

Price: $399.99 – $1,899.99
Access Duration: 30 Months
Deliverables: 100 AAPA Category 1 CME Credits, High-Yield Question Bank, and Integrated Gift Card
The utilization of your annual CME allowance requires a strategic approach that balances educational requirements with professional infrastructure. When preparing for the PANRE, you are not simply fulfilling a certification mandate; you are investing in the maintenance of your clinical knowledge base. CME Review Courses provides a mechanism to maximize this investment by offering CME with Amazon and Apple Gift Card add-ons.
By selecting a package that includes a $100 to $1,500 gift card, you secure the necessary documentation for your employer while gaining the capital needed to upgrade your clinical tools. The choice between Amazon and Apple depends on your specific professional needs.
The Amazon Path: Clinical Resources and Infrastructure
Selecting an Amazon gift card add-on is the preferred choice for the clinician focused on expanding their physical or digital library. The NCCPA Blueprint covers a vast array of medical specialties, and having the right reference materials is essential for mastery.


Professional Benefits of Amazon Credit:
- Medical Textbooks: Purchase the latest editions of Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine or specialty-specific texts for Cardiology and Emergency Medicine.
- Clinical Equipment: Upgrade your diagnostic tools, such as high-quality stethoscopes or otoscopes, which are often out-of-pocket expenses.
- Office Ergonomics: Enhance your study environment with standing desks, high-lumen task lighting, or noise-canceling headphones to facilitate focused review sessions.
The Amazon option offers maximum flexibility. Whether you need to replenish clinical supplies or acquire supplemental study guides that align with our PANRE Review Course, the credit is immediately applicable to thousands of professional products.
The Apple Path: Mobile Clinical Tools and Hardware
For the PA who prioritizes mobility and point-of-care technology, the Apple gift card is the superior choice. Modern clinical practice increasingly relies on high-performance hardware to run electronic health records (EHR) and clinical decision support tools.


Professional Benefits of Apple Credit:
- iPad Pro/Air: An iPad is arguably the most efficient tool for reviewing our high-yield medical content. Its portability allows for study during clinical breaks or commutes.
- Apple Watch: Useful for tracking vitals, setting clinical timers, and receiving urgent patient notifications in a hospital setting.
- MacBook Upgrades: A reliable laptop is a prerequisite for completing the 100 hours of AAPA Category 1 credit required for the PANRE Review.
Integrating top-tier hardware into your workflow improves efficiency. Utilizing your CME budget to acquire an iPad ensures that your CME Review Courses content is always accessible, whether you are on the floor or at home.
Targeted Content: Cardiology and Emergency Medicine
Our content is developed by physician assistants for physician assistants, ensuring that every lecture and question is relevant to the NCCPA Blueprint. While our packages are utilized by NPs and physicians: who find value in the content for Category 2 credit: our primary focus remains PAs seeking the most efficient path to recertification.


We offer specialized content across major medical disciplines, including:
- Cardiology: Mastery of ECG interpretation and heart failure management.
- Emergency Medicine: Critical care pathways and acute trauma management.
- Internal Medicine: Comprehensive review of chronic disease states.
- Orthopedics and Dermatology: High-yield visual diagnosis and treatment protocols.
The PANRE Review Course provides the 100 hours of Category 1 AAPA credit necessary to maintain your "C" status. The following clinical vignettes represent the caliber of assessment you will encounter in our program.
Clinical Application: Practice Questions
Question 1: Cardiovascular Medicine
Patient Presentation: Your patient is a 64-year-old male presenting to the emergency department with a 2-hour history of crushing substernal chest pain that radiates to his left jaw. He is diaphoretic and nauseated.
Vitals: BP 105/62 mmHg, HR 110 bpm, RR 22 bpm, SaO2 94% on room air.
Diagnostics: The initial ECG reveals 3mm ST-segment elevation in leads II, III, and aVF.
What is the most appropriate next step in the management of this patient?
A. Administer 325 mg of aspirin and arrange for emergent percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI).
B. Obtain a STAT portable chest X-ray to rule out aortic dissection.
C. Administer sublingual nitroglycerin and wait for initial troponin results.
D. Perform a 12-lead ECG every 30 minutes to monitor for evolution.
Correct Answer: A. Administer 325 mg of aspirin and arrange for emergent percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI).
Explanation: The patient is presenting with a classic ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) of the inferior wall. According to standard clinical guidelines, "time is muscle." Immediate reperfusion therapy via PCI is the gold standard for management when available within 90 minutes of medical contact. Aspirin should be administered immediately for its antiplatelet effects. Nitroglycerin (Option C) must be used with extreme caution in inferior MIs due to the risk of severe hypotension if right ventricular involvement is present. Waiting for troponin results (Option C) or repeat ECGs (Option D) unnecessarily delays definitive treatment and increases myocardial necrosis.
Question 2: Pulmonary / Emergency Medicine
Patient Presentation: Your patient is a 24-year-old female with a history of asthma who presents with acute shortness of breath and wheezing. She has been using her rescue inhaler every 20 minutes for the past two hours without significant relief.
Vitals: HR 118 bpm, RR 28 bpm, SaO2 91% on room air.
Physical Exam: You note the use of accessory muscles of respiration and loud expiratory wheezing throughout all lung fields.
Which of the following pharmacological interventions is indicated first?
A. Intravenous magnesium sulfate.
B. Inhaled short-acting beta-agonist (SABA) via nebulizer and oral or IV corticosteroids.
C. Prophylactic intubation and mechanical ventilation.
D. Subcutaneous epinephrine.
Correct Answer: B. Inhaled short-acting beta-agonist (SABA) via nebulizer and oral or IV corticosteroids.
Explanation: In an acute asthma exacerbation, the primary goal is to reverse airway obstruction and reduce inflammation. Inhaled SABAs provide rapid bronchodilation. Corticosteroids are essential for reducing the underlying airway inflammation and preventing relapse; their systemic administration (oral or IV) is indicated in patients who do not respond completely to initial SABA treatment. Magnesium sulfate (Option A) is typically reserved for severe cases that are refractory to initial treatment. Intubation (Option C) is a last resort for impending respiratory failure. Epinephrine (Option D) is generally reserved for anaphylaxis or cases where inhaled therapies are not feasible.
Maximizing Your CME Resources
Selecting the right CME provider involves more than just counting credits. It requires finding a partner that understands the clinical and logistical demands of being a Physician Assistant. By choosing CME Review Courses, you gain access to 100 hours of AAPA Category 1 credit through our PANRE Review, while simultaneously equipping yourself with the professional tools necessary for modern medicine.
Whether you prefer the tech-forward Apple ecosystem or the broad resource availability of Amazon, our gift card add-ons ensure your CME money works as hard as you do. Secure your documentation and your recertification today.











