· PAEDIATRIC TRAUMA 11.25 - 11.45 Paediatric C spine injury Mr Richard Edwards Q1: How common is...

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Approved for 24 CPD points by Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh (6 points are available per conference day) www.londontraumaconference.co.uk 10th - 13th December Royal Geographical Society supported by

Transcript of  · PAEDIATRIC TRAUMA 11.25 - 11.45 Paediatric C spine injury Mr Richard Edwards Q1: How common is...

Page 1:  · PAEDIATRIC TRAUMA 11.25 - 11.45 Paediatric C spine injury Mr Richard Edwards Q1: How common is it? Q2: What are the pitfalls? Q3: Cautionary tales 11.45 - 12.05 Paediatric trauma

Approved for 24 CPD points by Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh (6 points are available per conference day)

www.londontraumaconference.co.uk

10th - 13th DecemberRoyal Geographical Society

supported by

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Wednesday 11th December 2019Pre-hospital Care DayOndaatje Theatre (Main Lecture Theatre)Delivered in partnership with the Norwegian Air Ambulance

09.00 - 09.05 Introduction

09.05 - 09.35 Pre-hospital Critical Care - what should the near future look like?Dr Stephen Rashford

09.35 - 10.00 Pre-hospital End of life decisionsDr Espen FevangQ1: Is this a real issue?Q2: Which patient groups are the most difficult?Q3: How can we support decision making?

10.00 - 10.25 Is the liklihood of getting CPR a lottery?Professor Laurie MorrisonQ1: What are the factors which prevent CPR?Q2: Why might they occur?Q3: How can we level the playing field?

10.25 - 11.00 Panel Discussion

11.00 - 11.25 Coffee Break

11.25 - 11.45 Pre-hospital bloodDr Jostein HagemoQ1: What does the evidence tell us? Q2: Why so much variation between services?Q3: What is the best available combination?

11.45 - 12.05 Pre-hospital ECMO - yes or noProfessor Lionel LamhautQ1: The case forQ2: The case againstQ3: What is happening world wide?

12.05 - 12.25 Introsseus AccessProfessor Jerry NolanQ1: Current useQ2: Are they where we think they are?Q3: Is it effective?

12.25 - 13.00 Pandemic FluSir Jeremy Farrar, Oxford University and the Wellcome Foundation

13.00 - 14.00 Lunch Break

14.00 - 14.30 Major Incidents: Lessons from the Salisbury Novichok IncidentDr Steve Emmett

14.40 -15.30 KEYNOTE ADDRESS: The Grenfell FireAsst Commissioner Graham Ellis, London Fire Brigade

15.30 - 16.00 Coffee Break

16.00 - 16.30 Pre-hospital obstetricsDr Tracey AppleyardQ1: What are the key emergencies?Q2: How can they be managed?Q3: How can non-obstetricians be trained for rare events?

16.30 - 17.00 Communication under pressureDr Stephen Hearns

17.00 - 17.30 Pro-Con Debate: It’s not what you do it’s the way that you do itPeter Brindley vs Dr Dan Ellis

17.30 Close

About the 2019 Conference

The conference will incorporate the most successful elements of the previous meetings as well as a fantastic Faculty to present on the key issues in Cardiac Arrest, Trauma and Pre-hospital Care.

As a result of feedback, we are expanding the established formula of short presentations and keynote lectures with debates, panel discussions and ‘thoughts on’ sessions to allow experts to really reveal their thoughts on difficult areas.

Conference Programme by day:

Tuesday 10th December Cardiac Arrest Symposium

Brought to you in association with ZOLL

(For the LCAS schedule please see separate programme)

Wednesday 11th December

Pre-hospital Care Conference Delivered in partnership with

the Norwegian Air Ambulance

Thursday 12th December

Trauma Conference (Day 1)

Friday 13th December Trauma Conference (Day 2)

Conference Information Conference Programme

pre-hospital care conference

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Conference Programme

Thursday 12th December 2019 Trauma Day 1 Ondaatje Theatre (Main Lecture Theatre)

09.00 - 09.10 Introduction

HOT TRAUMA TOPICS

09.10 - 09.35 Receiving the bleeding trauma patient in EDDr Dan EllisQ1: What is best practice?Q2: How can the trauma team leader reduce mortality?Q3: Should point of care testing be a standard of care?

09.35 - 10.00 Trauma Airway ManagementProfessor Wolfgang VoecklQ1: What is the current evidence of airway management

in trauma?Q2: Airway management in trauma - a matter of skills

or a bundle of challenges?Q3: Devices and strategies - anything new?

10.00 - 10.25 Trauma in ObstetricsDr Tracey AppleyardQ1: How common is the problem? Q2: What are most common injuries?Q3: What do trauma team leaders need to know?

10.25 - 11.00 Decision making in trauma resuscitationProfessor Simon Carley

11.00 - 11.25 Coffee Break

ABDOMINAL TRAUMA

11.25 - 11.45 Conservative management of abdominal traumaMr Mansoor KahnQ1: How effective is it?Q2: Can we overdo it?Q3: What is the role of laparoscopy?

11.45- 12.05 Trauma Laparotomy: Seperating fact from fictionMr Ross DavenportQ1: What is the need for Damage Control Resus/Surgery

in the UK trauma practice?Q2: Trauma laparotomy - how, why and when?Q3: How should we QA abdominal surgery in trauma?

12.05 - 12.25 Hepatic traumaMr Adam BrooksQ1: EpidemiologyQ2: Diagnosis Q3: Surgical Management

12.25 - 13.00 Panel Discussion: Abdominal trauma/ Trauma surgeryMr Adam Brook, Mr Ross Davenport, Mr Mansoor Kahn

13.00 - 14.00 Lunch Break

14.00 - 14.30 REBOA and major trauma: A patient perspectiveSarah Doone and Anne Weaver

14.40 - 15.30 KEYNOTE ADDRESS: PETER BASKETT LECTUREMaking the trauma team workProfessor Peter Brindley

15.30 - 16.00 Coffee Break

16.00 - 16.25 Fatigue in emergency care Dr Alex PsridesQ1: Is it really a big problem?Q2: How can we manage it?Q3: What factors are outside our control?

16.25 - 16.50 Ophthalmological TraumaMr Andrew CoombesQ1: Which injuries need to be detected by the trauma team?Q2: What is the early management?Q3: What are the outcomes of eye injury?

16.50 - 17.30 US Army adaptions to austere environment traumaUS Army speakers

17.30 Close

Friday 13th December 2019 Trauma Day 2 Ondaatje Theatre (Main Lecture Theatre)

09.00 - 09.10 Introduction

TRAUMA SYSTEM IMPROVEMENT

09.10 - 09.35 The ‘primary’ hospital trauma transferDr Andrew PearceQ1: What can be done?Q2: What should be done in what timeframe?Q3: How do we ensure quality care?

09.35 - 10.00 Innovation within defence medicial services - a new model Col Nigel TaiQ1: How do we push the envelope when not at War?Q2: What lessons are there from Tech Start-Ups?Q3: How should organisations configure themselves

to support their innovators?

10.00 - 10.25 Clinical trauma Innovations in a US EMSDr Zaffer QasimQ1: Transporting to EDQ2: Whole bloodQ3: Recording resuscitations

10.25 - 11.00 Thoughts on conflict SurgeryDr Mohana Amirtharaja

11.00 - 11.25 Coffee Break

PAEDIATRIC TRAUMA

11.25 - 11.45 Paediatric C spine injuryMr Richard EdwardsQ1: How common is it?Q2: What are the pitfalls?Q3: Cautionary tales

11.45 - 12.05 Paediatric traumaMr Ross FisherQ1: What is the epidemiology?Q2: Are we managing it well?Q3: Where are the gaps?

12.05 - 12.25 NAIDr Deirdre O’DonnellQ1: Are we bad at detecting it?Q2: What should we look for?Q3: What system change is required?

12.25 - 13.00 Panel Discussion: Paediatric Trauma

13.00 - 14.00 Lunch Break

14.00 - 14.25 Translating science to clinical trauma careDr Sarah Watts, DSTL UKQ1: How can Science and technology laboratories

contribute to trauma care?Q2: What has been translated into clinical practice?Q3: How have we tackled haemorrhagic shock?

14.25 - 14.50 Tackling knife crime in the youngMr Martin Griffiths

14.50 - 15.30 KEYNOTE ADDRESS: Dealing with trauma deathsDr Alex Psrides

15.30 - 16.00 Coffee Break

16.00 - 16.30 Improving trauma resuscitation: Conducting the trauma resuscitation in the operating roomDr Dan NevinQ1: Why is it different?Q2: How can we make it as good as ED?Q3: What does the team structure look like?

16.30 - 17.00 Clearing the SpineProfessor Mark WilsonQ1: Why is it such a problem?Q2: Why so many different local policies?Q3: Cautionary tales.

17.00 Close

Conference Programme

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Breakaway Sessions

Wednesday 11th DecemberLCAS Day 2 - Emergency Care MasterclassCommencing: 09.00

Breakaway sessions will take place in the Education Centre.For the full schedules please see the separate programmes.

Please note access to these sessions is only available to those who have pre-booked the breakaway ‘add on’.

supported by

www.londontraumaconference.co.uk