conflict of interest.   
 
This activity expires May 1, 2024
 
Click on the bar below to access the video content for this course. The sharing of links or content is strictly prohibited. 
 

Fee

$20.00

CE Hours

1.50

CE Units

0.150

Activity Type

Knowledge

Target Audience(s)

Registered Nurses
Researchers

 

 

Nurses are unfamiliar with incorporating genomics into their program of research. The following video aims to narrow this practice gap by educating on the use of genomics in research and on how to use these analysis techniques in their science if applicable. 

Speaker(s)/Author(s)

Katherine Maki picture

Katherine Maki
Scientist & NP, Assistant Clinical Investigator at the NIH Clinical Center


Brief Bio : Katherine Maki, PhD, APRN, NP-BC, is a postdoctoral fellow at the National Institutes of Health, Clinical Center, in the Nursing Research and Translational Science Department. Dr. Maki is an electrophysiology nurse practitioner and received her PhD from the University of Illinois at Chicago, College of Nursing. Her dissertation research examined the effects of chronic sleep disruption on the microbiome and cardiovascular system in rats. She specifically invested the gut microbiome and fecal metabolites as potential mediators of the known association between poor sleep and elevated blood pressure. As a postdoctoral fellow, Dr. Maki works on an interdisciplinary team for several intramural and extramural research protocols. She combines oral and gut microbiome analyses with biosignal and neuroimaging technology to study the gut-brain axis, and how it relates to health and disease. Dr. Maki is particularly interested in the relationship between environmental factors such as poor sleep and alcohol abuse with cardiovascular risk through microbial and metabolite mechanisms in humans.
Paule Joseph picture

Paule Joseph, PhD
Lasker Clinical Research Scholar Tenure Track clinical Investigator and Chief of the Section of Sensory Science and Metabolism, National Institute of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism


Brief Bio : Paule Joseph, PhD, MS, FNP-BC, RN, CTN-B, and her group are conducting pre-clinical, clinical and translational studies that aim to improve the diagnosis, prevention, and management of chemosensory disorders and symptoms. Dr. Joseph’s laboratory is leading research that is aimed at enhancing the understanding of molecular, cellular, neural, and behavioral mechanisms underlying symptoms to identify new targets for treatment and improve symptom management strategies. As a nurse and family nurse practitioner, Dr. Joseph has worked extensively with individuals with diabetes and obesity, individuals undergoing weight loss surgery and alcohol and substance use disorders. Dr. Joseph brings a unique and necessary perspective to the study of chemosensory symptoms (taste and smell alterations) by incorporating both clinical and bench science approaches to unite three fields of science: nursing, sensory biology, and omics. Dr. Joseph and her group are conducting pre-clinical, clinical and translational studies that aim to improve the diagnosis, prevention, and management of chemosensory disorders and symptoms. Dr. Joseph’s laboratory is leading research that is aimed at enhancing the understanding of molecular, cellular, neural, and behavioral mechanisms underlying symptoms to identify new targets for treatment and improve symptom management strategies. As a nurse and family nurse practitioner, Dr. Paule Joseph has worked extensively with individuals with diabetes and obesity, individuals undergoing weight loss surgery and alcohol and substance use disorders. Dr. Joseph brings a unique and necessary perspective to the study of chemosensory symptoms (taste and smell alterations) by incorporating both clinical and bench science approaches to unite three fields of science: nursing, sensory biology, and omics.

Release Date: May 1, 2022
Credit Expiration Date: May 1, 2024

CE Hours

1.50

Fee

$30.00