For many physician assistants, June 30 marks a critical deadline. While the NCCPA's national logging cycle concludes at the end of the calendar year, many hospital systems, private practices, and corporate healthcare employers operate on a fiscal year that ends in June. If you have unspent CME funds, you face a "use it or lose it" scenario.
Securing high-yield educational material that provides a significant amount of credit in a single purchase is the most efficient way to maximize your professional development budget. Our panre review course is designed specifically for this purpose, offering a substantial credit volume and the option to enhance your learning tools through gift card add-ons.
Product: 100-Hour PANRE Review Course
Price: Starting at $1,495
Deliverables: 100 AAPA Category 1 CME Credits
Add-Ons: $100 – $1500 Amazon or Apple Gift Cards
Access: 12 months of digital access
When evaluating pance prep courses or recertification materials, the primary goal is exam readiness. However, professional education often requires additional hardware or reference materials, such as a new iPad for clinical rotations or medical texts from Amazon.
At CME Review Courses, we offer cme gift cards as optional add-ons to your course purchase. It is important to note that these are not "free gifts." They are value-added components that allow you to bundle your educational needs into a single transaction. You can choose to add an Amazon or Apple Gift Card ranging from $100 to $1500 to your purchase of the 100-hour PANRE course. This allows you to further enrich your education by purchasing the specific tools you need to succeed in your practice.
The 100-hour PANRE Review Course is specifically accredited for 100 hours of AAPA Category 1 CME credit. This credit is essential for maintaining your NCCPA certification and meeting state licensure requirements.
While our Pharmacology Course also offers Category 1 credit, the 100-hour designation applies specifically to the comprehensive PANRE Review Course. For Nurse Practitioners, please note that while many state boards accept AAPA Category 1 credit, requirements vary by state. Physicians may also find value in these packages, though the credit typically counts as Category 2 CME for MDs and DOs.
The curriculum is built to align with the NCCPA Blueprint, covering essential specialties including Cardiology, Emergency Medicine, Internal Medicine, and more. All content was written by physician assistants for physician assistants, ensuring the clinical vignettes and focus areas are practical for your daily practice.
To demonstrate the depth of the panre review course, we provide clinical vignettes modeled after the types of questions you will encounter on the exam. These scenarios focus on high-stakes decision-making in the Emergency Department and Internal Medicine settings.
Your patient is a 64-year-old male presenting to the Emergency Department with sudden onset substernal chest pressure that radiates to his left jaw. He appears diaphoretic and pale. His medical history is significant for hypertension and type 2 diabetes mellitus.
Vitals:
An EKG is performed immediately, revealing 3mm ST-segment elevation in leads V2, V3, and V4.
Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in management?
A) Obtain a Stat Chest X-ray
B) Administer 324 mg of chewed Aspirin and activate the Cardiac Catheterization Lab
C) Order serial Troponins and wait for results before intervention
D) Administer a 2L Normal Saline bolus
Correct Answer: B) Administer 324 mg of chewed Aspirin and activate the Cardiac Catheterization Lab.
Explanation: This patient is presenting with an acute ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction (STEMI) involving the anterior wall (V2-V4). The priority is rapid reperfusion. Chewed aspirin should be administered immediately to inhibit further platelet aggregation. Activation of the cath lab is the definitive treatment to restore blood flow. Waiting for cardiac enzymes (Choice C) is contraindicated in the setting of clear EKG evidence of STEMI, as "time is muscle." While a chest X-ray (Choice A) may eventually be useful to rule out other pathology, it must not delay the trip to the cath lab.
Your patient is a 72-year-old female with a history of COPD and tobacco use (50 pack-years) who presents with increased shortness of breath and a productive cough over the last three days. She notes her sputum has changed from clear to green.
Vitals:
Physical exam reveals diffuse wheezing and decreased breath sounds at the right base. A chest X-ray shows a new focal infiltrate in the right lower lobe.
Which of the following is the most appropriate outpatient antibiotic regimen for this patient, assuming no recent hospitalizations?
A) Amoxicillin 1g TID
B) Levofloxacin 750mg daily
C) Doxycycline 100mg BID
D) Nitrofurantoin 100mg BID
Correct Answer: B) Levofloxacin 750mg daily.
Explanation: This patient is experiencing a COPD exacerbation complicated by community-acquired pneumonia (CAP). According to current guidelines, patients with significant comorbidities (like COPD) require broader coverage than a healthy individual. A respiratory fluoroquinolone (like Levofloxacin) or a combination of a beta-lactam plus a macrolide is indicated. Amoxicillin alone (Choice A) or Doxycycline alone (Choice C) are often sufficient for uncomplicated CAP in healthy patients but are less ideal for those with structural lung disease like COPD. Nitrofurantoin (Choice D) is used for urinary tract infections and has no role in treating pneumonia.
Effective board preparation requires more than just reading; it requires active recall through practice questions. Our courses include thousands of questions designed to mimic the complexity of the NCCPA exams.
Whether you are preparing for the PANCE or the PANRE, consistency is key. We recommend the following approach:
Don't let your employer-provided CME funds expire on June 30. By choosing the 100-hour PANRE Review Course, you secure your 2-year cycle's worth of Category 1 credit in one step. Adding an Apple or Amazon gift card allows you to get the hardware or supplemental books you need for your clinical practice, all within your approved CME budget.
Explore our full range of CME with Gift Card packages and find the level that fits your needs. Our materials are developed by experienced PAs who understand the rigors of the profession and the specific requirements of the recertification process.
For more targeted review, you may also consider our specialty-specific materials, such as the Emergency Medicine EOR or our comprehensive guide to EKGs and clinical patterns.
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