Poster Title Name Title of Program David Geffen

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Poster Title Name Title of Program David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA Background

Poster Title Name Title of Program David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA Background Methods • An exquisitely brief and riveting synopsis of the case. • Objectives • Use action verbs describing your learning goals for the reader, such as “usually recognize, ” “diagnose, ” “manage, ” etc. Aims Adhere to the standard sequence of HPI -> PMH -> Fam/Soc. Hx -> PE -> Labs -> Studies. However, not all of the above are necessarily relevant, and may not need to be included. • If this is a common presentation of an uncommon disease, explain how it’s like other cases. • Consider breaking the case into sections (e. g. HPI, PMH, PE, etc. ) to further organize the text for the reader. Use visual dividers to separate sections. • Review pathophysiology, epidemiology, risk factors, clinical characteristics, optimal diagnostic work-up, and treatment options. • ROS should be included in the HPI only when it contributes to making the presentation interesting. • If the case is an uncommon presentation of a common disease, explain how it is unique. • Use active voice. • List no more than two or three. Clinical Findings, Diagnostic Tests, etc. ) and bullets. Avoid “big-block-of-text” format since these are hard to read. Results • • Break your discussion into several headings; use tables and charts to make your points. • • Discuss what factors might have led to this unusual presentation, and give thought to how clinicians should be alert to this unusual facet of the disease. Do not include an abstract or references in the poster. Use section headings (Epidemiology, Figure 1. Description or Table Acknowledgements Use this area to acknowledge any outside sources of support for your work. Any logos other than the David Geffen School of Medicine logo should be confined to this area. Figure 2. Figure/Table/Photo/Description Conclusions • Break your discussion into several headings; use tables and charts to make your points. • Give extensive thought to the lessons that the case has to teach, and how a case like this should change the way doctors think about their patients. These lessons should drive the structure of the entire poster. • Be careful about bold, controversial statements (e. g. “all patients with chest pain should have emergent cardiac MRI”). Policy Implications • Wrap up the points on how your case should impact clinical practice. • Are there broader policy considerations that make your case even more compelling?