Event Registration

Webinar: Protecting a Small Business' Best Asset During COVID-19: It's Employees

Sierra Tucson and Arizona Small Business Association (ASBA) have joined together to bring you relevant, educational programming and we are proud to present: Protecting a Small Business' Best Asset During COVID-19: It's Employees.

Employees are isolated. Isolation is painful and this impacts productivity and customer service, and isolation increases the risk of overuse and addiction. Managing a business in the pandemic requires that we do things we never thought we would do, but we cannot let that distract us from a business fundamental: our employees are our best asset. Join Dr. Bennet Davis, as he reassess our understanding of the risks to our employees and what we can do about them, through the lens of updated neurobiology of addiction and pain. This 60-minute presentation will include a brief Q&A session. Please note: This is a complimentary non-CE event.

The webinar begins at 11:00AM PDT.
October 6, 2020

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Bennet E. Davis, MD - Director of the Pain Recovery Program

Bennet E. Davis, MD, is the director of the Pain Recovery Program at Sierra Tucson. He is board certified in anesthesiology and pain medicine. Dr. Davis completed his undergraduate work at Stanford University in Stanford, CA, and received his medical degree from Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, OH. He then trained in orthopedic surgery and anesthesiology at the University of New Mexico and University of California, Irvine. He completed his fellowship in Manchester, England, after finishing residency training.

Dr. Davis served as founder and director of the University of Arizona Pain Center from 1995 to 2002, where he was also director of the Pain Fellowship Program and co-founding faculty of the Arizona Cancer Center. In 2002, he and his colleagues founded Arizona’s first and only adult pain clinic to achieve American Pain Society Center of Excellence, The Integrative Pain Center of Arizona, which operated as one of the nation’s few models for interdisciplinary pain care until November 2017.

He is involved in organized medicine as past president of the Pima County Medical Society, and is active on a national level in teaching as medical director for CHC Pain ECHO, a telemedicine teaching program for primary care providers across the nation. He serves on numerous advisory boards for health policy. His latest article, “A Patient Centered Approach to Tapering Opioids” was featured in The Journal of Family Practice in 2019 and addresses the adverse how not screening for trauma has prevented us from effectively addressing the opioid crisis.

We are sorry but registration for this event is now closed.

Please contact us if you would like to know if spaces are still available.