Diagnosing and Managing Diabetes in HIV-infected Patients
Anne K. Monroe, MD, MSPH
Assistant Professor of Medicine
Division of General Internal Medicine
The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD
Videos of live meetings of PRN in NYC are owned and published by Physicians’ Research Network, Inc.
Copyright © 2015. All rights reserved.
Anne Monroe is an Assistant Professor in the Division of General Internal Medicine at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. She completed medical school at SUNY Stony Brook, Internal Medicine residency and a Master of Science in Public Health degree at Jackson Memorial Hospital/University of Miami, and General Internal Medicine fellowship at Johns Hopkins. Her emphasis during fellowship training was HIV clinical care and HIV outcomes research. Since joining the faculty at Johns Hopkins, she has received a career development grant from the NIH to study how mental health and substance use disorders affect retention in HIV care and how to address these problems to improve retention. Her other research interests include metabolic and cardiovascular complications of HIV infection. She provides clinical care to a panel of HIV-infected patients at the Johns Hopkins Moore Clinic and precepts Internal Medicine residents at the Internal Medicine Residency Ambulatory Practice.
At the completion of this educational session, learners will:
- Be aware of diabetes testing strategies among HIV-infected patients.
- Know diabetes management strategies, including lifestyle changes and medications, for use in HIV clinical care.
- Understand therapeutic options, including recently released agents from new classes, for diabetes treatment.
- Know treatment goals and cardiovascular disease risk reduction strategies for diabetic patients.
This PRN CME activity is funded in part by unrestricted educational grants from:
Bristol-Myers Squibb, Gilead Sciences, Merck & Co, and ViiV Healthcare.