Session Name: Less is More: How to Use Antibiotics to Improve Outcomes in UTIs and SSTIs

Time: February 11, 2026

We appreciate your time and effort in participating in this CME Sessional Evaluation. This evaluation is a pipeline to bring your voice to the leadership, instructors, and CME team. We value your voice and try our best to improve the quality of future activities.

*
*
Did/Will you use this information for specific patient(s)?
What patient/health care problem recently challenged you, and you wish you knew more about?
Comments and Feedback on the learning experience, content, procedure, and instructors, etc. in this session.
As a result of my participation in this activity, I am better able to... 4 - Strongly Agree 3- Agree 2 - Somewhat Disagree 1- Strongly disagree
1234
Participants who engage in this educational intervention will be able to differentiate symptomatic urinary tract infections (UTIs) from asymptomatic bacteriuria and noninfectious conditions to make accurate diagnostic and treatment decisions in patients with suspected UTIs.
Participants who engage in this educational intervention will be able to assess common skin and soft tissue infection presentations to select appropriate diagnostic and management strategies, including when antibiotic therapy is indicated or can be safely withheld.
Participants who engage in this educational intervention will be able to apply antimicrobial stewardship principles to select appropriate agents and durations of therapy for urinary tract and skin and soft tissue infections based on pharmacologic and clinical considerations.
The following speaker(s) demonstrated experiential knowledge of the topic 4 - Strongly Agree 3- Agree 2 - Somewhat Disagree 1- Strongly Disagree
1234
Allison Gibble, PharmD
Leah Mische, MD
Rebecca Krueger, ACNP
Choose the option that best fits your evaluation of this activity: 4 - Strongly Agree 3- Agree 2 - Somewhat Disagree 1- Strongly Disagree
1234
The content provided a fair and balanced coverage of the topic
The content was free of commercial bias