30th Annual Meeting of the European Society of Paediatric and Neonatal Intensive Care (ESPNIC 2019) in June in Austria
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The 30th Annual Meeting of the European Society of Paediatric and Neonatal Intensive Care (ESPNIC 2019) will take place from June 18th to 21st in Salzburg, Austria. This is a unique multidisciplinary forum for colleagues from around the world to meet and discuss a variety of topics, generating stimulating debates and fruitful collaborations. Join doctors, nurses, and other allied healthcare professionals for this outstanding opportunity to take part in cutting-edge workshops, educational sessions, and networking opportunities.

Marvin Zick
World Sepsis Day Infographics Now Available in French
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The World Sepsis Day Infographics are now available in French.

Please download them and feel free to use them as you see fit, on your social media channels, printed at your events, and everywhere in between.

Like in the English, Spanish, and German versions, there are a total of 21 infographics, nine on sepsis itself, ranging from symptoms, sources, prevention, risk groups, to physiology, post-sepsis symptoms, and more. Additionally, there are two on hand-washing, and ten more pointing out the relationship to other World Health Days, such as World Malaria Day, World AIDS Day, World Immunization Week, and more.

The infographics are available as images (.png), as well as optimized for print (.pdf).

Please support us to make sure the French infographics are used widely - thank you so much.

If you like them, please use them and tell your colleagues and friends about sepsis and World Sepsis Day. If you don’t, or have suggestions for improvements, please let us know.

We will be translating the infographics to more languages over the coming months.

Marvin Zick
Reminder: 2nd Meeting of the European Sepsis Alliance and WSD Supporter Meeting in Brussels
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If you are in Brussels for ISICEM 2019 later this month, we’d like to encourage you to attend the 2nd Annual Meeting of the European Sepsis Alliance as well as the World Sepsis Day Supporter Meeting.

 

2nd Annual Meeting of the European Sepsis Alliance

  • Monday, March 18th, 2019 from 15:00 to 19:15h

  • Representation of the State of North Rhine-Westphalia to the European Union (Rue Montoyer 47, 1000 Brussels)

  • Participation is free of charge and open to everyone wanting to accelerate the fight against sepsis in Europe

 

World Sepsis Day Supporter Meeting

  • Tuesday, March 19th, 2019 from 12:30 to 14:15 (lunch break of ISICEM)

  • Square Convention Center, Room 213

  • Participation is free of charge and open to everyone supporting World Sepsis Day

 

We look forward to seeing you in Brussels in two weeks!

Marvin Zick
The Story of Sean, Up-And-Coming Musician Who Was Taken by Sepsis at Only 15 Years of Age
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In the morning of Friday January 12th 2018, we lost our amazing son Sean to sepsis. He was only 15 years old. Sean was a healthy young man with no underlying health issues. He was an up-and-coming rap artist who wrote and performed all his own material.

On Monday, January 8th, 2018, Sean came home from school and told his Mum he was not feeling too well. He was displaying flu-like symptoms, which were similar to those of a chest infection:

  • A persistent cough and a crackling sound in his chest

  • Breathlessness and shallow breathing

  • Aches in his muscles

  • High temperature

On Tuesday, he was feeling slightly better.

On Wednesday, Karen, Sean’s Mum, took him to the family doctor. She examined Sean and treated him for a chest infection, including prescribing antibiotics. The doctor stated that Sean had a high fever and a very bad chest infection. She was concerned that it might progress into pneumonia. Karen started Sean on the antibiotics immediately. However, with the severity of his cough it was impossible to keep the medication down. He was coughing up a lot of phlegm. He could not sleep at all that night.

On Thursday evening, Sean was sitting on the sofa in the living room watching TV with his mother. Karen was talking to Sean one minute and the next he was unresponsive. Karen called for me as I was upstairs. I ran down the stairs to my son, who was unresponsive and not breathing. I immediately got him off the couch and placed him on the floor. I checked his airways and began CPR. Karen called the ambulance. I continued to do CPR until the paramedics arrived. They took over and asked us to wait in the hall. They asked us whether Sean took anything, to which we replied that he just took his antibiotics, as prescribed by the doctor. They asked if he had any underlying health issues, which we declined. They told us that they were going to take Sean to the hospital, put him on a gurney, and loaded him into the ambulance. They took him to Temple Street Children’s Hospital in Dublin just minutes after midnight. We followed in our car as they wouldn’t allow anyone to ride in the ambulance with Sean.

The doctors in the Accident and Emergency Department at Temple Street Children’s Hospital went to work immediately, assessing and examining Sean. We were asked to wait in a family room and were kept updated. We were again asked about Sean’s medical history, to which we again replied that Sean was a healthy young man who was treated with antibiotics for a chest infection by the family doctor. The doctors in the hospital were baffled – they had absolutely no clue what was wrong with Sean. One doctor told us that if Sean was to survive, there would be some damage to his brain as a result of the lack of oxygen. After a while, we were told that the doctors wanted to do a MRI scan and move him up into the Intensive Care Unit. They let us know that we might want to have some family come up to the hospital, as all indications were that Sean was not going through pull through and that it might only a matter of hours until he would pass away.

He did pass away in the morning hours of Friday, January 12th, 2018, a little over a year ago to this day.

We were officially informed at Sean’s inquest that the cause of his death was sepsis. We had never heard of sepsis before this. Not once were we educated on this silent global killer which stole our son’s life. At no time was the term sepsis mentioned to Karen or me by the family doctor, the paramedics, or the doctors in the hospital. We are educating ourselves about sepsis, with great material being available from the World Sepsis Day Movement and the UK Sepsis Trust. But it does not reach far enough. We were shocked at the level of public awareness in Ireland around this global medical emergency. Early recognition, diagnosis, and the correct treatment is the key to surviving sepsis.

  • There are at least 7 deaths per day in Irish hospitals from the “silent killer” called sepsis

  • Any infection can lead to sepsis

  • Almost 15,000 cases of sepsis were diagnosed in Ireland in 2016, resulting in 2,735 deaths, but both numbers are likely underestimated

  • Sepsis kills more people in Ireland every year than breast cancer, prostate cancer, and AIDS combined

  • Sepsis does not discriminate against age, gender, or strength

Sean was six months from his 16th birthday. Our world will never be the same. Sean had a wake and a send-off that we know he would have been very proud of. Sean’s funeral received a guard of honor by his classmates and friends. All his songs were played inside and outside the church as the church was so full that many people had to pay their respects from outside. Friends of Sean have called him their role model. He was quick to help others and we are very proud to have called him our son.

Where is the awareness?

We could not find any readily available, easily accessibly, and easy to understand information in any of the doctors waiting rooms or in the hospitals in Ireland. When we asked the Health Service Executive why this is the case, we were told that there is information online. But not everyone has access to the internet or knows how to use it. We call for simple and easy to understand posters and infographics (such as the ones by World Sepsis Day) in every waiting room of every hospital and in every doctors office in Ireland.

Myself, Karen, and Sean’s sister Zoe are doing all that we can to raise awareness for sepsis. We are using social media to spread the message and have been interviewed a number of times on national radio and in national newspapers. We have hosted a sepsis awareness evening on January 12th this year, called The Red Event, coinciding with the first anniversary of Sean’s death. It was a huge success. There were around 70 guests in the attendance – 70 people who now know more about the signs and symptoms of sepsis than before the event. We have a number of other sepsis awareness events coming up and have printed out our own leaflets and banners, which are very effective.

One of the many highlights of the “Lil Red’s Legacy Sepsis Awareness Campaign” is that we were contacted by a mother whose daughter’s life was saved as a result of our campaign. Awareness saves lives. Please make sure you and your loved ones know the symptoms of sepsis!


The article above was written by Joe Hughes, Sean’s father, and is shared here with his explicit consent. The views in the article do not necessarily represent those of the Global Sepsis Alliance. They are not intended or implied to be a substitute for professional medical advice. The whole team here at the GSA and World Sepsis Day wishes to thank Joe and his family for sharing Sean’s story and for fighting to raise awareness of sepsis.


To help us avoid similar stories in the future, please consider donating to support our cause. Thank you.

Marvin Zick
GSA Global Quality Measures Survey Closes March 1st, 2019
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The GSA Global Quality Measures Survey closes March 1st, 2019.

Please participate and encourage your colleagues and institutions, if you haven’t yet.
The survey is available in English, Chinese, Spanish, Portuguese, and German.

Despite a recent resolution by the WHO and increasing worldwide recognition that sepsis poses a major global health threat, our knowledge of what sepsis surveillance, treatment, quality improvement (QI), and reporting practices look like across the world is surprisingly limited and fragmented. As a community of stakeholders from policy makers to healthcare providers, we need to know more about how these programs and practices vary between regions, between patient populations, and between healthcare settings.

The GSA is conducting a global survey, which will operate through 2 arms.
The first arm is a targeted survey that will be distributed to the head of every national government health agency in the UN member states. The second arm is a publicly available survey that is targeted to various healthcare providers, health administrators, and government health officials across the world. We aim for participation that includes every UN member state, from diverse types of healthcare providers, and from diverse patient populations.

The survey begins by clarifying respondents’ roles to ask only the questions that are relevant to them. The following 15-20 questions should take about 7-9 minutes to complete. All responses are anonymous, and no data will ever be released in a manner that would allow any specific healthcare institution to be singled out.

 

Purpose of the Survey

To characterize the current practices related to sepsis surveillance, treatment, quality improvement, and reporting worldwide.

 

Date Protection and Privacy

All data is s collected through REDCap, a fully encrypted and secure data abstraction platform that has become a global industry standard to maintain both security and privacy for protected health information (PHI) and personally identifiable information (PII) in clinical trials and human subjects research.

This survey does not ask any questions that constitute PHI. The risk of any responses being able to identify individuals or institutions is extremely minimal. Nevertheless, all data is fully encrypted and housed in a secure location. One only individual will directly access raw data for analysis, and all data reports will always presented in aggregate only.

 

Share the Survey

Please share the survey with your colleagues and other interested parties:
www.worldsepsisday.org/survey

Marvin Zick
Spanish WSD Pocket Cards for Medical Professionals and Laypeople Now Available
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The new World Sepsis Day Pocket Cards are now available in Spanish!

Like in the English Pocket Cards, there are two distinct versions - one for medical professionals and one for laypeople. Both versions cover sepsis in adults, in pregnant women, in children, and in newborns/neonates. In addition to how to spot sepsis in said groups, the pocket cards for medical professionals also include treatment advice.

The pocket cards are optimized for print. The format is 9 cm x 12.7 cm (3.5 x 5 in), like a small printed picture, and perfect to fit in a, well, pocket.

Please support us to make sure the new Spanish pocket cards are widely used in healthcare facilities and beyond - thanks so much, we really can’t do it without you. A special thanks to everyone who contributed to the Spanish pocket cards, especially Luis Antonio Gordordo del Sol, Andres Laserna, and Carlos.

We spent a lot of time and thought on the World Sepsis Day Pocket Cards and sincerely hope you like them. If you do, the best way to show us is by using them and encouraging people to explore our toolkit section. If you don’t like them or have suggestions for improvements, please get in touch.

Marvin Zick
Applications and Nominations for the 2019 GSA Awards Now Open
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Applications and nominations for the 2019 GSA Awards are now open.

The GSA Awards honor major contributions in the fight against sepsis every year and are exclusively sponsored by the Erin Kay Flatley Memorial Foundation.
They are granted in three categories:

  1. Governments and Healthcare Authorities

  2. Non-Governmental Organizations, Patient Advocate Groups, or Healthcare Provider Groups

  3. Individual Nominees

In addition to glory, prestige, and a beautiful trophy, winners of category 2 and 3 are awarded with $ 2,500 each.

To make applying or nominating for the 2019 GSA Awards even easier, we redesigned the application process - it is now completely online, faster, clearer on what documents are needed, and even prettier than before. Your thoughts and feedback on the new application process are much appreciated.

The deadline to apply is March 31st, 2019. Please share this opportunity with your colleagues, friends, and other interested parties.

Marvin Zick
Video: 5 Keys to Reducing Sepsis, featuring Dr. Ken Rothfield from the Physician-Patient Alliance for Health & Safety

In the video embedded above, Dr. Ken Rothfield emphasizes the need for early detection and treatment of sepsis and discusses 5 keys to reducing sepsis. Dr. Rothfield is Chief Medical Officer at Medical City Dallas, which is operated by the Hospital Corporation of America. This video also discusses technologies that may be helpful in detecting and treating sepsis.

Dr. Rothfield is not only a doctor, but he developed sepsis following hernia surgery, giving him the unique perspective of knowing sepsis from the point of view of a doctor as well as a patient.

In the video, Dr. Rothfield discusses 5 keys to reducing sepsis mortality:

  • Be Committed to Early Detection and Treatment of Sepsis

  • Monitor for Sepsis

  • Treat Sepsis Early

  • Work Collaboratively

  • Be Open to Using New Technology

This video has been produced by the Physician-Patient Alliance for Health & Safety (PPAHS), which is a national advocacy force for addressing patient health and safety priorities that are shared by patients, physicians, regulators, and industry as well as a member of the Global Sepsis Alliance.
Dr. Ken Rothfield is a member of the board of advisors for PPAHS.

Marvin Zick