The NaRCAD Conference Series
Held in Boston each November, our dynamic conference series focuses on educational outreach and healthcare quality improvement, creating a unique opportunity to learn, share, and network with experts. Attendees have the opportunity to connect with colleagues working in academic detailing, public health, clinical outreach education, practice transformation, government, non-profits, hospital and provider networks, insurers, and academic institutions. Check out the 2015 recap of events, participants, speakers, and more at our Conference Hub.
Accommodations: The Inn at Longwood
NaRCAD has a reserved hotel room block for the nights of Sunday, November 13th, Monday, November 14th, and Tuesday, November 15th, 2016, at the nearby Inn at Longwood, at 342 Longwood Avenue.
Reserve early to secure our group rate of $249/night. You can reserve by visiting the Inn at Longwood website and entering the group code DETA2016, or you can use the direct registration link to reserve your room.
Space fills up quickly--once full, we recommend other nearby hotels, such as:
Holiday Inn Boston/Brookline
Residence Inn Back Bay/Fenway
Envision Hotel Boston
The Verb Hotel
Hilton Boston Back Bay
About NaRCAD: Who We Are & What We Do
Founded in 2010 and operating within Brigham & Women's Division of Pharmacoepidemiology & Pharmacoeconomics [DoPE], our resource center supports clinical outreach education programs across the United States, Canada, and beyond.
Whether we're training new educators on effective social marketing techniques, helping organizations develop their programs, creating and refining resources and tools to strengthen educators' success rates, helping programs evaluate their impact, or connecting educators through our extensive Partner Network and annual conference series, we're always working to magnify the impact of clinical outreach education.
Our Impact: Improving Success for Frontline Health Educators
Through our trainings, conference series, consultation, and materials development, we're helping clinical health educators build longterm relationships with clinicians, helping them make the best, evidence-based decisions. And those decisions improve the health of diverse populations, including underserved patients who need it the most. The result? Increased cancer screenings, reduced overmedication in the elderly, more access to sexual health education resources, few overdoses from opioid addiction, and more. Learn about the various clinical areas we support, and how our partners' interventions are improving health outcomes across the nation.