
Automatic CME Activity and Credit Reporting in EthosCE
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EthosCE can automatically report CME activities and credit to ACCME PARS, JA-PARS, and CPE Monitor. This session will provide an in-depth look at how the two systems communicate and and how you can use them to streamline the reporting process. We will go over best practices for activity creation and learner data collection to ensure that activities and credits are seamlessly reported in near real time.
Learning Objectives
- Understand when and how communication happens between EthosCE and activity and credit reporting systems
- Implement best practices for activity and learner information gathering and reporting
- Troubleshoot common reporting issues with activity and credit reporting systems

Devin Zuczek
Architect / Senior Developer
Cadmium
Devin Zuczek, Architect / Senior Developer at Cadmium
As an architect, I get to build complex systems for complex problems using my many years of experience in software development. From basic content management to maintenance of certification I have spent a lot of time learning the intricacies of the medical learning space. I started working on EthosCE in 2010 and have enjoyed the daily challenges that go along with deploying enterprise learning management systems for the some of the world's largest academic hospitals, organizations, and societies.
I work with our project managers and analysts to solve hard problems with technical solutions. Our development team contributes to and takes advantage of open source projects like Drupal, which EthosCE is built on. The learning tools we have contributed back to the community, such as the Drupal assessment engine "Quiz", have thousands of active installs. Because of the contributions to our projects from other individuals and organizations who support open source, EthosCE, now part of Cadmium, will continue to grow with the entire elearning community.
In my early life I worked as a performance technician, and I still enjoy working community and amateur productions. I believe my experience translated to my career as a software architect as it involves the same sort of problems - bringing in multiple, perhaps unrelated streams of information and systems, then making them all work in harmony with one another. Connecting sounds to lights, lights to fountains, and doing it while freezing outside on a temporary ice skating rink. But after all these systems are integrated, the end result is a good show.
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