Anchorage, AK
Online ACLS Training and Certification
- 100% Online Certification
- Adheres to the Latest AHA Guidelines
- 4-8 CME's with No Skills Testing Needed
- Instant Downloadable Provider Card
- Hard Copy Provider Card Shipped Free
- Accepted or Your Money Back
ACLS Recertification
$175
Earn 4 CME/CE Credits
ACLS Certification
$275
Earn 8 CME/CE Credits
What you receive with ACLS Medical Institute
So How Does it Work?

Enroll
Complete our secure checkout and receive instant access to all course materials.

Study
Enjoy full access to our Certification Center, including our up to date provider manuals.

Test
Prep with our practice tests and take the certification exam when you’re ready. We offer unlimited retakes if you don’t pass the exam your first try.

Pass
Score 80% or above and you pass the examination.

Certify
You passed an exam? You are certified! Download your instant provider card (PDF) to have as proof of your certification while your hard copy provider card is mailed to you.

Anchorage has a larger rate of obesity than the rest of the state of Alaska, with a recent figure reporting that 64.7 percent of adults are either overweight or obese. Unfortunately, a higher percentage of the obese population are those who qualify as low-income residents and students of Anchorage. The city of Anchorage also supports a higher rate of alcoholism and alcohol abuse than what is typically seen as a national average. Over 18 percent of adults admit to abusing alcohol and, shockingly, almost 12 percent of high school students in Anchorage have confessed to occasional alcohol use.
Access to healthcare is more difficult in Anchorage than in many other cities, due to Alaska’s remote nature. A recent poll showed that 41 percent of Anchorage residents confess to not having a primary care physician and only seek medical attention for emergencies. 18.5 percent of people living in Anchorage do not have health insurance, and thus no real ability to regularly monitor their health status. As of 2012, about 4 percent of hospitalizations are considered to be due to preventable causes, issues that could have been resolved with proper personal healthcare and visits to a primary care provider.