Cenacme
What is the practice gap? (e.g., "Local cardiologists are under-prescribing SGLT2 inhibitors for heart failure.") The CME content must address a measurable performance gap.
Modern CenaCme events now publish their budgets. If a meal costs $85 per person, the attendee or a grant pays for it—not a commercial interest expecting a sales quota. Furthermore, many events now offer a "lecture-only" ticket at a lower price, allowing attendees to skip the meal if they feel uncomfortable. CenaCme
Don't just hand out a satisfaction survey. Measure competence : Give a post-test 30 days after the event to see if learning endured versus a control group. The Future of CenaCme: Virtual Reality & Sommelier Science The concept is evolving rapidly. We are now seeing the rise of VR CenaCme where participants wear headsets at a dinner table to "scrub in" on a virtual surgery while eating. Furthermore, "Sommelier Science" events pair wine or non-alcoholic pairings with specific learning modules (e.g., a bold red paired with high-intensity trauma resuscitation protocols). What is the practice gap
There is also the . CenaCme tends to favor urban centers with fine dining. Hybrid models (a meal kit delivered to a rural physician’s home while they Zoom in) are solving this. Conclusion: Why CenaCme is Here to Stay Medicine is a demanding, isolating, and intellectually rigorous profession. For too long, we have treated CME as a penalty—another box to check, another webinar to tolerate. The CenaCme movement flips this script. It argues that learning should be delicious, social, and restorative. If a meal costs $85 per person, the