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CPP Associates

3100 N. Sheridan Rd

Suite 1C

Chicago IL 60657

BBancr9271@aol.com

 

 

"...loved, loved, loved your DVD series on Teaching Pharmacology. Just finished watching them a few days ago and checked out your website... My husband is a medic and he also loved the DVD."

Deanne Broscious, Fairmont State University

 

 
 

DVDs from 'Teaching Pharmacology, Simplify Don't Mystify', 2009,

and 'Teaching Pharmacology,

the Sequel', 2010

 

 

 

TEACHING PHARMACOLOGY

Simplify Don’t Mystify

This DVD series was presented to a group of nurse educators on August 3, 4, and 5, 2009 in Chicago, IL. The series is an overview of the most common classes of drugs used and each part of the series is described on the following pages. The entire series comes with a 250-page booklet that includes the power point handouts that can be photocopied and distributed to the students. This series of teaching DVDs can not only be used for instructors to learn more about "how" to teach pharmacology, but this series can also be used  in the classroom as a direct teaching tool for students.

 

 

Set of 10 DVDs

$350. (USD)

Streaming Video Rights add $175.

15.75 contact hours for this series add $150.

Include a 250 page booklet with all of the Power Points and Pharm Facts.

Options

 

Day 1

Pharmacokinetics, genetics, and frenetics...

What students really need to know...For starters, Barb will cover the basics of nomenclature, or the "name game."  Barb will discuss the perils of acetaminophen and the branding of Aspirin. Barb will cover the specifics of Pharmacokinetics with a sub-type known as "pharmaco-geriatrics" and the special problems encountered in the elderly with polypharmacy. Drug absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion will be discussed with specific drugs and drug classes. Grapefruit juice and the CYP450 enzyme system will also be included. Various receptors (alphas and betas, dopamine, serotonin, cholinergic, and hormone receptors) will also be correlated with "blockers" and "boosters". Anti-cholinergic side effects will be emphasized and repeated as will a few lists of drugs with anti-cholinergic properties.

 

Understanding neurotransmitters and neuropharmacology.

Enjoy an entire session learning the neurotransmitters and all of the drugs that modulate each transmitter. The neurotransmitters that Barb discusses include: acetylcholine, serotonin, melatonin, dopamine, epinephrine, norepinephrine, GABA, and glutamate. Barb will also correlate various disease processes with each of the above neurotransmitters and the drugs used to treat each of the disease processes. Learn about acetylcholinesterase inhibitors for Alzheimer's and memantine (Namenda); learn about the ubiquitous serotonin-all of her functions, all of her dysfunctions and all of the drugs to treat the various dysfunctions-including depression with the SRIs, the SNRIs, the NRIs, and the infamous "other" category; migraine headaches and the "triptans", and the role of serotonin in vomiting and the "setrons". Barb will discuss the benzodiazepines and their role as anxiolytics/hypnotics-how they are used to treat sleep and alcohol withdrawal; the drugs with "gaba" in their name-gabapentin and pregabalin will also be discussed as will their role in the treatment of chronic pain syndromes, seizure disorders, and fibromyalgia; dopamine's role in health and disease will also be discussed-ADHD drugs, oxycontin and other addicting pain killers, dopamine deficiency and Parkinson's disease as well as the treatment of Parkinson's disease; the role of blocking dopamine and serotonin with the antipsychotics (old and new), dopamine and the GI tract, and dopamine and restless leg syndrome.

DAY 2

Cardiovascular pharmacology.

This is an extensive update on the various classes of drugs used for all the things that ail the cardiovascular system. Barb will cover the "prils" (ACE inhibitors), the "sartans" (ARBs), the "dipines" (calcium channel blockers), "olols, alols, ilols" (the beta blockers), the "statins" (LDL-lowering agents), the "afils" (ED drugs), ASA, clopidogrel, NTG, Dig, diuretics, and Coumadin. A review of a bit of kidney physiology, the "Barb Bancroft way" will explain the functions of ACE inhibitors and angiotensin receptor blockers. The many uses of ACE inhibitors and ARBs as well as their side effects will be discussed in detail. A review of the definition of blood pressure will be discussed followed by the use of the various classes of drugs for selected patient populations. Complete coverage of the statins and the beta blockers is included as well. Enjoy a few stories about the ED drugs, how to regulate fluctuating INRs, and more...

 

Diuretics, Hormone therapies, Diabetic drugs. 

Barb discusses the various classes of diuretics and their clinical uses, focusing on the thiazide diuretics and the loop diuretics. How many classes of drugs are there for diabetics? You will find out when Barb describes the numerous choices for oral agents--the pros and cons--as well as the various types of insulin. Hormones for menopause, hormones for oral contraceptives, and hormone replacement for hypothyroidism will also be included. Controversies abound for HT in postmenopausal females--and Barb covers them all. The "dronates" for osteoporosis will also be covered. Drugs for benign prostatic hypertrophy will also be included.

 

DAY 3

Bugs and drugs.

Barb starts out with a review of vaccines and how vaccines are produced to provide long-term or short-term immunity. New vaccines, old vaccines, and future vaccines will be described. Barb will list the various classes of antibiotics (the "cillins", the "floxacins", the "mycins", and more...) and discuss the role of first, second, third and fourth generation drugs. Anti-herpetic drugs (the "cyclovirs"), anti-fungal drugs (the "conazoles"), and anti-retroviral drugs (including HAART therapy for HIV/AIDS) will be described as well.

 

GI, GU, G-wheeze; Monoclonal antibodies; asthma; and the bowels...

A discussion of type 1 hypersensitivity reactions will be followed by the two phase response in the asthmatic patient with bronchoconstriction and inflammation as underlying pathophysiologic mechanisms. Treatment of asthma will include a discussion of the "one-airway" theory of treating allergic rhinitis and topical nasal treatments as well as inhalant bronchodilators and topical steroids. Monoclonal antibodies and their many uses will be described as will their nomenclature—in other words, how you can tell what the monoclonal antibody is for based on it's generic name. Proton pump inhibitors, H2 blockers and other GI drugs will be discussed—including new drugs for opiod-induced constipation.

 

TEACHING PHARMACOLOGY

The Sequel

This DVD series was the follow-up to the 2009 series and was presented on August 3, 4, 5, 2010 in Chicago, IL. Each day was a separate topic. Day 1: Polypharmacy—The Pearls, the Perils, and the Pitfalls of Pharmaceuticals in the Aging Population; Day 2: Alpha Receptors, Beta Receptors, Kappa Receptors—It's ALL GREEK to me! and Day 3: Interpretation of Lab Tests with a Pharmaceutical Focus. The "sequel" seminars are for the more advanced student, including Nurse Practitioner students and students pursuing other graduate degrees in nursing. As with the first series, this set of DVDs can be used for nursing instructors or shown to students. A booklet does not accompany this set of DVDs; however, the power points are available for download at www.barbbancroft.com.

 

Set of 9 DVDs

$285. (USD)

Streaming Video Rights add $175. for series

15.75 contact hours for this series add $150.

No booklet but download PowerPoints here.

Options

 

 

Day 1

Polypharmacy—The Pearls, the Perils, and the Pitfalls of Pharmaceuticals in the Aging Population

The whole new world of Geriatric Pharmacology awaits you! It has been estimated that 28% of all hospitalizations in the elderly are due to adverse drug reactions. And right along with that fact it has been estimated that each older patient has 6.5 chronic conditions with an average of 3-5 drugs prescribed to treat each condition. YOU DO THE MATH. Barb will discuss the normal physiologic changes of aging that play a major role in drug absorption, distribution, and excretion. You will learn the most common disastrous drug combinations and how to avoid them—and you will learn what drugs can be substituted, deleted, and/or added to avoid drug-related disasters. How can something as simple as ibuprofen throw an 80-year-old into renal failure? How can a single dose of cimetidine send a 90-year-old into a state of delirium?

Day 1  $95 USD

Streaming Video Rights add $75.

Options

 

 

Day 2

Alpha Receptors, Beta Receptors, Kappa Receptors—It's All Greek To Me!

How many types of receptors are there? Alpha receptors, beta receptors, kappa, mu, sigma receptors, muscarinic and nicotinic receptors, dopaminergic and serotonergic receptors, cannabis receptors, estrogen, progesterone and testosterone receptors—and other "sub" receptors that you didn't even know you had!! Whereas, manipulating receptors makes a pharmacologist squeal with delight it makes everyone else scream in frustration. Why does boosting one receptor block another receptor which in turn boosts another receptor only to block another receptor? Why does one type of receptor have 16 different subtypes? Why can't they all just get along? Barb will sort, resort, and sort again, the myriad of receptors involved with drug therapy today. Pain medications and blood pressure medications; medications for the prostate gland and the thyroid gland; appetite boosters and appetite suppressants; estrogen agonists and estrogen antagonists; anti-depressants for depression, anti-depressants for pain; dopamine boosters and dopamine blockers; mushrooms, LSD, nicotine and marijuana effects on various receptors—for pleasure and/or for pharmacy.

Day 2  $95 USD

Streaming Video Rights add $75.

Options

 

 

Day 3

Interpretation of Lab Tests with a Pharmaceutical Focus

White counts, liver function tests, TSH, electrolytes, platelets, serum creatinine...how do drugs change the interpretation of lab tests in a patient and how do we monitor specific drugs based on lab test changes? What drugs cause low sodium? Can prescription drugs as well as complementary therapies wreak havoc with potassium levels? What should the sed rate do when antibiotic treatment is initiated? What drugs "kill" the thyroid? A myriad of drugs induce direct liver injury—what are the most common prescription and non-prescription drugs that cause liver damage? What drugs and supplements affect lipid metabolism? What should the TSH do once a patient begins thyroid replacement? Why do ACE inhibitors increase the serum creatinine? Which lab test should be used tomonitor muscle aches and pains in patients on "statin" therapy? What drugs are notorious for reducing platelet counts? What drugs cause megaloblastic anemia? Heck, what IS megaloblastic anemia? Which drugs induce life threatening neutropenia? How does Neulasta work? You'll not only understand the effects of drugs on lab tests—you'll also finally understand LAB TESTS!

 

Day 3  $95 USD

Streaming Video Rights add $75.

Options

All purchases via P.O. Number should be mailed to:

 CPP Associates 3100 N. Sheridan Road 1C  Chicago IL 60657

(phone) 870-715-7508   (fax) 870-749-2276

 email: BBancr9271@aol.com

 

Printable Order Form here

 

Shipping and Handling

Shipping to US:  $15.00 for orders under $250.00, $25.00 for orders over $250.00

Shipping to Canada (or other countries):  $20.00 USD for orders under $250.00,

$30.00 USD for orders over $250.00

 

CPP Associates Inc  

3100 N. Sheridan Road #1C  

Chicago IL 60657
870-715-7508 (phone)  870-749-2276(fax)

 

 

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