Description
Course approved for 6 CPD credits by RCP
Managing the critically ill outside an intensive care setting has been designed for professionals who encounter such patients in their daily practice. Come join us for a one-day case-based symposium on some of the common but challenging topics and listen to our experts from Emergency Medicine, Intensive Care and Acute Medicine.
Who is Resuscitation of the critically ill for?
- Emergency Physicians
- Acute Physicians
- Intensive Care Clinicians
- Advanced Care Clinicians who work in any critical care settings
Objectives for the day
- Evidence based management of the critically ill
- Provide confidence in decision making in the critically ill
- Practical skills required for managing sick patients
Date
Wednesday 8th March 2023
Cost
£ 150
Location
The Willow Training Centre
Wyboston Lakes Resort,
Great North Road,
Wyboston,
Bedfordshire,
MK44 3AL
It is conveniently located on the A1 (M) and easily reachable by road from the Midlands, East and Southeast.
The closest Railway Station: Sandy (Short Taxi ride to venue)
The Venue has accommodation available and abundance of free parking.
Visit the Wyboston Lakes website for more information
Programme
Programme for those who have booked to attend morning workshops
- 08.40 – 08.50 Welcome and Introduction
- 08:55 – 09:50 Morning Workshops
- 10.00 – 10.45 Role of Ultrasound in the shocked patient
- 10.45 – 11.30 Massive PE management – Recent evidence
- 11.30 – 11.45 Coffee
- 11.45 – 12.30 Crashing Cardiogenic shock – What are my options?
- 12.30 – 13.15 Sepsis and Septic shock – Evidence based management
- 13.15 – 14.00 Lunch
- 14.00 – 14.45 GI Bleed- Fill the tank and close the tap
- 14.45 – 15.30 Top 5 papers that can change your practice
- 15.30 – 15.45 Coffee
- 15.45 – 16.30 Toxicology – Interesting cases
- 16.40 – 16.45 Close
Programme for those who have booked to attend afternoon workshops
- 08.40 – 08.50 Welcome and Introduction
- 08:55 – 09:50 Toxicology – Interesting cases
- 10.00 – 10.45 Role of Ultrasound in the shocked patient
- 10.45 – 11.30 Massive PE management – Recent evidence
- 11.30 – 11.45 Coffee
- 11.45 – 12.30 Crashing Cardiogenic shock – What are my options?
- 12.30 – 13.15 Sepsis and Septic shock – Evidence based management
- 13.15 – 14.00 Lunch
- 14.00 – 14.45 GI Bleed- Fill the tank and close the tap
- 14.45 – 15.30 Top 5 papers that can change your practice
- 15.30 – 15.45 Coffee
- 15.45 – 16.40 Afternoon Workshops
- 16.40 – 16.45 Close
Workshops
Delegates can choose to attend eone of the workshops, both morning and afternoon workshops are available and will follow the relevant programme above.
The workshop places are limited and allocated on first come first serve basis.
Select the option from the drop down menu before booking.
Ultrasound
Morning: 8.55 – 9.50 (Morning workshops fully booked)
Afternoon: 15:45 – 16:45
Hands on training focusing on single well-defined skills during this 55-minute session.
Delegates can opt for one of the following sessions –
- Basic Cardiac Scan – Subcoastal, PLAX, PSSX, Apical views (Morning workshop fully booked)
- Advanced Cardiac Scan – VTI, TAPSE, LV assessment (Morning and afternoon workshop fully booked)
- DVT Scan and IVC Scan (Morning workshop fully booked)
Non-Invasive Ventilation (NIV)
Morning: 8.55 – 9.50 (Morning workshop fully booked)
Afternoon: 15:45 -16:45
Skill station covering practical aspects of NIV – setting the NIV machine, sizing the mask, application of various modes and parameters to monitor.
Anaesthesia and Ventilation
Morning: 8.55 – 9.50 (Morning workshop fully booked)
Afternoon: 15:45 – 16:45
This masterclass will cover administration of anaesthesia, ventilator set up, different ventilator modes, discussion about lung protection strategies and practical tips in managing challenging ventilated patients.
Faculty
Dr Dean Burns
Consultant Emergency Medicine and Intensive care, Luton and Dunstable University Hospital
Dr Dean Burns is a Consultant in Emergency and Critical Care Medicine at Bedfordshire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust. Dean’s training consists of medical school at St Andrew’s University, where he graduated with an Honours degree in Medical Science. Dean undertook training in Emergency Medicine in the East of England and Critical Care Medicine training in London. He currently splits his time between the Emergency Department and Intensive Care Unit at Luton and Dunstable Hospital. Dean’s interests are point-of-care ultrasonography, tea, FOAMed, and all things related to the interface of EM and ICM.
Dr Alex Hieatt
Consultant Emergency Medicine, Broomfield Hospital
Dr Alex Hieatt is a Consultant in Emergency Medicine since 2011, having trained in the East of England. Qualified from UMDS (Guy’s & St.Thomas’s) in 1998. Background in surgery passing MRCS before a stint in anaesthetics and ITU. Finally settled on dual CCT in EM and ICM. Alex has worked as an EM consultant at Cambridge University Hospital and ITU / EM consultant at Broomfield. Alex has decided to make life simpler and concentrated on being a jobbing EM physician at Broomfield since 2017. He is currently Trauma Lead for the Broomfield Site. Interests are critical care, trauma, regional anaesthesia and teaching through simulation.
DR Kamal Patel
Consultant in Acute Medicine and Critical Care Medicine at Cambridge University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
Dr Kamal Patel is a Consultant in Acute Medicine and Critical Care Medicine at Cambridge University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust. Kamal graduated in 2007 and did his Acute Medicine and Intensive Care training within the East of England. He has been Specialty Lead for Acute Medicine since March 2022. He has a keen interest in teaching and has various roles within the trust in this aspect. He is a RCP examiner, Training Programme Director for the ACCS – Acute internal medicine programme and is also involved in ultrasound training.
Dr Unni Krishnan
Consultant Cardiologist, Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and Royal Papworth Hospital
Dr Unni Krishnan is a Consultant Cardiologist at Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and Royal Papworth Hospital. Unni trained in general and interventional cardiology in Liverpool and Cambridge. He also undertook basic science research in coronary atherosclerosis during his PhD and academic clinical lectureship attracting funding from the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR), the British Heart Foundation (BHF) and the European Union Sixth Framework Programme for research. He is very keen on supporting undergraduate and postgraduate medical training in his role as the education lead for the department of Cardiology at Addenbrooke’s Hospital.
Dr Rajeev Madan
Consultant Emergency Medicine, Cambridge University Hospital NHS trust
Dr Rajeev Madan is a Consultant in Emergency Medicine at the Cambridge University Hospital. Dr Madan has done MD radiology from India and has expertise in radiology and point of care ultrasound. He is also ultrasound TPD for East of England region.
Dr Vazeer Ahmed
Consultant Emergency Medicine, Cambridge University Hospital NHS trust
Dr Vazeer Ahmed FRCEM MRCP is an EM Consultant at Cambridge University (CUH) NHS Trust and is also the Urgent & Emergency (UEC) lead for Cambridge and Peterborough ICS. Vaz completed his training in EM in East of England and started as a Consultant at CUH in 2008. He was the Clinical Director of CUH ED & Trauma Centre until 2017. Vaz has completed a Fellowship in Leadership and received the Nye Bevan leadership award. He is passionate about teaching and has been directing the Simulation in Airway & Ventilation in Emergency (SAVE) course for the last 12 years.
Dr Dhakshini Sathasivam
Consultant in Emergency Medicine, Cambridge University Hospital NHS trust
Dr Dhakshini Sathasivam is a Consultant in Emergency Medicine at Cambridge University Hospitals. Dhakshini graduated from Stanley Medical College in India and obtained her MRCEM at Apollo Hospitals. Following this she did her FRCEM training in the East of England and has been working as a Consultant at CUH since 2018. Dhakshini is currently Specialty Tutor and Sepsis Lead for the department. Her interests are sepsis care, POCUS and simulation training and is faculty for Undergraduate & Foundation school sim training and Level 1 US courses.
Dr Fraz Mir
Consultant Physician, Cambridge University Hospital NHS Trust
Dr Mir is a consultant in acute medicine and clinical pharmacology and therapeutics at Addenbrooke’s Hospital, Cambridge. He has an interest in clinical toxicology as well as teaching and education. He is Head of School/Associate Dean for postgraduate medicine in the East of England deanery. In addition, he is a Fellow and Director of Clinical Studies, King’s College, Cambridge. For the last 3 years, he has also been the Senior Medical Advisor to the British National Formulary (BNF) and is chair of its Joint Formulary Committee. He co-founded Cambridge Medical Seminars in 2006, a not-for-profit educational initiative that has delivered nearly fifty conferences and webinars attended by tens of thousands of doctors not just locally and regionally but nationally and internationally too.
Professor Charlotte Summers
Interim Director of the Heart and Lung Research Institute and Professor of Intensive Care Medicine at the University of Cambridge.
Professor Charlotte Summers is Interim Director of the Heart and Lung Research Institute and Professor of Intensive Care Medicine at the University of Cambridge. She is also the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) National Speciality Lead for Intensive Care Medicine.
Charlotte graduated in both Biomedical Sciences and Medicine from the University of Southampton, and later undertook a Wellcome Trust-funded PhD at the University of Cambridge, alongside specialist clinical training in Respiratory (Cambridge) and Intensive Care Medicine (London). Subsequently, Charlotte was appointed as the UK’s first National Institute of Health Research (NIHR) Clinical Lecturer in Intensive Care Medicine, and awarded both a Fulbright All-Disciplines Scholar Award and a Wellcome Trust Fellowship for Postdoctoral Clinician Scientists to undertake research at the University of California, San Francisco. Charlotte returned to Cambridge in 2015, where she established a research group focussed on developing insights into the mechanisms underlying acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) that can be translated into therapeutic benefit for patients experiencing this devastating condition – this work is supported by programmatic funding from the Medical Research Council.
Charlotte made a significant contribution to the global COVID response, advising several governments, and contributing to multiple policy documents and clinical management guidelines. She is Chief Investigator of HEAL-COVID, the UK’s national Urgent Public Health platform clinical trial aiming to find drug therapies to improve the longer-term clinical outcomes of people who were hospitalised with COVID-19. HEAL-COVID is open at 109 hospital sites across all four nations of the UK.