BEGIN:VCALENDAR VERSION:2.0 PRODID:-/-/EN BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:Anaesthesia all day meeting (including Trainee Presentations) UID:36 DESCRIPTION:This meeting is being held FACE TO FACE.  Registration Fees will apply for Non-Members of the Manchester Medical Society – Medical/Health related Students can attend for free by emailing from their student email account to admin@mms.org.uk .   All attendees MUST register in advance.\n\nMorning Session "Safety Aspects of Anaesthesia"\n\n9.30 am                    \nRegistration and coffee\n\n10.00 am\nEXIT: An MDT approach\nDr Catherine Doherty, Paediatric Anaesthetist, RMCH\nDr Daniel Mallaber, Obstetric Anaesthetist, St Mary’s Hospital\nMr Neil Bateman, Paediatric ENT Surgeon, RMCH\n\n11.00 am\nCoffee\n\n11.30 am                 \nHow to give constructive feedback - how to help people learn and progress\nDr Sarah Thornton, Consultant in Anaesthesia and ICM, Bolton NHS Foundation Trust; Head of School of Anaesthesia HEE Manchester and Mersey\n\n12 noon\nAnaesthesia for hip fracture repair: not if, not when, but how!\nDr Cliff Shelton, Consultant anaesthetist, Wythenshawe Hospital\n\nSynopsis of lecture:\n\nHip fractures are a major public health concern - around 70,000 cases per year occur in England, they are the most common cause of trauma-related mortality, and they lead to more occupied hospital bed-days than all other orthopaedic and trauma admissions combined. They tend to occur in elderly, multi-comorbid patients, who have a high risk of peri-operative complication. A key aspect of the management of hip fractures is timely surgical repair, but this presents numerous anaesthetic challenges connected to uncertainty, age, morbidity and cognition. In this talk, I will draw on primary research, medical literature, and experience of working in a busy hip fracture centre to discuss how best to manage this common - but often stressful - anaesthetic scenario.\n\nLearning objectives:\n\nreview the recent evidence on mode of anaesthesia for hip fracture surgeryreview the recent evidence on timing of hip fracture surgeryconsider practical ways to meet the best practice tariff for hip fracture care12.30 pm\nThe uncooperative kidult\nDr Will Brady, Consultant anaesthetist, Wythenshawe Hospital\n\nTalk synopsis:\n\nSpecial needs dental lists are an interesting beast. They're regarded by some as a fairly soft option in the average Consultant job plan. Until the regular person goes on holiday and the secretary asks for cover – there’s often a collective step backwards away from the prospect!\n\nThis chat will describe the challenges faced with anaesthetising neurodiverse patients, anxious children and adult patients who lack capacity. The rules have changed with this latter group of patients, and I’ll describe a Best Interests Clinic we run at Wythenshawe, tell you what to expect if you’ve never run a Best Interests meeting, and how to get the most from it. Hopefully I’ll provide some “tricks of the trade” of how to manage these challenges. Finally I’ll describe some interesting cases along the way…\n\n1.00-2.00 pm\nLUNCH\n\nAfternoon Session\n\n2.00 pm-3.30 pm\nTrainee’s Prize Presentations supported by the North West School of Anaesthesia  \n\nDr Mark Tan - Healthcare Resilience: A meta-narrative systematic review and synthesis of reviewsDr Mark Brown - Creating a toolkit: a secondary analysis of intervention implementation from the Improving Tracheostomy Care Quality Program.Dr Baillal Shahid - Cricoid Chondroma – a Clinical ConundrumDr Linda Bairkdar - Do you need us? An analysis of the neurology admissions to Salford Royal Hospital (SRH) ICU in 2021Dr Daniel Haslam - Midodrine For The Prevention And Treatment Of Orthostatic Intolerance After Total Hip Arthroplasty (MIHIP Study)Dr Simon Mackie - What factors influence Anaesthetists decision making when deciding to trust or reject evidence and guidelines – a qualitative studyDr Victoria Stokes - Critical care, maternal and neonatal outcomes of SARS-Co-V2 pregnant patients admitted to eight intensive care units across the north-west of England – A retrospective review4.00 pm-5.00 pm\nINVITATIONAL LECTURE to be given by Dr Rosie Baruah, Consultant in Critical Care Medicine and Anaesthesia, Western General Hospital, Edinburgh\n'But I treat everyone the same' - uncomfortable truths about bias and microaggressions in healthcare teams\n\nLearning objectives:\n\nDefine microaggressions and gender bias in context of healthcare teamsGive examples of how gender bias and microaggression may appear in feedbackDescribe ways in which individuals may use active bystander techniques to counter negative effects of microagressions and bias-driven behaviors. \n\n DTSTART:20230209T100000Z DTEND:20230209T170000Z LOCATION:MANDEC END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR