
Late-Breaking Clinical Trials at HRS 2021

Late-Breaking Clinical Trials at HRS 2021 is organized by Heart Rhythm Society (HRS).
Expires on : Oct 01, 2024
Target Audience:
This activity is designed for all professionals who participate in the care and management of heart rhythm disorders.
Description:
This bundle includes all four Late-Breaking Science sessions presented at Heart Rhythm 2021. Learn latest science on arrhythmia diagnostic for mobile telemetry, Leadless LV stimulation, ultralow cryoenergy for AF ablation, electrographic flow mapping. Each Late Breaking Clinical Trial presenter will have 8 minutes to present their science. For each presentation, there will be a Dove & Hawk commentary. The Dove commentator will have 2 minutes to provide an optimistic view regarding the methodology, interpretation and impact of the results. The Hawk commentary will have 2 minutes to provide a cynical perspective regarding the methodology, interpretation and impact of the results while remaining respectful of the study team and their work. Each presentation will end with 3-minutes of Q&A and remarks by the Chair.
Learning Objectives:
• Identify and analyze the latest scientific advances and innovations in the field of heart rhythm disorders.
• Select appropriate, evidence-directed pharmacological and non-pharmacological therapies to achieve optimal outcomes for patients with heart rhythm disorders.
• Recognize alternative perspectives regarding areas of controversy for which scientific evidence is insufficient, controversial, inconclusive, or confusing.
• Utilize quality improvement measures, methods, and tools to foster systems-based improvements in heart rhythm care, outcomes, and value.
• Analyze and improve processes related to inter-professional teams, care coordination, patient engagement, and communication to optimize the delivery of patient- and family-centered care.
• Assess the impact of regulatory and institutional policies, and societal and cultural norms, on safety, timeliness, equity (including diversity and inclusion), effectiveness, efficiency, patient-centered care, and value.