Public Policy & NGOs
Here's a look at documents from public policy and non-governmental organizations
Featured Stories
Training Program Expands Immigration Legal Services Statewide
CHICAGO, Illinois, Jan. 3 -- The National Partnership for New Americans issued the following news:
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New training program expands immigration legal services statewide
By Andres Bautista
ALBUQUERQUE -- A new immigration law workforce training program will expand access to legal services for New Mexico's nearly 131,000 foreign-born workers, with community advocates now serving residents from Bernalillo and Dona Ana to San Juan and Lea counties.
"This innovative partnership is helping the department train new professionals for in-demand legal careers in our state," said Sarita Nair, Secretary
... Show Full Article
CHICAGO, Illinois, Jan. 3 -- The National Partnership for New Americans issued the following news:
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New training program expands immigration legal services statewide
By Andres Bautista
ALBUQUERQUE -- A new immigration law workforce training program will expand access to legal services for New Mexico's nearly 131,000 foreign-born workers, with community advocates now serving residents from Bernalillo and Dona Ana to San Juan and Lea counties.
"This innovative partnership is helping the department train new professionals for in-demand legal careers in our state," said Sarita Nair, Secretaryof the New Mexico Department of Workforce Solutions (NMDWS). "When we expand access to immigration legal services, we expand opportunity and this training helps make that possible for workers, families, and communities throughout New Mexico."
NMDWS' Office of New Americans (ONA) launched the inaugural 40-hour program in partnership with the National Partnership for New Americans.
"The Office of New Americans is excited to break new ground with this career trainings for legal professionals," said ONA Director Leonardo Castaneda, "as well as to grow the ways NMDWS supports immigrants who make up an indispensable piece of New Mexico's labor force and economy."
The training is required for non-attorney legal professionals to be certified through the U.S. Department of Justice Recognition & Accreditation Program to provide immigration services including naturalization and work permit applications, creating career advancement opportunities for New Mexico workers.
"We are incredibly proud to partner with the New Mexico Office of New Americans and organizations across the state to strengthen their immigration legal services and outreach capacities at a moment when immigrant communities are being met with increasing hostility and enforcement," said Nicole Melaku, Executive Director of the National Partnership for New Americans. "Now more than ever, investing in training and capacity-building rooted in leadership is not just beneficial, it is essential."
Director Melaku emphasized that organizations completing the program are helping build the trusted, local infrastructure needed to ensure immigrants can access accurate information, navigate complex legal systems, and exercise their rights without fear. "By equipping leaders with real tools and knowledge, this initiative strengthens our collective ability to build a more just, humane, and accessible system for all," she said.
This training was funded by the ONA through private grant funds. The ONA is a member of the Office of New Americans network with more than two dozen other participating states, convened by the American Immigration Council and the World Education Service.
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The New Mexico Department of Workforce Solutions (NMDWS) oversees the New Mexico public workforce system. The department is committed to supporting the business community through special recruitment, analyzing hard to fill jobs, layoffs, job fairs, and skills assessments for hiring; and assisting New Mexicans seeking employment opportunities with job search, job referrals and placement, and customized skill development such as interviewing skills and resume writing. The department administers programs to include business services; workforce training; Unemployment Insurance; labor law enforcement; veterans' services; and labor market information. In 2025, NMDWS expanded to include the Office of Housing.
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Original text here: https://partnershipfornewamericans.org/new-training-program-expands-immigration-legal-services-statewide/
[Category: Sociological]
Public Advocate of the U.S.: Every State Has Fraud - Vast Majority Of Daycare Is A Scam
MERRIFIELD, Virginia, Jan. 3 -- The Public Advocate of the U.S. issued the following news release:
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EVERY STATE HAS FRAUD: Vast Majority Of Daycare Is A Scam
Eugene Delgaudio, president of Public Advocate, says "Minnesota fraud in several major government programs is being prosecuted for years. In the last week, billions of dollars in fraud for daycare centers funded by the federal government has been reported by citizen journalists on social media and a few major news groups. For the most part it is ignored by the news media, " said Delgaudio.
The Federalist reports:
Taxpayers have spent
... Show Full Article
MERRIFIELD, Virginia, Jan. 3 -- The Public Advocate of the U.S. issued the following news release:
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EVERY STATE HAS FRAUD: Vast Majority Of Daycare Is A Scam
Eugene Delgaudio, president of Public Advocate, says "Minnesota fraud in several major government programs is being prosecuted for years. In the last week, billions of dollars in fraud for daycare centers funded by the federal government has been reported by citizen journalists on social media and a few major news groups. For the most part it is ignored by the news media, " said Delgaudio.
The Federalist reports:
Taxpayers have spenthundreds of billions more on completely ineffective daycare than even Somalis have been able to pilfer.
The Trump administration announced it is pausing all child-care payments to Minnesota in light of explosive revelations about Somali-saturated fraud rings siphoning billions from federal welfare programs. State officials in Ohio, where the second-largest Somali population resides in the United States, are begging for a federal fraud investigation there.
Viral videos of YouTuber Nick Shirley visiting childless "day care centers" in Minnesota expose that Democrats' two-century practice of buying votes with welfare has now degraded below even offering a functioning cover story. To no thinking person's surprise, the investigation reveals Democrats' "affordable childcare" quest seeks the same as every other welfare program: kickbacks for the Democrat political machine. This is a major reason the Founders made federal welfare programs unconstitutional.
From 1965, when it began, to 2020, Head Start has cost American taxpayers $240 billion, according to a Heritage Foundation report. The program sold as an educational boost for America's poorest children has done nothing in 60 years to improve education outcomes for those children, according to federal evaluators. Yet it currently gets $9 billion in taxpayer funds per year. Pretty scammy!
As with apparently every federal program, Head Start has shockingly high rates of unlawful fraud. A 2020 Heritage Foundation report notes federal investigators found in 2019 that one-third of Head Start providers they probed potentially committed enrollment fraud - meaning, offered to enroll children who did not qualify. In some cases, preschool staff appeared to have falsified or hid information showing applicants were ineligible, presumably so they could fraudulently obtain taxpayer funding: "More than half of the tested Head Start centers failed to identify ineligible families."
So U.S. taxpayers have spent hundreds of billions more on daycare than even Somalis have apparently been able to pilfer in Minnesota. Meanwhile, research and common sense has repeatedly demonstrated these massive societal efforts would have been far better spent encouraging American mothers to raise their own children and decreasing government burdens on families such as cutting the health welfare that increases hospital and insurer profits while stealing Americans blind.
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Original text here: https://www.publicadvocateusa.org/news/article.php?article=13411
[Category: Sociological]
Direct Relief: Cyclone Ditwah Killed Hundreds and Blocked Sri Lankans From Aid. A Medical Team Reached Them
SANTA BARBARA, California, Jan. 3 -- Direct Relief issued the following news:
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Cyclone Ditwah Killed Hundreds and Blocked Sri Lankans from Aid. A Medical Team Reached Them.
Alabaster International, outfitted with Direct Relief field medic packs and emergency supplies, traveled to treat patients in the country's battered north.
When Cyclone Ditwah battered Sri Lanka late last month, killing more than 600, landslides and infrastructure damage cut whole communities off from aid and medical care in the country's north. In the following weeks, Shannon Fernando-Rubera's team focused on reaching
... Show Full Article
SANTA BARBARA, California, Jan. 3 -- Direct Relief issued the following news:
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Cyclone Ditwah Killed Hundreds and Blocked Sri Lankans from Aid. A Medical Team Reached Them.
Alabaster International, outfitted with Direct Relief field medic packs and emergency supplies, traveled to treat patients in the country's battered north.
When Cyclone Ditwah battered Sri Lanka late last month, killing more than 600, landslides and infrastructure damage cut whole communities off from aid and medical care in the country's north. In the following weeks, Shannon Fernando-Rubera's team focused on reachingthem.
Speaking to Direct Relief on her way to a mobile clinic in Sri Lanka's rural north, Fernando-Rubera, a nurse practitioner and founder of the nonprofit organization Alabaster International, described a path of medical aid that her team cut across Chilaw, Puttalam, Mullaitivu, and other hard-hit communities over an eight-day journey.
"We often go where others won't or can't go...to rural or inaccessible areas," Fernando-Rubera explained. "That's our ethos: to go where others may not be working."
Fernando-Rubera was born in Sri Lanka but has been living in Kenya for years, working in conflict and disaster settings across sub-Saharan Africa.
Traveling with her fellow providers by bus to these northern communities, most of them cut off from humanitarian intervention by the sheer scale of the physical damage, Fernando-Rubera described patients who had lost everything living in flooded, damaged housing. Many of them were older adults who had struggled to survive Sri Lanka's decades-long civil war, which ended in 2009.
Setting up a medical camp in one heavily battered village, she recalled, an older man was the first to arrive.
"He was desperate to be seen," she explained.
The nearby clinic where this patient usually received treatment for heart disease was flooded out, its doctors displaced themselves or scattered to supervise medical clinics elsewhere.
"He's had multiple heart attacks and is terrified he will have another," Fernando-Rubera explained.
During his examination, the patient began to sob. He explained that he'd stood neck deep in the floodwaters with no one to help him. "I live alone and thought I was going to die," he told Alabaster International's providers. My house is still flooded and the rains don't stop. The mattress I sleep on is still wet."
For Alabaster International, invited by Sri Lanka's Ministry of Health to participate in a widespread response to Cyclone Ditwah, this mission was their first time working on home turf.
"Our own families have been affected, as well as many families who didn't have the same privilege or resources," Fernando-Rubera said.
She described caring for children in orphanages whose few possessions had been swept away. People who described watching loved ones and pets lost to the floodwaters. Older adults who'd struggled for decades to survive a civil war, and now weren't mobile enough to reach a distribution site or mobile clinic.
For those patients, she said, "we went boots on the ground with our backpacks from home to home."
Those backpacks were supplied by Direct Relief, which outfitted Alabaster International's team of providers, working side-by-side with local physicians, with five field medic packs, 10,000 water purification tablets, and 3,500 sachets of oral rehydration solution, to prevent water-borne illnesses and mitigate their effects where they'd already occurred.
"We didn't have time to get donations or buy supplies," Fernando-Rubera said. Being able to work quickly with Direct Relief's emergency response team to outfit providers made it possible to respond more quickly and thoroughly.
"I can't really explain in words how important and critical it's been" to have the packs, she told the organization. Many patients urgently needed treatment for wound care and other physical trauma; for severe skin conditions caused from being washed away or wading through floodwaters; or for chronic diseases like diabetes, hypertension, and kidney disease.
The backpacks "allow us to really give comprehensive care; we can respond to all the needs a patient is presenting with."
Moreover, field medic packs - a recognizable medical aid item - have provided credibility where it was badly needed. Fernando-Rubera said many Sri Lankans are skeptical of outside help, as humanitarian workers sometimes promise aid or medical care that then isn't given.
"Having that credibility has given us access where we wouldn't have had access," she explained. When the team arrives, wearing field medic packs, "people in the community see that we are medical providers."
In addition, Fernando-Rubera said all the tablets and sachets were quickly claimed and urgently needed, both by communities and regional health providers.
Her team reached about 360 patients through medical camps and home visits. Older patients were evaluated for malnutrition, and people who needed more extensive care were referred to hospitals. Providers taught the communities where they worked about how to prevent water-borne illness, keep wounds sanitary as they healed, and manage chronic diseases amid the difficult conditions.
When the team walked through the streets of a village or town, she said, they were frequently flagged down by people with a sick or immobile family member at home. One woman approached the team at a medical camp, asking them to visit her mother, who was confined to bed and had severe bedsores. Both mother and daughter had been washed away from their home in the floods - the older woman with very limited mobility. "It's pretty much a miracle she survived," Fernando-Rubera said. "Natural disasters really impact the most vulnerable, and oftentimes that is the elderly or children."
There is still tremendous need in the communities where Alabaster International visited, Fernando-Rubera said. Many families have lost their livelihoods and all their crops, and urgently need food and nutrition support. And mental healthcare will be an ongoing need: "Having lived through the war, having lived through the economic collapse a few years ago, and now having lived through a tsunami-like experience," symptoms of post-traumatic stress and other mental health conditions are widespread.
But responding to Cyclone Ditwah has given Alabaster International's team a sense of how they can do the most good in Sri Lanka going forward.
"There's not really a paradigm here yet for mobile medicine," such as the medical camps and home visits the team routinely provides in the countries where they work, Fernando-Rubera said. "It's an opportunity for us...that's really how we do most of our healthcare."
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Original text here: https://www.directrelief.org/2026/01/cyclone-ditwah-killed-hundreds-and-blocked-sri-lankans-from-aid-a-medical-team-reached-them/
[Category: Health Care]
CAIR-NY Welcomes Gov. Hochul's First-Ever Proclamation of Muslim American Heritage Month
WASHINGTON, Jan. 3 [Category: Sociological] -- The Council on American-Islamic Relations posted the following news release:
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CAIR-NY Welcomes Gov. Hochul's First-Ever Proclamation of Muslim American Heritage Month
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The New York chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-NY), a chapter of the nation's largest Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization, today welcomed Governor Kathy Hochul's p roclamation officially recognizing Muslim American Heritage Month, marking the first time the State of New York has issued such a proclamation.
In recognition of Muslim American
... Show Full Article
WASHINGTON, Jan. 3 [Category: Sociological] -- The Council on American-Islamic Relations posted the following news release:
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CAIR-NY Welcomes Gov. Hochul's First-Ever Proclamation of Muslim American Heritage Month
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The New York chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-NY), a chapter of the nation's largest Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization, today welcomed Governor Kathy Hochul's p roclamation officially recognizing Muslim American Heritage Month, marking the first time the State of New York has issued such a proclamation.
In recognition of Muslim AmericanHeritage Month, Governor Hochul directed that 16 state landmarks be illuminated green to celebrate the rich history, culture, and contributions of Muslim Americans across New York State.
In a statement, Afaf Nasher, Esq., Executive Director of CAIR-NY, said:
"The Muslim community has long been an integral part of New York's social, economic and cultural fabric, contributing to fields including healthcare, education, public service, business, and the arts. We hope this proclamation represents a first step toward greater inclusion, visibility and understanding at a time when Muslim communities continue to face rising Islamophobia domestically and dehumanization globally.
"We welcome this historic and affirming proclamation recognizing Muslim American Heritage Month. This moment is meaningful for Muslim New Yorkers, whose contributions have helped shape this state for generations. Lighting state landmarks green sends a powerful message that Muslim Americans belong, are valued and are an essential part of New York's diverse identity. This recognition encourages greater understanding, unity, and respect among all New Yorkers."
CAIR-NY's mission is to protect civil rights, enhance understanding of Islam, promote justice, and empower American Muslims.
La mision de CAIR-NY es proteger las libertades civiles, mejorar la comprension del Islam, promover la justicia, y empoderar a los musulmanes en los Estados Unidos.
END
CONTACT: Afaf Nasher, Esq., CAIR-NY Executive Director, 917-669-4006, anasher@cair.com; CAIR-NY Communications Team, comms@ny.cair.com
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Original text here: https://www.cair.com/press_releases/cair-ny-welcomes-gov-hochuls-first-ever-proclamation-of-muslim-american-heritage-month/
Americans for Tax Reform: Income Tax Cuts Take Effect In Nine States On New Year's Day
WASHINGTON, Jan. 3 -- Americans for Tax Reform posted the following commentary on Jan. 1, 2026:
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Income Tax Cuts Take Effect In Nine States On New Year's Day
By Patrick Gleason
As 2025 gave way to 2026, income tax rates fell in Georgia, Indiana, Kentucky, Mississippi, Montana, Nebraska, North Carolina, Ohio, and Oklahoma. The following rate cuts took effect in each of those nine states on January 1, 2026:
* Georgia: The rate decreased from 5.19 percent to 5.09 percent. (The state is on a schedule to lower the rate by 0.10 percent annually until it reaches 4.99 percent).
* Indiana: The
... Show Full Article
WASHINGTON, Jan. 3 -- Americans for Tax Reform posted the following commentary on Jan. 1, 2026:
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Income Tax Cuts Take Effect In Nine States On New Year's Day
By Patrick Gleason
As 2025 gave way to 2026, income tax rates fell in Georgia, Indiana, Kentucky, Mississippi, Montana, Nebraska, North Carolina, Ohio, and Oklahoma. The following rate cuts took effect in each of those nine states on January 1, 2026:
* Georgia: The rate decreased from 5.19 percent to 5.09 percent. (The state is on a schedule to lower the rate by 0.10 percent annually until it reaches 4.99 percent).
* Indiana: Theflat income tax rate decreased from 3.0 percent to 2.95 percent.
* Kentucky: The flat income tax rate decreased from 4.0 percent to 3.5 percent.
* Mississippi: The flat income tax rate decreased from 4.4 percent to 4.0 percent. (This is part of a plan to phase out the income tax entirely).
* Montana: The top marginal income tax rate decreased from 5.9 percent to 5.65 percent.
* Nebraska: The top marginal income tax rate decreased from 5.2 percent to 4.55 percent.
* North Carolina: The flat income tax rate decreased from 4.25 percent to 3.99 percent.
* Ohio: The state completed its transition to a flat tax, reducing the top marginal rate from 3.5 percent to a flat 2.75 percent on income over $26,050.
* Oklahoma: The top marginal income tax rate decreased from 4.75 percent to 4.5 percent.
Number of Flat Tax States Grows, Club of No-Income-Tax States Poised for Expansion
In addition to being one of the nine states where an income tax cut took effect on the first day of 2026, Ohio also became the 14th state with a flat income tax. That brings the number of states with a flat or zero rate income tax to 24.
Though not among the places where the state income tax rate fell on New Year's Day, some of the boldest and most pro-growth income tax rate cuts of 2025 were enacted in South Carolina. One year ago, on the first day of 2025, South Carolina's then-6.2 percent top rate was scheduled to fall to 6.1 percent on the first day of 2026 as part of a phased-in income tax cuts enacted in 2022. But the new state budget approved by South Carolina legislators and Gov. Henry McMaster (R-S.C.) in 2025 accelerated that tax cut, taking the top rate down to 6.0 percent ahead of schedule. The new budget sped up the phase down to 6.0 percent by making it retroactive to January 1, 2025, two years earlier than originally scheduled to take effect.
In addition to accelerating the top rate phase down to 6.0 percent, the South Carolina House approved another bill last year that would schedule further income tax rate reduction in the coming years. The South Carolina Senate will soon take up that House-passed tax plan, which moves the state to a 1.99 percent flat rate over the next five years. What's more, the House-approved tax bill schedules that 1.99 percent flat rate to subsequently be phased down to zero over time based on revenue triggers.
"It speaks volumes about the contrasting approach to tax policy and general governance taken by blue and red states today when you have California politicians not only pushing for a destructive 5 percent wealth tax, but seeking to impose it retroactively," said Grover Norquist, president of Americans for Tax Reform. "Meanwhile, as California Democrats seek to impose an unprecedented wealth tax more than 11 months before voters even get the chance to sign off on the proposition, lawmakers in South Carolina and other red states are enacting retroactive income tax cuts and also seeking to phase out income taxes entirely."
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Original text here: https://atr.org/income-tax-cuts-take-effect-in-nine-states-on-new-years-day/
[Category: Political]
Americans for Tax Reform: In Memoriam - Dan Grossman, a Champion of Liberty
WASHINGTON, Jan. 3 -- Americans for Tax Reform posted the following commentary on Jan. 1, 2026:
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In Memoriam: Dan Grossman, a Champion of Liberty
By Tim Andrews
Americans for Tax Reform and the Tholos Foundation mourn the passing of Dan Grossman, a towering champion of liberty and former Chairman of the Atlas Network, whose quiet leadership and steadfast generosity shaped the free-market movement for decades.
Dan was not someone who sought the spotlight. Instead, he devoted his time, resources, and extraordinary judgment to strengthening the institutions that defend freedom--patiently,
... Show Full Article
WASHINGTON, Jan. 3 -- Americans for Tax Reform posted the following commentary on Jan. 1, 2026:
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In Memoriam: Dan Grossman, a Champion of Liberty
By Tim Andrews
Americans for Tax Reform and the Tholos Foundation mourn the passing of Dan Grossman, a towering champion of liberty and former Chairman of the Atlas Network, whose quiet leadership and steadfast generosity shaped the free-market movement for decades.
Dan was not someone who sought the spotlight. Instead, he devoted his time, resources, and extraordinary judgment to strengthening the institutions that defend freedom--patiently,deliberately, and almost always behind the scenes. His long service and leadership at the Atlas Network exemplified this commitment. Through Atlas and the many organizations it supports, Dan helped extend the cause of economic liberty and human dignity to every corner of the world.
Dan understood that free markets are not an abstraction, but a moral and practical foundation for human flourishing. He believed in limited government, voluntary exchange, and the rule of law--not as slogans, but as principles that require careful stewardship. He understood that liberty endures not through personalities or moments, but through strong institutions capable of carrying those principles forward across generations.
Dan was also a man of remarkable humility. Despite his immense impact, he preferred brevity over grandstanding and substance over ceremony. He believed deeply that the work mattered more than the applause--and he lived that belief every day.
At Americans for Tax Reform and the Tholos Foundation, we are especially grateful for Dan's example and for the role he played in strengthening the broader ecosystem of liberty-oriented institutions. Tholos has worked closely with Atlas Network partners and the graduates of their training programs in advancing free-market ideas globally, and Dan's stewardship helped ensure that this partnership--and many others like it--was grounded in integrity, mission clarity, and long-term vision. They carry on his legacy through their work
Dan Grossman's legacy lives on in the institutions he strengthened, the leaders he guided, and the countless individuals around the world whose lives are freer because of his work.
We extend our deepest condolences to his family, friends, and colleagues, and to the entire Atlas Network community. Dan Grossman will be deeply missed--but his influence will endure.
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Original text here: https://atr.org/in-memoriam-dan-grossman-a-champion-of-liberty/
[Category: Political]
Advancing CKSA: Integrating Spaced Repetition to Strengthen Knowledge Retention
LEXINGTON, Kentucky, Jan. 3 -- The American Board of Family Medicine issued the following news:
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Advancing CKSA: Integrating Spaced Repetition to Strengthen Knowledge Retention
As part of ABFM's commitment to providing high-quality, relevant assessment tools , we're excited to introduce spaced repetition into the Continuous Knowledge Self-Assessment (CKSA) activity.
Beginning January 1, 2026, each quarterly CKSA activity will feature 30 questions, including five personalized spaced repetition questions and 25 new questions.
What is Spaced Repetition?
Spaced repetition is an evidence-based
... Show Full Article
LEXINGTON, Kentucky, Jan. 3 -- The American Board of Family Medicine issued the following news:
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Advancing CKSA: Integrating Spaced Repetition to Strengthen Knowledge Retention
As part of ABFM's commitment to providing high-quality, relevant assessment tools , we're excited to introduce spaced repetition into the Continuous Knowledge Self-Assessment (CKSA) activity.
Beginning January 1, 2026, each quarterly CKSA activity will feature 30 questions, including five personalized spaced repetition questions and 25 new questions.
What is Spaced Repetition?
Spaced repetition is an evidence-basedlearning technique proven to strengthen the retention of critical clinical information over time. By strategically revisiting key concepts at set intervals, the CKSA activity now helps ensure that the knowledge you gain is retained for long-term application in your practice.
What's Changing?
Beginning in Q1, each quarterly CSKA activity will increase from 25 to 30 questions. These five additional questions are personalized for you and are selected to reinforce learning by intentionally revisiting foundational care concepts you have previously seen. Questions are prioritized by those answered incorrectly or those you answered correctly but self-ranked as "not confident" in previous quarters.
Why it Matters
The integration of spaced repetition into the CKSA activity is specifically designed to reinforce your learning experience and strengthen the long-term retention of critical clinical information, ensuring that your ABFM Board Certification directly supports your ongoing professional growth and builds greater confidence in the care you provide.
In ABFM's recent large scale study (The Effect of Spaced Repetition on Learning and Knowledge Transfer in a Large Cohort of Practicing Physicians) physicians exposed to repeated exam questions demonstrated significantly improved learning rates (58%) compared to those in the control groups (43%). The integration of spaced repetition has also shown a nearly 6% improvement in knowledge transfer - the ability to apply what was learned to different clinical contexts.
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"This study highlights how spaced repetition can be implemented among practicing [family] physicians on a large scale. Revisiting, over time, knowledge self-assessment questions initially answered incorrectly, enhances learning, retention of learning, and the ability to transfer concepts from one clinical scenario to another."
- David W. Price, MD, DABFM, Senior Advisor to the President, ABFM
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These findings suggest that simply reintroducing a few key questions each quarter can lead to lasting knowledge gains, helping you stay prepared for the evolving demands of patient care.
To learn more about details of this change, please visit our FAQs
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Original text here: https://www.theabfm.org/advancing-cksa-integrating-spaced-repetition-to-strengthen-knowledge-retention/
[Category: Medical]