Infographics Now Available in Arabic + Sepsis Fact Sheet in Spanish, Portuguese, French, Italian, and German
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Often requested, and finally here – our World Sepsis Day Infographics are now available in Arabic, bringing the total number of languages available up to 9. A huge thanks goes to the Critical Care and Emergency Medicine Pharmacy Speciality Network at Saudi Society of Clinical Pharmacy for their help!

As always, the new infographics are free and quick to download in our World Sepsis Day Toolkit Section – please download them and use them wherever you feel like it, on your social media channels, printed at (socially-distanced) events, and everywhere in between.

There is 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 (very important nowadays), and ten more highlighting the relationship to other World Health Days, such as; World AIDS Day, World Immunization Week, and more. The infographics are available as images (.jpg), as well as optimized for print (.pdf).

Additionally, our Sepsis Fact Sheet, newly updated in May, is now available in even more languages - we have added Spanish, Portuguese, French, Italian, and German over the last few months. The fact sheet remains the best and simplest way to quickly give someone an overview on the global burden of sepsis and its implications.

WSD Toolkit Section

We put a lot of thought and time into these new materials – please contact us to give feedback so we can continue to improve them. Lastly, please consider donating to support the ongoing development of our free sepsis awareness resources – thank you so much!

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Marvin Zick
Tuscany Region Issues Sepsis Treatment and Management Guidelines
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The Tuscany Region has presented a comprehensive document that presents strategies for sepsis recognition and treatment in the various contexts in which sepsis can occur, as well as for the prevention of this serious pathology and of the infections that cause it.

The document is the result of the work of a pool of clinical experts selected within the regional health authorities. The effort is coordinated by the Regional Clinical Risk Management and Patient Safety Centre (GRC) and the Agenzia Regionale di Sanità (ARS, Tuscany Region Healthcare Agency). The editors of the document are Giulio Toccafondi from the Quality Improvemnet Committee of GSA and Giorgio Tulli.

This document is based on the Surviving Sepsis Campaign guidelines and on evidence reported in the literature concerning microbiology, clinical care, human factors, quality and safety of care. It proposes a vision of the critical issues that sepsis brings with it to the healthcare system, a vision not attributable to a single disciplinary perspective but rather an expression of multiple viewpoints of team members. The document suggests and indicates approaches that are integrated on both a strategic-organizational level and in clinical-care practice.

The Global Sepsis Alliance welcomes the thorough work of Tuscany Region and is keen to learn about its implementation, including achievements and challenges.

This is a great example of what national, but also regional authorities can do to support their health system’s preparedness to prevent, manage and treat sepsis, as recommended in the WHA 70.7 Resolution on sepsis. The GSA strongly exhort national and regional authorities to undertake similar efforts and stands ready to support such efforts.

Download Document in English (PDF)
Download Document In Italian (PDF)
Simone Mancini
Giving Tuesday – Donate Now to Support the Global Fight Against Sepsis – This Year More Than Ever

Today is #GivingTuesday, a movement established in 2012 as a response to the consumeristic overdose of Black Friday and Cyber Monday. Fueled by the power of social media and the sentiment of collaboration, the movement encourages people to give back to the society and support good causes.

Sepsis affects 47 to 50 million people worldwide every year, with at least 11 million deaths. The majority of sepsis survivors suffer from the consequences of sepsis for the rest of their lives. Sepsis disproportionally affects children under 5 as well as low-resource settings.

With your help, we can continue to fight sepsis globally - raising awareness, affecting policy and implementing national sepsis plans, educating healthcare providers and laypeople about sepsis, and much more.

Your support makes a difference – this year more than ever. Stop Sepsis, Save Lives.

Start Secure Donation Process

P.S.: You can also help by signing the World Sepsis Declaration, shopping at our online shop, sending our video explaining sepsis to a friend, or by downloading and disseminating our resources raising awareness for sepsis.

Marvin Zick
Virtual Symposium: ‘2020 Sepsis Awareness Symposium: Sepsis and COVID’ – Friday, Dec 4th, 2020
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Update Dec 8th, 2020: If you signed up to participate, you can access the presentations here.

Original article:
The Houston Methodist Hospital in Houston, Texas will be hosting the 2020 Sepsis Awareness Symposium: Sepsis and COVID. The symposium will be held virtually on Friday, December 4, 2020, from 8:00 am - 1:25 pm. Registration is complimentary for other healthcare professionals, residents, fellows, and students.

More than 1.5 million people get sepsis each year in the U.S. At least 250,000 Americans die from sepsis each year and about 1 in 3 patients who die in a hospital have sepsis. With approximately 13 million patients diagnosed with COVID-19 and over 260,000 deaths in the US, we will be incorporating Sepsis and COVID-19 discussions. The mission of this event is to promote awareness of sepsis to the community and healthcare team with the goal of improving patient care.

Download Program (PDF)
Register to Participate

Credits for physicians, nurses, and respiratory care professionals will be issued.

Marvin Zick
Konrad Reinhart – A Sepsis Giant Undaunted
If I have seen further”, Isaac Newton wrote in a 1675 letter to fellow scientist Robert Hooke, “it is by standing on the shoulder of giants.
— Isaac Newton
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As we look back over the Global Sepsis Alliance’s first decade, we reflect that our enormous achievements to date are in a large part because we stood on the shoulders of one giant advocate for patients with sepsis, Prof. Dr. Konrad Reinhart.

Great ideas and visions do not arise from the ether, but rather the seeds are planted and nurtured by the creativity, zeal, tenacity, and innovative ideas of exceptional human beings. Konrad had the passion and foresight to see the tremendous burden and ravages of sepsis globally – always with the patient focus at his heart – and had the emotional intelligence and leadership skills to bring organizations from around the world to the table to achieve a greater good.

In December 2010, Konrad brought the World Federation of Intensive Care Societies, the World Federation of Pediatric Intensive and Critical Care Societies, the International Sepsis Forum, the Sepsis Alliance, and the International Federation of Nurses together to create the Global Sepsis Alliance (GSA). Building upon momentum gained from the Merinoff Symposium earlier that same year, and celebrating the progress made by the international Surviving Sepsis Campaign in placing sepsis and septic shock on the world’s academic and health improvement agenda, Konrad’s version was to now take sepsis to a global, regional, and national public and policy level in order to establish a sustained and transformational impact.

The pace of development from the founding of the GSA has been nothing less than astounding. In 2012, Konrad was instrumental in establishing World Sepsis Day on the 13th of September each year. From modest beginnings, WSD now has over 12,000 worldwide supporters across all populated continents, with about half (over 5,900) being hospitals and healthcare facilities. WSD supporters have enthusiastically engaged in the fight against sepsis with programs and activities such as quality improvement initiatives, sepsis protocols, and education of staff and management that have demonstrably improve the prevention and treatment of sepsis.

Also in 2012, the World Sepsis Declaration – with the stated aim to decrease deaths from sepsis by 20% by 2020 – was promulgated under Konrad’s leadership. Supporting the delivery of the UN Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 3 for Good Health and Well-Being (particularly the reduction of maternal, child, and neonatal mortality and non-communicable disease burden, and universally accessible health coverage), the declaration has been adopted by almost 6,000 hospitals and healthcare facilities. The Declaration and projects arising from it have seen huge regional and national successes such as those in New York State, the United Kingdom, and Australia, undoubtedly saving countless lives.

Under Konrad’s leadership, 2016 saw the launch of the World Sepsis Congress (WSC), a hugely impactful online congress attended by more than 15,000 health professionals, policymakers, and members of the public from 146 countries. This biennial meeting is interceded by WSC Spotlight meetings, each with a unique focus. The 2020 World Sepsis Congress Spotlight: “Sepsis, Pandemics, and Antimicrobial Resistance – Global Health Threats of the 21st Century” was attended by more than 10,000 delegates from 180 countries.

Also under Konrad’s leadership, the Task Force for the World Sepsis Resolution was created in 2014 with the intent of getting the World Health Assembly to adopt a Resolution on Sepsis. Submitted in January 2017, this was finally passed in May of that same year, marking a quantum leap in the fight against sepsis by making sepsis a WHO global health priority.

Konrad was tireless in his commitment to improving sepsis care and led two World Sepsis Congress Spotlight collaborative meetings with the WHO focusing on maternal and neonatal sepsis around the world and building on collaborative initiatives such as the Global Maternal Sepsis Study. He also drove regional change by supporting the formation of regional sepsis alliances including the African Sepsis Alliance, followed by Alliances in Europe, the Asia Pacific region, and the Eastern Mediterranean region with special recognition to the role already held by the Latin American Sepsis Institute.

Even during the COVID-19 pandemic of 2020, under Konrad’s leadership, the GSA has continued to influence change, passing the milestone of 100 member organizations and working with the WHO again on a press release for World Sepsis Day 2020 and the second collaborative World Sepsis Congress Spotlight. As the year comes to a close, the GSA is working with the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine and Society for Critical Care Medicine on a position statement reinforcing that the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus is yet another pathogen that can precipitate deadly sepsis.

All of us who have been touched by Konrad’s enthusiasm for improving outcomes from sepsis over the last decade know that this enthusiasm is rooted in an altruistic system of beliefs around injustice and inequality, resulting in a passion that has led to systemic change. His optimistic and exuberant personality, coupled with his unwavering determination and vigor, results in an infectious combination that makes his requests hard to decline. Fortuitously, this has only resulted in good as his strategy is almost always spot on.

We now find ourselves looking ahead to the post-Konrad era. Similarly determined, and with equal collective passion and expertise, we are committed to growing Konrad’s legacy to ensure a world free of avoidable harm from sepsis. The task ahead, whilst exciting and right, would be daunting enough without a Konrad-sized void. The Executive Committee is incredibly relieved, hugely grateful, and massively indebted to his decision to remain a member of the Committee for a period of 18 months – after having stepped down as President earlier this month – with a view to ensuring a seamless and effective handover, together with his commitment to impart his wisdom as needed in the years to come.

If asked, Konrad’s humility would cause him to declare that his greatest contribution has been building this team. We would respectfully argue that his greatest contribution is his vision and that his greatest achievement has been putting sepsis on the world stage.

Marvin Zick
2020 World Sepsis Day Event Poster – Download Now, Order Free Printed Copies, and Correct Mistakes
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Update December 10th, 2020: Thanks for your feedback and corrections. Everything has been implemented and you can download the updated poster below.


Download Poster

The 2020 WSD Event Poster is now available, summarizing hundreds of events and activities that took place for this year’s World Sepsis Day to raise awareness about sepsis. You can download it below in a ‘view version’ to share online (4 MB) and in a ‘print version’ (13 MB, high resolution) to print it yourself and display within your organization or institution.

Download 2020 Poster - Print Version
Download 2020 Poster - View Version

Order Printed Copies

For the next 14 days, until December 8th, 2020, you can order free printed copies of the 2020 WSD Event Poster via our shop - shipped free of charge to your home or office, as a token of appreciation for your support of World Sepsis Day. Please use the discount code ‘POSTER’ to get free shipping. Take advantage of the offer by adding anything from our online shop (including our new face masks). Free shipping is valid as long as you order at least one poster and use the discount code. Both offers expire December 8th. If you need an item from our shop urgently, please note that orders which include a poster will be shipped in the second half of December, once the posters have been printed. Lastly, please understand that free copies of the poster are limited to 3 copies per institution.

 
 

Report Mistakes / Add Events

Assembling and designing the poster requires a good amount of work - if you find any mistakes, please let us know. We’ll fix them and re-upload a corrected version. Also, due to the current situation worldwide, several events had to be canceled or postponed. If your event took place later or online, or is missing for any other reason, please contact us.

Contact Us

Donate to Support World Sepsis Day

This year more than ever, donating to the causes close to your heart is vital - literally. We’d be honored to put your donation to the global fight against sepsis to good use.

❤️Donate to Support World Sepsis Day ❤️
Marvin Zick
World Antibiotic Awareness Week – November 18th to 24th – Effective Antibiotics Key For Sepsis Treatment
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From November 18th to 24th, World Antibiotic Awareness Week aims to increase global awareness about the misuse of antibiotics and the risks posed by resistant bacteria.

Timely and targeted antimicrobial stewardship in the context of appropriate urgent therapy represents the cornerstone of effective sepsis therapy. Adult patients who receive antimicrobials within three hours of sepsis recognition have increased chances of survival. Similarly, in children with sepsis and septic shock, several cohorts report substantially better outcomes in those who receive timely intravenous antibiotics. We remain mindful that antimicrobial resistance represents a serious threat: it has been estimated that AMR contributes to at least 10% of sepsis deaths worldwide.

Over the past years, stimulating controversy on the use of antibiotics in sepsis treatment has perhaps overlooked that the aims of sepsis campaigns in fact closely align with the global agenda on antimicrobial stewardship: delivering the right antimicrobial for the right patient, and stopping antibiotics where they are no longer necessary.

The Surviving Sepsis Campaign recommends, in fact, to initiate sepsis treatment with broad-spectrum antibiotics covering the main likely pathogens, followed by narrowing to targeted therapy if a pathogen or source is identified, and stopping antimicrobial therapy if bacterial or fungal infection is felt unlikely to be the cause. Indiscriminate administration of early antibiotics is not only unnecessary but may also lead to increased costs and adverse effects on the patients or their community, such as the spread of increased antimicrobial resistance.

AMR was one of the themes of this years’ World Sepsis Congress Spotlight - the talks and presentations are available here. The Global Sepsis Alliance and the World Sepsis Day Movement strongly believe that prompt sepsis treatment can be achieved with the responsible and effective use of antimicrobials.

The World Health Organization and many other organizations produce material and organize events to encourage best practices among the general public, health workers, and policymakers to avoid the further emergence and spread of drug-resistant infections – we encourage you to join their campaign.

WHO WAAW Campaign
Talks of the WSC Spotlight
Marvin Zick
World Prematurity Day 2020: Together for Babies Born Too Soon – Caring for the Future
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World Prematurity Day on 17 November is one of the most important days in the year to raise awareness of the challenges and burden of preterm birth globally. Initiated by EFCNI and European parent organizations in 2008 and joined by the US organization March of Dimes, the African organization LittleBigSouls, and the Australian National Premmie Foundation in 2010, individuals and organizations from across the world now join forces with activities and events to draw attention to the topic of preterm birth and improve the situation of preterm babies and their families.

The symbol for World Prematurity Day is the socksline. The small pair of purple socks - framed by nine full-size baby socks - symbolizes: 1 in 10 babies is born preterm. Worldwide.

This year’s global World Prematurity Day motto is “World Prematurity Day 2020: Together for babies born too soon – Caring for the future”, highlighting that investing in the care of this vulnerable patient group is an investment in the future generation. With worldwide approximately 15 million babies being born preterm each year, this would be a stand to improve the lives of many children and their families.

Babies born prematurely often have a weakened immune system, also they are more likely to receive intensive medical treatment, making them especially susceptible to sepsis.

Join the Campaign
Learn More About Sepsis

The article above was written by Sarah Fuegenschuh, Head of Communications, EFCNI. Thanks, Sarah!


Marvin Zick