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Our courses that are now eligible for CME and CEU credits help our professional community engage with the HOPE framework while simultaneously meeting their continuing education needs. – Amanda Winn, MSW, Director of Training and Technical Assistance

CME and CEU credits available for eligible HOPE online courses

BOSTON, MA, November 20, 2024 – The HOPE National Resource Center, in partnership with Boston Children’s Hospital Center for Educational Excellence & Innovation, now offers continuing education credits for eligible online courses on the Virtual Learning Hub. The Hub includes a variety of self-paced, interactive courses covering the research of positive childhood experiences (PCEs) and Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs), the HOPE framework and the Four Building Blocks of HOPE, and what HOPE looks like in practice. Courses range from a general introduction to HOPE to sector-specific focuses.

“We believe the HOPE framework adds value to the work people are doing with children and families across sectors,” says Amanda Winn, MSW, Director of Training and Technical Assistance. “Our courses that are now eligible for CME and CEU credits help our professional community engage with the HOPE framework while simultaneously meeting their continuing education needs.”

The following eligible courses are worth 2 Continuing Medical Education (CME) or Continuing Education Units (CEU) credits:

  • Introduction to HOPE (CME/CEU)
  • HOPE and Child Welfare (CME/CEU)
  • HOPE and Home Visiting (CME/CEU)
  • HOPE for Medical Students (CME/CEU)
  • HOPE and Strengthening Families for Systems-Impacted Families (CME/CEU)
  • HOPE and Substance Use, Prevention, Intervention and Treatment (CME/CEU)

About HOPE – Healthy Outcomes from Positive Experiences

Based at Tufts Medical Center in Boston, Massachusetts, the HOPE National Resource Center sees a world that honors and promotes positive experiences as necessary for health and well-being. Research shows that positive childhood experiences (PCEs) drive healthy child development and lessen the lifelong effects of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs). HOPE aims to inspire a movement that changes how people and organizations advance health and well-being for children, families, and communities.

Robert Sege, MD, PHD, FAAP, Director of the Center for Community-Engaged Medicine at Tufts Medical Center and Professor of Medicine and Pediatrics at Tufts University School of Medicine, leads the HOPE National Resource Center.

Inquiries: HOPE@tuftsmedicalcenter.org

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