Spend :01 of your time each Monday morning as Twelve:01 delivers timely tools, trends, strategies, and/or compliance insights for the CME/CE enterprise.
Gamma is an AI-powered platform that rapidly transforms prompts, outlines, or existing materials into polished presentations, documents, and web-style content without requiring design expertise. For CME/CE professionals, Gamma can streamline the creation of slide decks, case-based learning modules, and patient education materials by converting clinical guidelines or journal summaries into ready-to-present formats in minutes. Its collaboration and sharing features also enable teams to co-develop educational content and distribute interactive modules via simple links, enhancing learner engagement and accessibility. AI tools like Gamma can allow clinicians and educators to focus on evidence-based content and instructional quality, rather than intensive slide production.
All jointly accredited providers and ACCME-accredited providers must complete their annual reporting in JA-PARS/PARS by March 31, 2026. Required actions include accepting the 2026 Annual Agreement, entering and closing all 2025 activities, and submitting the 2025 Program Summary. Providers must also review and update contact information to ensure accurate records. Those offering enduring material activities must report cumulative learner totals through December 31, 2025, reflecting all completions since each activity’s launch. Complete annual reporting here, JA-PARS/PARS, and consult the Annual Reporting page for additional guidance.
ECRI, an independent, nonprofit healthcare research and patient safety organization based in the U.S. that focuses on improving the safety, quality, and cost‑effectiveness of care across all settings, just released its 2026 Top 10 Patient Safety Concerns. The report highlights a clear reality: today’s risks are increasingly systemic, not isolated. From AI-driven diagnostic uncertainty to workforce shortages, rural access gaps, and preventable diseases, patient safety is being shaped by forces beyond the bedside. Just as critical are cultural barriers that include underreporting, blame, and lack of psychological safety. These barriers limit our ability to learn and improve. This week, reflect on where your organization might help address systemic issues as it relates to patient safety. Safer care starts with designing environments where transparency, equity, and accountability are the norm.