Course Price: $599 – $2,500 (Depending on Gift Card Add-on)
Access Duration: 1 Year
Educational Deliverables: 100 Hours of AAPA Category 1 Credit (PANRE Review), Over 1,000 Practice Questions
In 2026, the landscape of continuing medical education (CME) has shifted toward maximum efficiency and high-yield financial utility. Professional development funds are a significant portion of your compensation package, and managing them effectively requires choosing programs that offer both clinical excellence and tangible value. CME Review Courses provides an streamlined solution by offering comprehensive board review content paired with Amazon and Apple gift card add-ons ranging from $100 to $1,500.
Understanding the CME Gift Card Add-On Model
The concept of a gift card add-on is designed to help physician assistants and physicians enrich their educational experience beyond the core curriculum. When you purchase a CME with gift card package, you are selecting a bundle that includes your accredited medical education and a high-value gift card.
This model allows you to utilize your professional development stipend to its fullest extent. Whether you need to upgrade your clinical hardware (via an Apple gift card) or purchase the latest medical textbooks and office supplies (via an Amazon gift card), these add-ons ensure that your CME money is working for you.
Why Choose Amazon or Apple?
- Amazon: Provides immediate access to clinical reference books, medical equipment like high-quality stethoscopes, or ergonomic office upgrades.
- Apple: Ideal for clinicians looking to integrate the latest iPad or MacBook technology into their practice for EHR management or mobile study.

Accredited Learning: The PANRE Review and Pharmacology Courses
The core of your purchase is the educational content. Our courses were written by physician assistants, specifically for physician assistants, ensuring that the material is relevant to the PANCE/PANRE exam and daily clinical practice.
The PANRE Review Course
The PANRE Review Course is our flagship product for PAs. It offers 100 hours of AAPA Category 1 CME credit. This is a significant deliverable for clinicians in their recertification cycle. The content covers essential systems including:
- Cardiology
- Pulmonary
- Internal Medicine/Hospitalist
- Emergency Medicine
- Orthopedics
- Dermatology
- Psychiatry
- Neurology
- OB/GYN
The Pharmacology CME Review
For those focused specifically on prescribing trends and medication management, the Pharmacology CME Review offers specialized AAPA Category 1 credit. This course is an efficient way to fulfill the pharmacology requirements often mandated by state boards or specific hospital systems.
Credit Breakdown for Different Clinicians
Navigating CME requirements can be complex, and it is vital to understand how AAPA Category 1 credits translate across different professional licenses.
- Physician Assistants (PAs): You receive the full value of the AAPA Category 1 Credit. For the PANRE Review, this accounts for 100 hours, meeting a large portion of your biennial requirement.
- Nurse Practitioners (NPs): In many states, AAPA Category 1 credit is accepted toward the continuing education requirements for NP licensure and certification (ANCC/AANP). However, this varies by state. You should verify with your state nursing board before purchase.
- Physicians (MDs/DOs): Internal medicine physicians and other specialists frequently purchase our packages for the content. While the credits do not count as Category 1 for physicians, they are valid for Category 2 CME.


Clinical Vignette: Acute Assessment and Management
Your patient is a 68-year-old male with a history of HTN and DM who presents to the Emergency Department with sudden onset of substernal chest pressure radiating to the left jaw. The symptoms began 45 minutes prior to arrival. He appears diaphoretic and pale.
Vital Signs:
- HR: 104 bpm
- BP: 158/94 mmHg
- RR: 22 bpm
- SaO2: 94% on room air
An EKG is performed immediately and shows ST-segment elevation in leads II, III, and aVF with reciprocal ST-segment depression in leads I and aVL.
Clinical Question
Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in the management of this patient?
A. Immediate administration of thrombolytics
B. Measurement of serial troponins and observation
C. Urgent transfer to the Cardiac Catheterization Lab for PCI
D. Pulmonary CT Angiography to rule out PE
Explanation
The correct answer is C: Urgent transfer to the Cardiac Catheterization Lab for PCI.
This patient is presenting with an acute ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) involving the inferior wall. The standard of care for STEMI is immediate reperfusion. Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (PCI) is the preferred method when available within 90 minutes of first medical contact (FMC).
- A (Thrombolytics): These are indicated only if PCI cannot be performed within 120 minutes of FMC.
- B (Serial Troponins): While troponins will be elevated, the EKG diagnosis of STEMI is sufficient to initiate reperfusion therapy without waiting for lab confirmation. Delaying for labs in a STEMI patient increases the risk of myocardial necrosis.
- D (CT Angiography): The EKG findings are definitive for an MI. While a PE can cause EKG changes, they typically involve right axis deviation or an S1Q3T3 pattern, not ST-elevation in a vascular distribution.


Maximizing Your Professional Development in 2026
When choosing a CME provider, prioritize clinical content that mirrors the NCCPA requirements while offering the best financial return. CME Review Courses ensures that your time spent studying translates directly to exam success and clinical proficiency.
Key Takeaways for 2026:
- Efficiency: Fulfill up to 100 hours of AAPA Category 1 Credit with a single course.
- Flexibility: Use Amazon or Apple gift cards to purchase the tools you need for your practice.
- Relevance: Study content written by PAs, for PAs, covering all major clinical systems.
Practice Questions
Question 1
A 24-year-old female presents with a 3-day history of dysuria and increased urinary frequency. She denies fever, chills, or flank pain. Physical exam reveals mild suprapubic tenderness but no costovertebral angle (CVA) tenderness. A urinalysis shows positive nitrites and leukocyte esterase. What is the most likely diagnosis?
A. Acute Pyelonephritis
B. Uncomplicated Cystitis
C. Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
D. Nephrolithiasis
Answer: B. Uncomplicated Cystitis.
The presentation of dysuria and frequency in the absence of systemic symptoms (fever, chills) or CVA tenderness is classic for uncomplicated cystitis. Pyelonephritis would typically present with fever and CVA tenderness. PID usually presents with pelvic pain and cervical motion tenderness. Nephrolithiasis presents with severe, colicky flank pain.
Question 2
Your patient is a 45-year-old male presenting for a routine check-up. His fasting blood glucose is 128 mg/dL on two separate occasions. According to current guidelines, what is the diagnosis?
A. Impaired Fasting Glucose (Prediabetes)
B. Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus
C. Metabolic Syndrome
D. Normal Glucose Tolerance
Answer: B. Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus.
A fasting blood glucose of ≥126 mg/dL on two separate occasions meets the diagnostic criteria for Diabetes Mellitus. Prediabetes is defined as a fasting glucose between 100-125 mg/dL.
For more high-yield review and to maximize your CME allowance, explore our full list of CME with gift card packages.










