Toxicosurveillance Symposium | #ACMT2026

Toxicosurveillance Symposium | #ACMT2026

Includes a Live In-Person Event on 03/19/2026 at 8:50 AM (EDT)

  • Register
    • Early bird pricing available!
    • Non-member - Tier I - $400
    • Non-member - Tier II - $275
    • Non-member - Tier III - $175
    • Non-member - Tier IV - $150
    • Member - Tier I - $325
    • Member - Tier II - $225
    • Member - Tier III - $125
    • Member - Tier IV - $100
    • Regular Price after 02/06/2026 11:59 PM
    • Non-member - Tier I - $475
    • Non-member - Tier II - $350
    • Non-member - Tier III - $250
    • Non-member - Tier IV - $225
    • Member - Tier I - $400
    • Member - Tier II - $300
    • Member - Tier III - $200
    • Member - Tier IV - $175

2026 ACMT Symposium | Toxicosurveillance of Emerging Substances in the Management of SUD

March 19, 2026
Hilton Boston Park Plaza, Boston, MA

Join the American College of Medical Toxicology (ACMT) on Thursday, March 19, 2026 for the 2026 ACMT Symposium | Toxicosurveillance of Emerging Substances in the Management of SUD at the Fairmont Hotel in Boston, MA for a full-day symposium focused on the rapidly expanding field of toxicosurveillance and its potential role in the management of substance use disorders (SUD). As the illicit drug supply continues to evolve—with new synthetic compounds, adulterants, and contaminants emerging at unprecedented speed—timely drug supply surveillance has become essential for clinicians, toxicologists, and public health professionals.

This symposium brings together national experts leading drug checking and surveillance initiatives to discuss the evolution of drug supply testing, approaches for comprehensive toxicology testing in patients (biosurveillance), and real-world findings from community-based and national programs.


Learner Objectives

After attending the event, participants should be able to:

  • Describe the principles and evolution of drug supply testing and toxicosurveillance.
  • Interpret data from drug checking and biosurveillance programs.
  • Assess the benefits and limitations of toxicosurveillance.
  • Describe how toxicosurveillance could be used to inform clinical decision-making and public health messaging. 

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Continuing Education

Live and Enduring continuing education credits for Physicians and Pharmacists is provided by AKH Inc., Advancing Knowledge in Healthcare. It is expected that learners will receive up to 5.50 credits for learning and change.


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Questions?

Please write to ACMT at events@acmt.net

Agenda | March 19, 2026

All times listed are in local, Eastern Time.


8:50 - 9:00 AM ET

Welcome & Opening Remarks

9:00 - 10:00 AM ET

Donovan Lecture | The Changing Landscape of American Street Drugs

Nabarun Dasgupta, PhD, MPH, Senior Scientist, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

This lectureship is supported by the Medical Toxicology Foundation through the Ward and Ryan Donovan Memorial Fund. For more info, please visit: www.acmt.net/donovan-lectureship.


10:00 - 10:45 AM ET

Implementation of Drug-Checking Programs in Different Settings

Rachel Wightman, MD, FACMT, Associate Professor of Emergency Medicine and Epidemiology, Brown University
Yarelix Estrada, MPH, Drug Checking Manager, NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene


10:45 - 11:30 AM ET

The Promise and Perils of Drug Checking: A Debate on Toxico-Surveillance

Moderator
Leslie R. Dye
, MD FACMT FASAM, Medical Director, OneFifteen, Clinical Professor, Department of Emergency Medicine, Boonshoft School of Medicine, Wright State University

Panel
Lewis S Nelson, MD, MBA, FACMT, FASAM, Dean and Chief of Health Affairs, Professor of Emergency Medicine / Medical Toxicology, Schmidt College of Medicine at Florida Atlantic University
Jennifer Love, MD, Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine, The Mount Sinai Hospital 


11:30 - 1:00 PM ET | Lunch Break (90 min)


1:00 - 1:45 PM ET

Operationalizing Toxicosurveillance for Clinical Care: A Case Study Panel

Moderator
Jeanmarie Perrone
, MD, FACMT, Professor of Emergency Medicine, Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania

Panel
Michael Lynch
, MD, FACMT, Medical Director, Pittsburgh Poison Center, University of Pittsburgh
Simon Ostrowski, MD, Fellow, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center
Axel Adams, MD, Emergency Medicine Physician, Madison Emergency Physicians
Alex Krotulski, PhD, Associate Director of Toxicology & Chemistry, The Center for Forensic Science Research and Education, Willow Grove, PA


1:45 - 2:30 PM ET

Toxico-Surveillance via EMS-based data collection (RENDOR)

Alyssa Falise, PhD, MSPH, Research Associate, American College of Medical Toxicology
Kim Aldy, DO, MBA, MS, ToxIC Program Director, American College of Medical Toxicology
Rachel Culbreth, PhD, MPH, ToxIC Research Director, American College of Medical Toxicology


2:30 - 2:45 PM PT - Break (15 min)


2:45 - 3:15 PM ET

New Research Methods in Toxicosurveillance

Stephanie Weiss, MD, PhD, Staff Clinician, Translational Addiction Medicine Branch, National Institute on Drug Abuse
David H. Epstein, PhD, Senior Investigator, NIDA


3:15 - 3:45 PM ET

Community-Based Toxicosurveillance in Two States: Translating Research into Practice

Alexis Cates, DO, Attending Physician, Emergency Medicine and Medical Toxicology, Ochsner Medical Center
Travis D. Olives, MD, MPH, MEd, FACMT, Emergency Medicine Physician & Associate Medical Director, Hennepin HealthCare & Minnesota Poison Control System


3:45 - 4:15 PM ET

A Rise in Stimulant-Only Deaths?

James Gill, MD, Chief Medical Examiner, Office of the Chief Medical Examiner CT
Robert Hendrickson, MD, FACMT, Professor of Emergency Medicine, Medical Director, Program Director, Oregon Health and Science University, Oregon Poison Center, OHSU Fellowship in Medical Toxicology


4:15 - 4:30 PM ET

Closing Remarks

Download the agenda:

Continuing Education

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Continuing Education credit for this activity is provided by AKH Inc., Advancing Knowledge in Healthcare. It is expected that learners will receive up to 5.50 for learning and change.

Available Continuing Educations Credits:

  • Continuing Medical Education (CME)
  • Continuing Pharmacist Education (CPE)

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In support of improving patient care, this activity has been planned and implemented by AKH Inc., Advancing Knowledge in Healthcare and American College of Medical Toxicology (ACMT). AKH Inc., Advancing Knowledge in Healthcare is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) and the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team. If you are seeking continuing education credit for a specialty not listed above, it is your responsibility to contact your licensing/certification board to determine course eligibility for your licensing/certification requirement.


Axel Adams, MD

Emergency Medicine Physician

Madison Emergency Physicians

Dr. Axel Adams grew up in rural Wisconsin and attended the University of Wisconsin where he studied potato genetics and molecular biology. He then attended the University of California - San Francisco for medical school while doing a masters at the University of California-Berkeley School of Public Health with a focus in clinical toxicology. During this time, his research was primarily regarding new psychoactive substance surveillance and biomonitoring and mass spectrometry method development. He completed emergency medicine residency at the University of Washington and completed fellowship at the Toxikon Consortium in Chicago. He is currently involved in the development of a regional toxicosurveillance laboratory in Chicago. His interests include drug discovery from natural products, mass spectrometry, occupational toxicology, bioremediation, botany, and lichenology.

Kim Aldy, DO, MS, MBA

ToxIC Program Director

American College of Medical Toxicology

Dr. Aldy initially joined the Toxicology Investigators Consortium with the American College of Medical Toxicology as the first ToxIC intern, where she led a vaping initiative around the country. In her new position with ToxIC, Dr. Aldy is responsible for the day to day management of the ToxIC program, staff and site coordination, helping with research projects and publications, and acquiring support for ToxIC through grants and related activities.

Dr. Aldy earned her medical degree at the University of North Texas Health Science Center in Fort Worth, Texas. During her medical school training, she concurrently applied and enrolled in an MBA program with concentration in Health Management at the University of North Texas which she attained shortly after starting residency. She completed an emergency medicine residency at Western Michigan University in Kalamazoo, Michigan. She attended her Medical Toxicology Fellowship at University of Texas at Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, Texas. 

Dr. Aldy has an academic and clinical affiliation within the departments of Emergency Medicine and Medical Toxicology at the Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas, Texas.

Alexis L. Cates, DO, FACEP

Emergency Medicine and Medical Toxicology Staff Physician, Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine - The University of Queensland/Ochsner Clinical School

Ochsner Medical Center

Alexis Cates, DO trained in Emergency Medicine and Medical Toxicology at Einstein Medical Center in Philadelphia, PA. She is currently located at Ochsner Medical Center in New Orleans, LA where she serves as the Emergency Medicine Residency Assistant Program Director and the Resident Medical Toxicology Rotation director. Professionally, she enjoys academics, perinatal toxicology, and health policy. She is the mother of two active boys, and she and her husband enjoy road trips and adventures with the kids.

Rachel Culbreth, PhD, MPH

ToxIC Research Director

American College of Medical Toxicology

Dr. Culbreth joined the Toxicology Investigators Consortium/ACMT in May 2022. She received her PhD and MPH in epidemiology and biostatistics from Georgia State University. Her dissertation focused on the development of novel statistical methods to measure current and amount of substance use in a hybrid structural equation mixture model framework. She was an Assistant Professor in the College of Nursing and Health Professions at Georgia State University from 2019-2022, where she taught undergraduate and graduate-level research methods, healthcare leadership, and advanced statistical topics for pre-doctoral students. As ToxIC's Research Director, she leads new grant development and scientific dissemination through manuscripts and presentations, and enjoys working closely with clinical colleagues to advance medical toxicology research and practice.

Nabarun Dasgupta, PhD, MPH

Senior Scientist

The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Nabarun Dasgupta, PhD, MPH, is a street drug scientist, whose passion is telling true stories about health with numbers. Centered in pharmaco-epidemiology, his work amplifies community and patient voices in public health. Since 2002 he has done pioneering work in overdose prevention and addiction treatment. He is a recipient of the 2025 MacArthur ""genius"" Fellowship. In 2023 he was placed on the TIME100 Next list of rising global leaders.

As an applied epidemiologist, Dasgupta has served as an advisor to the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and World Health Organization (WHO). Operating with an appreciation for the social determinants and of health, the UNC Street Drug Analysis Lab has used GCMS to test nearly 20,000 drug samples provided voluntarily by community organizations and medical providers from around the country. 

Dasgupta co-founded two pioneering non-profit organizations: Project Lazarus and Remedy Alliance For The People, a groundbreaking national non-profit bulk distributor of free and low-cost naloxone to harm reduction programs.

Previously he was the Chief Science Officer of Epidemico, a health informatics startup he co-founded using technology developed at Harvard Medical School. He is also an associate editor at the American Journal of Public Health. Dasgupta earned degrees from Princeton, Yale, and UNC.

Follow the free Opioid Data Lab newsletter at OpioidData.org.

Leslie R. Dye, MD, FACMT, FASAM

Medical Director, OneFifteen

Clinical Professor, Department of Emergency Medicine, Boonshoft School of Medicine, Wright State University

Leslie R. Dye, MD is triple board certified in emergency medicine, medical toxicology, and addiction medicine. She has worked in the fields of medical toxicology and addiction medicine for 30 years. In addition to her clinical expertise, she has academic and business content expertise from experiences as an editor-in-chief (EIC) of a peer-reviewed medical journal (Journal of Medical Toxicology) and EIC of physician and pharmacist content production for a leading international medical digital content provider. Her deep subject matter expertise is demonstrated in her role as senior editor of the textbook, Case Studies in Medical Toxicology, author of 18 peer reviewed publications and 16 textbook chapters, 66 national and 11 international presentations, 10 various commentaries, interviews, and podcasts. Her leadership skills have been proven in both corporate and academic environments, as professor at a medical school, long-term board member and past president of the American College of Medical Toxicology, Chair of the Addiction Medicine Committee, former co-chair, and co-moderator of the AACT Acute and Intensive Care Symposium, and as the manager of as many as 30 team members at an international corporation. She received a funded grant that enabled her to start the first poison control center in mainland China and trained 6 Chinese physicians in the field of medical toxicology over 3 years in the US. Dr. Dye is experienced in and continues to provide medical care in remote polar regions with no access to advanced medical facilities.

David H. Epstein, PhD

Senior Investigator

National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)

David H. Epstein, Ph.D., is an Senior Investigator at the NIDA Intramural Research Program in Baltimore. He earned his doctorate in 1998 in the Biopsychology & Behavioral Neuroscience program at Rutgers University, studying both behavioral pharmacology in rats and neuropsychological assessment in humans, and teaching courses on drug use and addiction. Since then, he has overseen clinical trials and natural-history studies in people who use opioids, cocaine, and kratom. His research interests include multilevel modeling of repeated-measures data, using ambulatory technology for assessment and treatment, and integrating social-structural with person-level explanations of behavior.

Yarelix Estrada, MPH

Drug Checking Manager

NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene

Yarelix Estrada, MPH, is the Drug Checking Manager at the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, where she leads the city’s multi-site drug checking initiative. In this role, she oversees program operations, technician training, and community-based drug checking services using advanced spectrometry and immunoassay technologies. With a background in harm reduction research and health policy, Yarelix has extensive experience in analyzing drug trends, developing rapid public health responses, and promoting equitable care for people who use drugs. She holds a Master of Public Health in Health Policy from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

Alyssa Falise, PhD, MSPH

Research Associate, Toxicology Investigators Consortium

American College of Medical Toxicology

Alyssa joined the Toxicology Investigators Consortium/ACMT in November 2023. Alyssa earned her PhD in epidemiology from the University of Florida and her MSPH from the University of Miami. While at the University of Florida, Alyssa was trained in psychiatric epidemiology as a National Institute on Drug Abuse T32 Pre-Doctoral Fellow in the UF Substance Abuse Training Center in Public Health. In 2023, Alyssa was awarded the College on Problems of Drug Dependence’s Female Opioid-addiction Research and Clinical Experts (FORCE) Junior Investigator Award for her research addressing opioid use and non-medical use among middle and older adults.

James Gill, MD

Chief Medical Examiner

Office of the Chief Medical Examiner

James R. Gill MD is the Chief Medical Examiner of Connecticut, past Chair of the Forensic Pathology Committee of the College of American Pathologists (CAP), and a past President of the National Association of Medical Examiners (NAME).  He has faculty medical appointments at Yale, University of Connecticut, and Quinnipiac University.  He did his pathology training at Yale and Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center and his forensic pathology fellowship at the New York City Office of Chief Medical Examiner.  Prior to Connecticut, he was the Deputy Chief Medical Examiner for Bronx County.  He has testified over 450 times in criminal and civil matters in State and Federal courts and has published over 100 scientific articles and book chapters, and two books on a variety of forensic pathology topics.  He has particular interests in public health including drug intoxication deaths, infectious disease, fatal complications of therapy, and proper death certification.

Robert Hendrickson, MD, FACMT

Professor of Emergency Medicine, Medical Director, Program Director

Oregon Health and Science University, Oregon Poison Center, OHSU Fellowship in Medical Toxicology

Dr. Rob Hendrickson graduated from the State University of New York, Downstate College of Medicine, and completed training in Emergency Medicine and Medical Toxicology at the Medical College of Pennsylvania. He is a Professor of Emergency Medicine at Oregon Health and Sciences University where he is Chief of the Section of Medical Toxicology, Program Director for the fellowship in medical toxicology, and the Medical Director of the Oregon Poison Center.

Alex Krotulski, PhD

Associate Director of Toxicology & Chemistry

The Center for Forensic Science Research and Education

Dr. Alex J. Krotulski serves as a Director at the Center for Forensic Science Research and Education (CFSRE) working in the areas of forensic toxicology and forensic chemistry and is the Program Manager for NPS Discovery, the CFSRE’s drug early warning system and flagship program for the identification and characterization of new and emerging synthetic drugs. Dr. Krotulski is a chemist by training and practices as a forensic toxicologist. Dr. Krotulski holds faculty appointment and serves as the Program Director for the Thomas Jefferson University Master of Science in Forensic Toxicology (MSFT) program and is an Senior Associate Editor for the Journal of Analytical Toxicology.

Jennifer Love, MD

Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine

The Mount Sinai Hospital

Dr. Jennifer Love is an Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine at The Mount Sinai Hospital and a physician-scientist whose work centers on the emergency care of patients with substance use disorders. As part of the Mount Sinai Center for Research on Emerging Substances, Poisoning, Overdose, and New Discoveries (RESPOND Center), she investigates novel adulterants in the opioid supply, including xylazine, and their clinical implications in emergency settings. Dr. Love is also deeply committed to advancing gender equity in medicine through education, advocacy, and research. She currently serves as Vice President of Education for the Academy for Women in Academic Emergency Medicine (AWAEM), leading national educational initiatives and workshops. Her published research has examined gender disparities in medical toxicology authorship, and her ongoing work explores representation in leadership across the field. Dr. Love earned her medical degree from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, where she also completed her residency and chief residency in emergency medicine, followed by a medical toxicology fellowship at Oregon Health & Science University and a T32 research fellowship at Mount Sinai. Outside of work, she enjoys cooking, ballet, and spending time with her family.

Michael Lynch, MD

Medical Director

Pittsburgh Poison Center

Dr. Michael Lynch is an associate professor of Emergency Medicine, Toxicology, and Addiction Medicine at the University of Pittsburgh where he works clinically in several UPMC hospitals. He is currently Senior Medical Director for Quality and Substance Use Disorder Services at UPMC Health Plan. He previously served as the first Medical Director of the PA Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs and was Medical Director of the Pittsburgh Poison Center for 10 years. He is the founder and director of the UPMC Medical Toxicology Telemedicine Bridge Clinic.

Lewis S. Nelson, MD, MBA, FACMT, FASAM

Dean and Chief of Health Affairs | Professor of Emergency Medicine / Medical Toxicology

Schmidt College of Medicine at Florida Atlantic University

Lewis S. Nelson, MD, MBA, is Dean and Chief of Health Affairs at Florida Atlantic University’s Charles E. Schmidt College of Medicine. A nationally recognized leader in emergency medicine, medical toxicology, and addiction medicine, Dr. Nelson brings over three decades of experience in clinical care, education, and academic leadership. Prior to joining FAU in 2025, he served as Professor and founding Chair of Emergency Medicine at Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, where he also led the Division of Medical Toxicology and Addiction Medicine and served as Chief of Service for the Emergency Department at University Hospital of Newark.

Dr. Nelson has held numerous national leadership positions, including President of the American College of Medical Toxicology and the Association of Academic Chairs in Emergency Medicine, and board roles with the American Board of Emergency Medicine, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education, and the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine. A prolific scholar, he has authored more than 300 peer-reviewed publications and serves as lead editor of Goldfrank’s Toxicologic Emergencies, the definitive reference in medical toxicology. His work focuses on emergency medicine, toxicology, addiction medicine, and health policy, with an emphasis on improving patient safety and advancing evidence-based care.

Travis D. Olives, MD, MPH, MEd, FACMT

Emergency Medicine Physician & Associate Medical Director

Hennepin HealthCare & Minnesota Poison Control System

Travis Olives is a faculty emergency physician and medical toxicology at Hennepin Healthcare, and the associate medical director of the Minnesota Poison Control System. Dr. Olives also directs the combined residency in emergency medicine and internal medicine at Hennepin Healthcare. He holds active research interests in social determinants of health and disparities in poisoning diagnostic and therapeutic modalities, and he serves as the lead in Hennepin Healthcare's collaboration with both the Minnesota Department of Health in the Minnesota Drug Overdose and Substance Use Surveillance Activity, and with the American College of Medical Toxicology's FDA ACMT Covid-19 ToxIC Pharmacovigilance Project.

Simon Ostrowski, MD

Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine and faculty in the division of medical toxicology

University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School

Simon Ostrowski graduated from Boston University for his undergraduate degree and University of Massachusetts Medical School. He went on to complete his emergency medicine residency and medical toxicology fellowship at University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. Following fellowship, Dr. Ostrowski accepted a faculty position in emergency medicine and medical toxicology at UMass Chan Medical School. His academic interests include alcohol withdrawal, addiction medicine, and the intersection of toxicology and public health particularly the emergence of novel psychoactive substances.

Jeanmarie Perrone, MD, FACMT

Professor of Emergency Medicine

Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania

Dr. Perrone is a Professor in the Department of Emergency Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania and Director of Addiction Medicine Initiatives from the ED. She has led numerous investigations in opioid stewardship and has advocated at the national level for emergency treatment for Opioid Use Disorder; her work has been featured in media including the New York Times, USA Today and National Public Radio. She has served on the Philadelphia Mayor's Task Force, the PA State Opioid and PDMP task forces, the National Quality Forum, and advisory committees with the CDC and FDA to address judicious opioid prescribing. She has won numerous awards for education and mentorship, and is triple boarded in emergency medicine, medical toxicology and addiction medicine. She was inducted into the Penn Academy of Master Clinicians in 2014.

Stephanie Weiss, MD, PhD

Staff Clinician, Translational Addiction Medicine Branch

National Institute on Drug Abuse

Dr. Stephanie Weiss is the Staff Research Physician serving the National Institute on Drug Abuse’s Intramural Research Program. After earning a Ph.D. in pharmaceutical chemistry, Dr. Weiss received her medical degree in 2011. She is board certified in addiction medicine and medical toxicology and participated in the Boston University Research in Addiction Medicine Scholars Program prior to joining NIDA. Dr. Weiss is responsible for providing optimal, safe, and ethical care to study participants and clinical support toward the NIDA IRP mission of conducting inpatient and outpatient proof-of-concept human laboratory therapeutic and imaging studies for addictive disorders. Her research interests include GLP-1RAs, medication misuse, and improving interpretation of urine drug testing.

Rachel Wightman, MD, FACMT

Associate Professor of Emergency Medicine and Epidemiology

The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University

Dr. Rachel Wightman is an Associate Professor of Emergency Medicine and Epidemiology at Alpert Medical School of Brown University. Trained in Emergency Medicine and Medical Toxicology at Bellevue Hospital, New York University, New York City Poison Control Center Dr. Wightman currently serves as the Director of Toxicology and Addiction Medicine for Brown Emergency Medicine and is a Consultant Medical Director at the Rhode Island Department of Health. She is a NIH-funded Principal Investigator focused on cannabis and opioid use.

Registration Rates

Registration includes:

  • Access to the live in-person event on Thursday, March 19, 2026
  • Access to on-demand recording for 90 days after the event
  • Access to the speaker slides
  • Continuing Education credits available for Physicians and Pharmacists


ACMT Member RatesEarly-Bird

Expires: Feb 6, 2026

Regular Rate

Begins: Feb 7, 2026


     Member Tier I: Full, Affiliate, International, Emeritus

$325
$400

     Member Tier II: Fellows

$225
$300

     Member Tier III: Residents, International - Developing Country


$125

$200

     Member IV: Medical Students


$100

$175

Non-Member RatesEarly-Bird

Expires: Feb 6, 2026

Regular Rate

Begins: Feb 7, 2026


     Non-member Tier I: Physicians, Pharmacists, Lawyers, "Other"


$400

$475

     Non-member Tier II: Fellows, SPIs, Nurses, etc.


$275

$350

     Non-member Tier III: Educators & Emergency Responders


$175

$250

     Non-member IV: Residents & Students


$150

$225


Early-Bird Rate

Early-bird rates expire at midnight on FEBRUARY 6, 2026. Fees increase to the Regular Rate after this date, no exceptions.


ACMT Membership

ACMT Members receive a discounted rate. Interested in becoming an ACMT Member? Contact our Membership Team at membership@acmt.net. Learn more at: www.acmt.net/membership


Refunds and Cancellations

Event registration cancellations received on or before February 3, 2026 (2/3/26) will receive a full refund less a 8% processing fee. Cancellations received between February 4, 2026 and March 4, 2025 (2/4/26-3/4/26) will receive a 50% refund. Cancellations made on or after March 5, 2026 (3/5/26) will not receive a refund. All Continuing Education registrations will be refunded in full less an 8% processing fee regardless of date.

All cancellation requests must be made in writing and emailed to: events@acmt.net. No telephone cancellations will be accepted. A refund that results from a cancellation or change to your registration will be returned to the original payer and in the original method of payment.

Pending review, limited exceptions will be made based on need and circumstance and must be submitted in writing to events@acmt.net. Because each exception must undergo a review and approval process, we ask in advance for your patience.


Questions?

For any questions, please email us at events@acmt.net.

This content will not be available until 03/12/2026 at 9:00 AM (EDT)