FUSIC
9am – 1pm BST, 17 June 2024 ‐ 4 hours
FUSIC
Advanced Practitioner in Critical Care and ICS APCC Professional Advisory Group, Chair
Leadership
9am – 5pm BST, 17 June 2024 ‐ 8 hours
Leadership
CPD points available: 5
Some of the most successful and personally impactful people took steps to address their own leadership development, before progressing onwards in their leadership journey. Personal development has helped to prepare many to lead. It is for this reason that the Intensive Care Society has welcomed Dr Philip Stiles to lead an engaging, insightful, interactive, and highly applicable SOA24 pre-congress workshop, entitled “development of self in leadership”.
By the end of this session, you will expect to:
LEAG
10.30am – 4.30pm BST, 17 June 2024 ‐ 6 hours
LEAG
CPD points available: 5
Learning outcomes
By the end of the Symposium, the participants will to be able to:
Programme
FUSIC
1pm – 5pm BST, 17 June 2024 ‐ 4 hours
FUSIC
CPD points available: 3.5
Our FUSIC® team will be delivering our lung workshop, designed to help you get started on your accreditation journey and take your ultrasound skills to the next level.
An afternoon of training learning to look at the lungs using ultrasound, delivered by national experts from a range of medical specialities as this skill is relevant to all who treat unwell patients. We will combine lecture-based material to show you where to start and show you a myriad of potential pathologies to diagnose, hands-on scanning to get your skills into practice, realistic simulation to make your diagnoses, and some interactive case-based pathology discussions to help integrate your skills into practice.
Pathologies covered that can be diagnosed with lung ultrasound include:
We will also be running a FUSIC® Heart workshop in the morning, so if you would like to get both modules done in one day, just add both to your basket when you register.
Consultant Intensivist & Anaesthetist and National FUSIC® Lung Lead, UK
Advanced Practitioner in Critical Care and ICS APCC Professional Advisory Group, Chair
Registration
8am – 9.30am BST, 18 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour 30 mins
Registration
Plenary
9.30am – 9.45am BST, 18 June 2024 ‐ 15 mins
Plenary
Plenary
9.45am – 11.15am BST, 18 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour 30 mins
Plenary
What is consciousness? If it is the ability to perceive and respond to an environment, is a worm aware? Does it require 'intelligence' to exist? If so, what is 'intelligence'?
And how does consciousness arise? Does it just appear as a function of neural connections? If so, will computers ever be conscious? Or is it a fundamental property of all matter? Or is matter really just a 'creation' of consciousness?
Are you actually 'conscious' when asleep or under deep anaesthesia, given that most can obey simple commands when in either state?
And what does this all mean for us? How do we know if someone is conscious? And what does this all mean for us when we manage sedation, or the 'minimally conscious' states, or even 'brain death'?
We have assembled the worlds leading experts in the field - philosophers, neurobiologists, clinicians and computer scientists- to discuss all of these issues.
Professor of Neurology at the UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology and Honorary Consultant Neurologist at the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, Queen Square
Plenary
11.15am – 12pm BST, 18 June 2024 ‐ 45 mins
Plenary
The shape of medical training is changing. In this session Professor Colin Melville, Medical Director of the GMC, will highlight these changes and also discuss the evolution and regulation of new roles.Specialty Doctor and and ICS Specialty Doctor Professional Advisory Group Chair
Intensive Care Trainee and Trainee Doctor Professional Advisory Group Chair
Break
12pm – 1.30pm BST, 18 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour 30 mins
Break
Mini-theatre 1
12.10pm – 12.40pm BST, 18 June 2024 ‐ 30 mins
Mini-theatre 1
Dr Daniel Andrea Hofmaenner
Lung Protection and ECCO2R: why and when
Dr John Prowle
Blood purification options for intoxication
Clinical Reader in Critical Care Nephrology, Queen Mary University of London and Consultant Intensivist & Nephrologist, Barts Health NHS Trust
Mini-theatre 2
12.10pm – 12.55pm BST, 18 June 2024 ‐ 45 mins
Mini-theatre 2
Chair: Lydia Lofton
Speakers: Claire Rock, Ella Terblanche, Gabriella Cork, Giles Farrington, Laura Pathak, Samantha Eperson
Mini-theatre 1
12.50pm – 1.20pm BST, 18 June 2024 ‐ 30 mins
Mini-theatre 1
Please join a thought-provoking symposium examining the evidence for the application ofnasal high flow for non-invasive respiratory support in patients outside of critical care.
Dr Swapna Mandal qualified in medicine at Guy’s, King’s and St Thomas’ medical school, following graduation she specialised in respiratory medicine. Having undertaken a period of research, Dr Mandal received a PhD from King’s College London, for her work in the investigation and management of ventilatory failure. Dr Mandal presents at international conferences and has published in several internationally peer reviewed journals, demonstrating the use of novel diagnostic techniques in ventilatory failure and has published widely within this field. She also published clinical data on the post acute management of COVID-19. She is the lead Consultant Physician in Sleep and Ventilation at the Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust, focussing on the management of sleep disordered breathing, the service covers a large geographical area treating range of patients with often complex needs including those with progressive neurological disorders and ventilatory failure. Additionally, she has set up a joint respiratory and palliative advanced respiratory care clinic for patients with chronic respiratory conditions requiring input from both specialties. She is also the clinical lead for lung function services across the trust and has introduced innovative diagnostic pathways. She currently sits on the British Thoracic Society Sleep Specialist Advisory Group and is part of the executive committee for the British Sleep Society. She continues her pursuit of academic interests in sleep and ventilation medicine and is supervising several PhD students as well as actively improving patient care through quality improvement projects.
Consultant in Sleep and Ventilation, Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust
Mini-theatre 2
1pm – 1.30pm BST, 18 June 2024 ‐ 30 mins
Mini-theatre 2
Mentoring
1.30pm – 2.30pm BST, 18 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour
Mentoring
Mentoring in essence is taking time to have a supported conversation with a trained mentor, to allow the mentee to take control of their personal development. The mentor will help the mentee look at the chosen issue through a wider lens to identify how they can help themselves to develop an action plan to move forwards, as well as identifying potential blind spots and pitfalls to navigate.
Mentoring is not about being given advice or being told what to do by a mentor. Instead, it is the opportunity to explore a situation while receiving guidance from a qualified mentor. There are some similarities with coaching, but it is a separate process.
Mentoring is for anyone who would like the opportunity to explore a current opportunity or challenge. It is a common misconception that mentoring is only for those struggling, although of course it can play a very useful role during difficult times.
The best way to really find out how mentoring may benefit you is to book a session! Mentors from NEMO (the North East Mentoring Organisation) will be offering taster sessions at SOA24 on the 18 - 19 June during the Congress. There is also a BJA Education article which you can read to gain more understanding of this process. The article is entitled “Mentoring for doctors in the UK: what it can do for you, your colleagues, and your patients”. However, mentoring is open for all members of the multi-professional team.
Consultant in ICM & Anaesthesia, Newcastle Training Programme Director for Intensive Care, and ACCS within the Northern School of Anaesthesia & Intensive Care Medicine
Specialist Anaesthetist and Intensivist , Darlington Memorial Hospital
Stream 1
1.30pm – 2.45pm BST, 18 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour 15 mins
Stream 1
The UK population is ageing, and critical care services are increasingly faced with complex decision- making scenarios involving older patients. Acting in patients’ best interests can be less obvious in patient that are older, more frail or faced with extremely invasive lifesaving therapies that are also life changing. This session will begin with challenging the concept of numerical aging and emphasising the importance of physiological age.
The importance of physical activity will be discussed, and the speakers will disentangle the effects of ageing from disuse processes in determining the trajectory of decline in physiological function as we age. This will be followed by paired presentations (from a Geriatrician and an Intensivist) in regards to decision making on critical care admission for frail patients, and the increasing blurred lines of emergency laparotomies in elderly patients.
Stream 2
1.30pm – 2.45pm BST, 18 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour 15 mins
Stream 2
This session will explore recent legal rulings around instituting complex interventions such as RRT and chemotherapy in patients lacking capacity or with significant learning disabilities. It will then introduce a new critical care eating disorder consensus guideline. It will focus particularly on the legal and ethical considerations around feeding of people who are refusing nutrition and as a result are life threateningly ill and in whom it is deemed necessary to feed under sedation without consent.
Stream 3
1.30pm – 2.45pm BST, 18 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour 15 mins
Stream 3
2023 saw the Intensive Care Society publish a landmark document ‘Towards an Inclusive Future – A look inside our Teams’. This session will bring some of the themes highlighted through this work to life. Our stage will be home to the real lived experiences of speakers as we ask what it has been like to walk in their shoes – and how the power of people around them could or should have made that different. There’ll be plenty of time for debate and audience participation very much encouraged. Understanding how you can foster not just a diverse, but a diverse and inclusive team, might just be the most important thing you can learn today!
Mini-theatre 1
1.30pm – 2.45pm BST, 18 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour 15 mins
Mini-theatre 1
The adoption of point of care ultrasound (PoCUS) and Focused Ultrasound in Intensive Care (FUSIC) by healthcare professionals clinically and within research continues to grow at an exceptional rate. With easier access to ultrasound equipment by a wide range of professions, new, innovative, and disruptive practices are appearing across critical care units. This session learning outcomes are that delegates will understand the current and future uses of ultrasound by three of the AHP professions working within critical care (Physiotherapy, Speech and Language Therapy & Dietetics), as well as beginning to understand some of the scope of practice, educational and governance considerations around its adoption by AHPs.
Consultant Intensivist & Anaesthetist and National FUSIC® Lung Lead, UK
Mini-theatre 2
2.45pm – 3.15pm BST, 18 June 2024 ‐ 30 mins
Mini-theatre 2
Napp products will be discussed at this meeting.
Professor, Consultant and Research Director in Intensive Care Medicine
Mini-theatre 1
2.45pm – 3.25pm BST, 18 June 2024 ‐ 40 mins
Mini-theatre 1
Break
2.45pm – 3.30pm BST, 18 June 2024 ‐ 45 mins
Break
Stream 1
3.30pm – 4.45pm BST, 18 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour 15 mins
Stream 1
This session will cover what happens to patients after critical illness. It will focus on:
“Optimising medicines post critical illness, it's everyone’s business"
Intimacy after intensive care
Frailty, Falls and Function
Patient experience of recovery after cancer treatment and surgery.
Stream 2
3.30pm – 4.45pm BST, 18 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour 15 mins
Stream 2
Conflict, differing beliefs and differing opinions on what is death and what is life, and how this shapes end of life care and ability to make decisions that are in the best interests of our patients.
Abstracts
3.30pm – 4.45pm BST, 18 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour 15 mins
Abstracts
The Intensive Care Society wishes to promote and encourage the presentation of the best critical care science in the UK. The Rising Star – ICS Gold Medal is awarded annually to a young investigator (nurse, AHP or doctor) who has shown excellence in science relevant to intensive care medicine.
Mini-theatre 1
3.30pm – 4.45pm BST, 18 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour 15 mins
Mini-theatre 1
Join us for a dynamic panel discussion as we explore aspects of transitioning to consultant roles in critical care. Our diverse panel, consisting of consultants at different career stages and trainees at various points of the final stages of training, will share personal anecdotes, insights, and lessons learned from their own experiences. They will offer practical tips and strategies for navigating the challenges and opportunities that come with this crucial career milestone. Don't miss this opportunity to gain valuable perspectives and advice to support success in your career journey.
This session will cover a range of crucial topics, including:
Intensive Care Trainee and Trainee Doctor Professional Advisory Group Chair
Wellness
6.30am – 7.30am BST, 19 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour
Wellness
Research
8am – 9am BST, 19 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour
Research
This session will present and discuss the latest publications and progress in various fields of critical care medicine. Its aim is to bring the audience up to date with the latest science, clinical research and commentary in each of the fields of Respiratory Medicine, Cardiac and Cardiac ICU, and Trauma Care.
Registration
8am – 9am BST, 19 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour
Registration
Plenary
9.15am – 10.45am BST, 19 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour 30 mins
Plenary
This plenary will feature new key trial results, as well as two new and innovative upcoming trials for critical care teams to get involved with in the UK.
Mini-theatre 1
10.40am – 11.10am BST, 19 June 2024 ‐ 30 mins
Mini-theatre 1
Mini-theatre 2
10.40am – 11.10am BST, 19 June 2024 ‐ 30 mins
Mini-theatre 2
Break
10.45am – 11.30am BST, 19 June 2024 ‐ 45 mins
Break
Stream 1
11.30am – 12.45pm BST, 19 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour 15 mins
Stream 1
This session is a collaboration between the ICS and Regional Anaesthesia-UK and heralds the forthcoming FUSIC Blocks module.
Pain management in the ICU is rapidly evolving and alternative techniques to limit usage of opiate have become more common place. In this session, the ICS/RA-UK team will highlight and show which blocks are relevant to ITU practice and why they are important. For example, the ability to treat pain and prevent escalation of FiO2 in the rib fracture patient, using simpler nerve/regional blocks with potentially less side effects than the "gold standard" epidurals which are also often contraindicated in such patients.
The session will utilise on-stage, multi-screen live ultrasound performed by experts. Added to this will be discussion with tips and tricks from the coal face.
Blocks being discussed are Superficial cervical plexus / Parasternal / Chest wall blocks / Abdominal wall blocks.
The complications and contraindications will also be discussed.
Highly important area within critical care…no ITU patient should suffer pain on the back of our obsession with sedation etc.
Highlight the requirement of good, long lasting, non-opiate based pain relief.
RA can also prevent escalation to higher forms of FiO2 as per the case in rib fractures.
Possible decreased LOS
Part 1
Superficial cervical plexus block
CVP insertion, used in the US in most. Should we be doing this on all patients?
Demo the block on live model with discussion
Superficial parasternal intercostal plane block
Debate about deep and danger of vascular puncture
Demo the block on live model with discussion
Demo each block on live model with discussion
Mention paravertebral is advanced, ESP will tend to cover it and is very centre dependent etc
Part 3 - Abdominal wall blocks
TAP
Demo and discussion regarding efficacy of this block, missing supra-umbilical area
Rectus sheath
Demo the block on live model with discussion
Part 4 - Spinal US to aid neuraxial techniques
Demo on live model with discussion regarding marking entry points, finding midline, needling etc
Demo of kit and how best to site and secure catheters
PIB, rates for plane blocks, LA used etc
The evidence, top tips, and bleeding risk discussion
Discussion of relevant evidence for PNB’s and bleeding risk
Stream 2
11.30am – 12.45pm BST, 19 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour 15 mins
Stream 2
Abstracts
11.30am – 12.45pm BST, 19 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour 15 mins
Abstracts
We know that the multi-professional team effort is without any doubt, greater than the sum of any of its parts. Critical care thrives when we understand and value the power of teams, but we also know that within that team are individual people, outlooks, stories and experiences that may impact on patient care when shared widely within the intensive care community. These can highlight quality improvement, multi- professional approach to quality improvement, innovations in multi- professional practice, workforce, controversies in intensive care, or any ideas that may change practice.
This year's Critical Care Tales shortlist is:
Physiotherapist in Critical Care and and ICS Physio Professional Advisory Group, Chair
Mini-theatre 2
11.30am – 12.45pm BST, 19 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour 15 mins
Mini-theatre 2
The TRIC Network are excited to be returning to SOA to discuss all things related to trainee research, audit and QI. After the success of last year, we will be hosting another national competition to find our next TRIC Network project, and revealing the results of last year's project winner, ID-ACCT. We will also discuss our most recent project, NEAT-ECHO, run in conjunction with the ICS, FICM and the BSE. We very much look forward to seeing you all there!
Laboratory Requesting in Intensive Care (LYRIC) - Alexander Butcher & Ganesh Rajaratnam
TRIC-MAN - Oliver Hamilton
BRONCH-ICU - Kaladerhan Agbontaen
Clinical Fellow in ICM and Anaesthetics, University Hospitals Sussex NHS Trust
Mini-theatre 2
12.45pm – 1.30pm BST, 19 June 2024 ‐ 45 mins
Mini-theatre 2
Perioperative Temperature Management is mainly a concern for anaesthesiologists in the OR. So, is there any reason why intensivists should care about PTM?
Perioperative hypothermia can cause problems for the intensivists.
Therefore, PTM is important, and rewarming of hypothermic patients is necessary.
Consultant, Department of Anesthesiology at the University Hospital in Göttingen, Germany.
Break
12.45pm – 2pm BST, 19 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour 15 mins
Break
Stream 1
2pm – 3.15pm BST, 19 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour 15 mins
Stream 1
Introduction Ben Ivory and Jill Featherstone
Donor Optimisation in DBD – Sarah Mason and Amit Adlakha
Normothermic Regional Perfusion in DCD - Antonio Rubino and Rachel Thomas
Peering into the crystal ball - Dale Gardiner and Dan Harvey
Stream 2
2pm – 3.15pm BST, 19 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour 15 mins
Stream 2
How were 50% of patients in NYC encouraged to transition to plant-based diets during their hospitalisation? How can food improve sustainable healthcare? When aren’t gloves necessary in ICU, and how can you support this change in thinking with colleagues? And what are the key learnings from the Green Surgery Report? Join us to find out.
Session Programme
Senior Trainee in Critical Care and ICS Sustainability Working Group, co-Chair
Abstracts
2pm – 3.15pm BST, 19 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour 15 mins
Abstracts
Our Trainee Professional Advisory Group are proud to present the latest edition of The Cauldron. The topic for discussion this year is – “If you could change only one thing to make critical care better, what would it be?”
All doctors in Training with an interest in ICM, including Specialty Doctors, Fellows, IMG, MTI & CESR programmes were eligible to send in an abstracts.
This year's Cauldron shortlist is:
These presentation are followed by a round of questions and lively discussion by a panel of judges and an eventual winner chosen.
Break
3.15pm – 4pm BST, 19 June 2024 ‐ 45 mins
Break
Stream 1
4pm – 5.15pm BST, 19 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour 15 mins
Stream 1
Clinical ABC of intensive care medicine
Intensive Care Trainee and Trainee Doctor Professional Advisory Group Chair
President of College of Intensive Care Medicine of Australia and New Zealand, Australia
Stream 2
4pm – 5.15pm BST, 19 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour 15 mins
Stream 2
This session will focus on the difficulty of neuroprognostication in the ICU in patients with various causes of brain injury. It will explore developments in the tools used for prognostication such as MRI and biomarkers, as well : non-invasive bedside neuromonitoring. The explanation provided will compliment a wider discussion and understanding of prognostication in this patient cohort. The session will end with a discussion of best practice with questions from the chair and audience.
Consultant in Neurosciences, Trauma, Critical Care Medicine and Emergency Medicine, UK
Stream 3
4pm – 5.15pm BST, 19 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour 15 mins
Stream 3
In a landscape of increasing patient complexity, the importance of a tailored weaning approach is paramount for optimising patient care. This symposium will have a clinical information focus, providing insight into current best practise in tracheostomy care to facilitate voice, swallow, cough and rehabilitation, whilst illustrating the benefits of a multi-disciplinary approach.
Intro - Ema Swingwood and Sarah Wallace
It's all about timing - Anna-Liis Sutt
Switch the larynx back on! - Brendan McGrath
Does tube size matter - results from a benchtop study - Helen Newman
Networking
7pm – 11pm BST, 19 June 2024 ‐ 4 hours
Networking
Oh Me Oh My – West Africa House, 25 Water Street, Liverpool L2 0RG OH ME OH MY - Google MapsStream 1
8am – 9am BST, 20 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour
Stream 1
Registration
8am – 9am BST, 20 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour
Registration
Stream 1
9.15am – 10.30am BST, 20 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour 15 mins
Stream 1
ICNARC celebrated its 30th birthday in January 2024. This session will both look back at ICNARC’s contribution to critical care audit and research over those 30 years—with reflections from both national and international perspectives—and look forward to ICNARC’s vision and direction for the future of audit and research in critical care, followed by a panel discussion.
Stream 2
9.15am – 10.30am BST, 20 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour 15 mins
Stream 2
Innovative approaches are required to address the increasing burden of critical illness in low and middle income countries. Over the next decade, the need for critical care is expected to grow due to ageing populations with increasing medical complexity; limited access to primary care; climate change; natural disasters; and conflict. Expert speakers within this session will discuss advances in context-sensitive critical care approaches to meet the needs of vulnerable populations.
Abstracts
9.15am – 10.30am BST, 20 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour 15 mins
Abstracts
Every year, the top five abstracts submitted to the State of the Art meeting are shortlisted and authors given the opportunity to give an oral presentation in the main congress programme. There is a then a round of questions and discussion by a panel of judges following which the winner of the ePosters abstract category is chosen.
This year's top five posters are:
Break
10.30am – 11.15am BST, 20 June 2024 ‐ 45 mins
Break
Stream 1
10.40am – 11.10am BST, 20 June 2024 ‐ 30 mins
Stream 1
Abstracts
11.15am – 12.30pm BST, 20 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour 15 mins
Abstracts
Advanced Practitioner in Critical Care and ICS APCC Professional Advisory Group, Chair
Consultant Intensivist & Anaesthetist and National FUSIC® Lung Lead, UK
Stream 2
11.15am – 12.30pm BST, 20 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour 15 mins
Stream 2
In this session we will discuss the newly proposed ‘Martha’s Rule’, highlighting expected advantages and potential challenges in its adoption.
Henrietta Hughes, England’s first ever Patient Safety Commissioner, is leading the Martha’s Rule oversight group and will provide valuable insight into the project. John Welch, who is the co-lead of the NHS England national Patient Worry & Concern Improvement Collaborative will speak about giving patients and families a voice during critical illness. Natalie Pattison (Chair of National Outreach Forum - NoRF) and Victoria Metaxa (Chair of the Society's Legal and Ethics Group) will join this panel discussion and present data from a pilot site. And Rob Bevan (President of College of Intensive Care Medicine of Australia and New Zealand) will bring the Queensland experience of their equivalent to this rule named Ryan’s Rule.
Lead Nurse Associate Director and ICS Nursing Professional Advisory Group, Chair.
President of College of Intensive Care Medicine of Australia and New Zealand, Australia
Stream 3
11.15am – 12.30pm BST, 20 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour 15 mins
Stream 3
The session will explain and highlight key points about Paediatric to Adult Critical Care Transition, through a young person's story. It will reveal the highs and lows, and the process by which transition has developed within South Yorkshire (the region where Transition was developed and began, eventually leading to the joint ICS / PCCS national guidance). Transition is a multiprofessional process mirrored by the multi-professional nature of the speakers in this session.
The session will cover the emotive topics of the change in consent process, discussions around limits of care, funding and discharge planning. The aim is to allow other units to set the transition process going in their Trusts, learning from the experience of the speakers and the young people involved.
Oli was an amazing young man with Spinal Muscular Atrophy who experienced numerous critical care stays throughout his life from a child to an adult. His journey highlights the challenges that patients, their families and clinical teams face when transitioning from paediatric to adult critical care services. This legacy has helped transform the care provided for other young adults making the same journey.
This session will share Oli`s story, and how it helped Paeds to Adult transition on both a local and national level. The expert speakers and panel will share their learnings and aim to provide a guide on how to implement transition, focusing on best practice to support young people, their families and staff to provide the best care and environment.
Break
12.30pm – 1.30pm BST, 20 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour
Break
Plenary
1.30pm – 1.45pm BST, 20 June 2024 ‐ 15 mins
Plenary
Plenary
1.45pm – 3pm BST, 20 June 2024 ‐ 1 hour 15 mins
Plenary
Our field began not with a whimper but with a bang: will the next major change come through steady change or through another system shock? Join us as we bridge past and future, with Hannah Wunsch taking us from the beginnings of critical care through to her vision of the future, and then being joined by an expert multidisciplinary panel to share their thoughts and hold a lively shared discussion on the future of intensive care over the decades to come. What are the things that will affect what you do in the next 5 years, 10, and more?
1. Hannah Wunsch: ICU: Does it advance in revolutions or evolutions?
2. Quick-fire round:
a. Tim Walsh - Therapeutics/treatment strategies in the next two decades
b. Michaela Jones - What will ICU nursing look like in 2040?
c. Marcus Peck - The future of critical care imaging
d. Sarah Wallace - Reawakening communication and swallowing - in the not too distant future
e. Owen Gustafson - Resuscitation is pointless without Recovery
f. Danni Bear - Futuristic Nutrition.
3. Panel debate chaired by Hannah Wunsch and Ganesh Suntharalingam
Lead Nurse Associate Director and ICS Nursing Professional Advisory Group, Chair.
Advanced Practitioner in Critical Care and ICS APCC Professional Advisory Group, Chair,
Hannah is an Advanced Critical Care Practitioner and A/Professor in Advanced Clinical Practice, University of Nottingham UK.
Hannah specialises in Critical Care Echocardiography and Ultrasound and sits on the committee for Focussed Ultrasound in Intensive Care (FUSIC), taking a lead role in FUSIC Heart. Hannah is an approved supervisor and examiner for multiple accredited ultrasound programmes, including BSE and has over a decade of experience in ultrasound education.
Hannah is a keen clinical researcher and is currently conducting a study into the use of telemedicine to aid echocardiography mentoring on intensive care. Another research interest is characterisation of right ventricular (RV) injury. Hannah is co-chair for PRORVnet, an international RV centric research network and is proud to be an RV defender!
Anaesthetic Trainee ,
Manoj is an Anaesthetic trainee in West Yorkshire. His interests include point of care ultrasound, critical care echocardiography and all things physiology. He set up and is the course director of the Leeds FUSIC course which has been running since 2019. He is passionate about medical education and recent interests and involvements include setting up ORCA (an interactive online resource for radiology education in acute care) as well as becoming an editor at criticalcarenorthampton.co.uk.
Cardiothoracic Anaesthetist and Intensivist, UK
Antonio Rubino is a cardiothoracic anaesthetist and Intensivist at Royal Papworth Hospital in Cambridge. He is clinical lead for Organ Donation for the Eastern Region as part of the National Transplant service. He is Intenisve Care Society's national lead for the focused transoesohpageal echocardiography (fTOE) program. His research interest include critical care ultrasounds, ECMO and cardiothoracic donor organs optimisation.
Consultant Intensivist and Anaesthetist,
Marcus Peck is a consultant in anaesthesia and intensive care medicine at Frimley Park Hospital (Surrey, UK), chair of the Intensive Care Society (ICS)’s Focused Ultrasound for Intensive Care (FUSIC) committee, and author of the OUP textbook 'Focused Intensive Care Ultrasound'. He is a passionate ultrasound trainer and teaches widely. Marcus sits on several national committees, including the ICS Council and British Society of Echocardiography’s Professional Standards Committee, delivering UK ultrasound training and quality assurance. He relishes breaking down organisational barriers, and dreams of the day when bedside ultrasound is normal practise for all frontline clinicians.
Consultant Intensivist and Anaesthetist,
Dr. Jonny Wilkinson (MBChB.MRCP.FRCA.FFICM) is a Consultant in Intensive care medicine and Anaesthesia in Northampton, UK. He trained in Nottingham, where he undertook a fellowship in thoracic anaesthesia. He is the editor in chief of the Oxford Handbook of Thoracic Anaesthesia and founder of www.criticalcarenorthampton.com. When not on Twitter , he is a national and international expert in point of care ultrasound, with specialist interests in the use of handheld devices to assess the critically ill patient. He is a course director for Advanced Trauma Life support and NICE IV fluid lead for his trust, promoting safe fluid prescription and education on fluid physiology. He is a member of the ICS council and the FUSIC committee (Focused Intensive Care Ultrasound). He is faculty for The State of The Art Intensive Care Society meeting, the International Fluid Academy, the Critical Care Symposium and RA-UK. He enjoys speaking / teaching on all that is ultrasound, nationally and Internationally.Consultant in Intensive Care, Acute & General Internal Medicine ,
Prashant is a Consultant in Intensive Care, Acute & General Internal Medicine at William Harvey Hospital (East Kent Hospitals). He is an honorary senior lecturer at Queen Mary University London (QMUL), giving lectures regarding the role of echocardiography in resuscitation and chairing tutorials on diagnostics and imaging modalities in resuscitation. He teaches and lectures at both regional and national ultrasound and echo conferences and courses.
He is member of the national Focused Ultrasound in Intensive Care (FUSIC) committee and is BSE Level 2 accredited in Critical Care Echocardiography. He is a FUSIC & FICE (Focused Intensive Care Echocardiography) supervisor & mentor and runs national FUSIC courses. He is published in research in the use of echo and ultrasound in Intensive Care and Acute Medicine and in the assessment of haemodynamic status using echo.
Prashant was the Chief Investigator (CI) for the national lung ultrasound and echo CORONA study (COre ultRasOund of covid in iNtensive care & Acute medicine) assessing the lung ultrasound features and the incidence of left and right ventricular dysfunction in COVID ICU patients. He is the creator and co-host of Ultra Live, the world’s first live POCUS gameshow at the SOA this year.
Consultant in Intensive Care and Acute Medicine , UK
Jennie is a Consultant in Intensive Care and Acute Medicine in, the sometimes sunny but always beautiful, Cornwall in Southwest England.
She is an avid point of care ultrasonographer and teaches bedside scanning on a regular basis. She was a founding member of three of the major working groups for point-of-care ultrasound training in the UK (FUSIC, FAMUS and CACTUS). She continues to contribute educational material, time and enthusiasm to all three.
She has an interest in enhanced care delivered outside of the critical care setting. She has contributed to recent national guidance from the Society of Acute Medicine and Intensive Care Society helping define how this is best delivered.
She is mum to two young boys, cross-fit enthusiast and occasionally competent gardener.
Consultant Intensivist, Cardiothoracic Anaesthesia, and ECMO,
Dr Rachel Wong is a Consultant at the Royal Papworth Hospital, specialising in Cardiothoracic Anaesthesia, Intensive Care, and ECMO. Rachel holds Level 2 accreditation in EACVI TOE and serves as a mentor for FUSIC and FAMUS across all existing modules. When not instructing in Echocardiography or Ultrasound, Rachel dedicates her time to training and developing roles allied to medicine, including Clinical Scientists and Advanced Practitioners in Critical Care.Consultant Clinical Psychologist ,
Dr Julie Highfield is a Consultant Clinical Psychologist & Lead for Organisational Health in Adult and Paediatric Critical Care, Cardiff. She is the National Project Director for Wellbeing in the Intensive Care Society. She has a long experience of working as a psychologist in medical and health care settings and works closely with staff in their experience of working in healthcare, as well as advising managers on matters of workforce wellbeing. Julie has worked with the British Psychological Society and its Division of Clinical Psychology in Wales. She led the BPS team writing the National Guidance for Staff in the Coronavirus Pandemic.
Julie works with the Welsh Assembly Government in various projects, including as the lead for Critical Care Workforce Task and Finish Group, and Modelling for Rehabilitation for patients post COVID-19, and the Wellbeing Conversation Tool. She has a number of publications and book chapters in the field of critical care, staff wellbeing, and leadership.
Chief Executive, Intensive Care Society
Sandy began her career as a radiographer, which led to her undertaking a PhD in Child Health. Making the decision to move away from a clinical setting, Sandy gained a wealth of experience operating at a senior management level, leading strategy and change programmes for non profit organisations and membership bodies particularly those involved in professional education, training, standards, research and international development. Sandy joined the Society in 2017.Philip Stiles’ principal research area is in the management of people, primarily around the subjects of talent and performance management, and culture. His research takes in all levels of the organisation, from the board through to front-line staff, to gain a rounded view of the key processes and practices. He has worked with many organisations on issues of people management and change management, including the NHS, both within hospitals and with GP surgeries. He has won awards for his research and for his teaching at Cambridge.
Consultant Intensivist and Trauma , UK
Dr Victoria Metaxa is a full-time Critical Care and Major Trauma Consultant, at King’s College Hospital in London. She is a King's College London Honorary Clinical Senior Lecturer, and has a PhD in neurosciences and an MA in Medical Ethics and Palliative Care from Keele University. Her clinical interests include bioethics, end-of-life care, critical care outreach and the management of patients with haematological malignancies. Dr Metaxa is a member of the European Society of Intensive Care (ESICM) Ethics section, and the representative of the section in the e-learning committee. She is the UK National Outreach Forum board Secretary and a member of the Legal and Ethical Advisory Group of the UK Intensive Care Society (ICS).Consultant Intensivist and Anaesthesia, UK
Dr Thearina de Beer MBChB FRCA DICM FFICM LLM (Health Law) RCPathME , is a Consultant in Anaesthetics and ICM including Neuro-ICM at Nottingham University Hospitals. Thearina is currently Divisional Director for the Clinical Support Division. She is a Medical Examiner at NUH and is deputy lead ME for NUH. She is on the ICS – Legal and Ethical Advisory Group. Her special interests are delirium and the impact on long stay patients, legal and ethical issues around critical and neuro-critical care.
Professor of Intensive Care Medicine , UK
Dr Dan Harvey is a Consultant in Intensive Care Medicine at Nottingham University Hospitals, Hon. Professor at the University of Nottingham, and a member of the UK Intensive Care Society Legal & Ethical Advisory Group. Dan has an active research interest as National Lead for Innovation & Research in Organ Donation for NHS Blood and Transplant, and joint Chief Investigator for the SIGNET study, the world's largest interventional study in organ donation.
Partner at Kennedys Law,
Rob leads Kennedys’ healthcare team in Cambridge. He advises NHS Trusts on healthcare law, medical negligence litigation, end of life decisions, judicial reviews, consent and capacity to treatment, inquests and mental health and capacity law. Working with NHS Resolution he manages a team of lawyers working on clinical negligence claims of the utmost severity, including cerebral palsy, neurological injuries, neonatal deaths and psychiatric injuries. He has a specialist practice in medical treatment cases involving declarations to treat and withdrawal of treatment and lectures on these topics. He is legal advisor to the Intensive Care Society’s LEAG and to Thrive LDN, a mental health taskforce. He sits on the Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Trust clinical ethics advisory group. During the pandemic, Rob actively advised the ICS and the National Executive Critical Care Committee. Rob’s recent high profile cases include: AH v Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (2021) – obtaining a declaration to withdraw ventilation from a 56 year old, described as “the most complex COVID patient in the world” and Tafida Raqeeb v Barts Health NHS Trust and others (2019) – complex Judicial Review and treatment case concerning withdrawal of life sustaining treatment for 5 year old Muslim child.
Consultant Psychiatrist in Eating disorders ,
Dr ACM is a consultant psychiatrist in eating disorders at Addenbrooke’s hospital in Cambridge. She is a trained child psychiatrist and neurodevelopmental specialist who now works in an adult eating disorders service with a large student population. Dr ACM is the head of school for psychiatry in the East of England and the vice chair of the Eastern Division of the Royal College of Psychiatrists. Her research interest is in compulsive behaviour.
Consultant Physician in Acute medicine,
Zoë Fritz is a Wellcome fellow in Society and Ethics, and a Consultant Physician in Acute medicine at Cambridge University Hospital. Her research is focused on identifying areas of clinical practice that raise ethical questions and applying rigorous empirical and ethical analysis to explore the issues and find effective solutions. Examples of her work include developing and assessing a new approach to Resuscitation decisions (www.respectprocess.org.uk - she chairs the ReSPECT subcommittee for RCUK); researching how clinicians make decisions to refer and admit patients to ICU; working with colleagues in the faculty of philosophy on the relationship between trust, questioning and the issue of “Too Much Medicine’; and considering the legal, ethical and empirical consequences of communicating uncertainty in diagnosis.
Patient Advocate,
Rebecca (37) was diagnosed with stage 3 bowel cancer at the age of 30.
She underwent surgery leaving her with a permanent ileostomy.
Following her first chemotherapy treatment she suffered a series of four cardiac arrests.
Rebecca used her enjoyment of sport to help her in her recovery; completing her first ever triathlon a year after her surgery (10 months after her ICU stay), and ran her first ever half marathon sixteen months after ICU. (After which she was interviewed for ITV national news).
After her initial recovery, Rebecca has got a DNACPR, Advanced Directive and ReSPECT form. She is passionate about talking about end-of-life planning, and was on a Radio 4 programme ‘Do Not Resuscitate’. She is keen to show that it isn’t a negative to complete such documents, while living life to the max.
She is keen to share her experience of being a patient, and a young woman with a stoma, to help others going through similar journeys.
Consultant Intensivist & Anaesthetist and National FUSIC® Lung Lead, UK
Justin Kirk-Bayley is a Consultant Intensivist & Anaesthetist at Royal Surrey NHS Trust in Guildford, UK where he has been Clinical Lead for ICU, and is now Deputy Medical Director. His clinical passion is for pragmatic delivery of point of care ultrasound, having run a training fellowship for over a decade and being a part of the ICS’s FUSIC committee. He has published and teaches ultrasound around the world. As his Trust’s Professional Director for Therapeutics, he is committed to medication safety and optimisation, lecturing internationally about improvement in medication process and has helped found the Turning the Tide group to improve the UK’s use of intravenous fluids. (@Turningthe_Tide)
Cardiothoracic Anaesthetist and Intensivist, UK
Antonio Rubino is a cardiothoracic anaesthetist and Intensivist at Royal Papworth Hospital in Cambridge. He is clinical lead for Organ Donation for the Eastern Region as part of the National Transplant service. He is Intenisve Care Society's national lead for the focused transoesohpageal echocardiography (fTOE) program. His research interest include critical care ultrasounds, ECMO and cardiothoracic donor organs optimisation.
Advanced Practitioner in Critical Care and ICS APCC Professional Advisory Group, Chair,
Hannah is an Advanced Critical Care Practitioner and A/Professor in Advanced Clinical Practice, University of Nottingham UK.
Hannah specialises in Critical Care Echocardiography and Ultrasound and sits on the committee for Focussed Ultrasound in Intensive Care (FUSIC), taking a lead role in FUSIC Heart. Hannah is an approved supervisor and examiner for multiple accredited ultrasound programmes, including BSE and has over a decade of experience in ultrasound education.
Hannah is a keen clinical researcher and is currently conducting a study into the use of telemedicine to aid echocardiography mentoring on intensive care. Another research interest is characterisation of right ventricular (RV) injury. Hannah is co-chair for PRORVnet, an international RV centric research network and is proud to be an RV defender!
Consultant Intensivist ,
Ashley Miller is an Intensivist at Shrewsbury and Telford Hospitals. His specialist area of interest is Intensive Care ultrasonography. The 1st person to become BSE accredited in Critical Care Echocardiography, he is a BSE committee member and examiner. He has co-authored guidelines for the BSE on assessing fluid responsiveness with echocardiography. He is an elected ICS council member and co-chair of the Focussed Ultrasound in Intensive Care (FUSIC) committee where he has helped introduce a modular curriculum and accreditation pathway for Intensive Care ultrasonography. He is a speaker on ultrasound at international conferences and teaches on ultrasound courses around the country. He is a published author on ultrasound and is co-editing a forthcoming textbook on critical care ultrasound.Consultant Intensivist and Anaesthetist,
Dr. Jonny Wilkinson (MBChB.MRCP.FRCA.FFICM) is a Consultant in Intensive care medicine and Anaesthesia in Northampton, UK. He trained in Nottingham, where he undertook a fellowship in thoracic anaesthesia. He is the editor in chief of the Oxford Handbook of Thoracic Anaesthesia and founder of www.criticalcarenorthampton.com. When not on Twitter , he is a national and international expert in point of care ultrasound, with specialist interests in the use of handheld devices to assess the critically ill patient. He is a course director for Advanced Trauma Life support and NICE IV fluid lead for his trust, promoting safe fluid prescription and education on fluid physiology. He is a member of the ICS council and the FUSIC committee (Focused Intensive Care Ultrasound). He is faculty for The State of The Art Intensive Care Society meeting, the International Fluid Academy, the Critical Care Symposium and RA-UK. He enjoys speaking / teaching on all that is ultrasound, nationally and Internationally.Consultant Intensivist and Anaesthetist,
Marcus Peck is a consultant in anaesthesia and intensive care medicine at Frimley Park Hospital (Surrey, UK), chair of the Intensive Care Society (ICS)’s Focused Ultrasound for Intensive Care (FUSIC) committee, and author of the OUP textbook 'Focused Intensive Care Ultrasound'. He is a passionate ultrasound trainer and teaches widely. Marcus sits on several national committees, including the ICS Council and British Society of Echocardiography’s Professional Standards Committee, delivering UK ultrasound training and quality assurance. He relishes breaking down organisational barriers, and dreams of the day when bedside ultrasound is normal practise for all frontline clinicians.
Consultant in Intensive Care, Acute & General Internal Medicine ,
Prashant is a Consultant in Intensive Care, Acute & General Internal Medicine at William Harvey Hospital (East Kent Hospitals). He is an honorary senior lecturer at Queen Mary University London (QMUL), giving lectures regarding the role of echocardiography in resuscitation and chairing tutorials on diagnostics and imaging modalities in resuscitation. He teaches and lectures at both regional and national ultrasound and echo conferences and courses.
He is member of the national Focused Ultrasound in Intensive Care (FUSIC) committee and is BSE Level 2 accredited in Critical Care Echocardiography. He is a FUSIC & FICE (Focused Intensive Care Echocardiography) supervisor & mentor and runs national FUSIC courses. He is published in research in the use of echo and ultrasound in Intensive Care and Acute Medicine and in the assessment of haemodynamic status using echo.
Prashant was the Chief Investigator (CI) for the national lung ultrasound and echo CORONA study (COre ultRasOund of covid in iNtensive care & Acute medicine) assessing the lung ultrasound features and the incidence of left and right ventricular dysfunction in COVID ICU patients. He is the creator and co-host of Ultra Live, the world’s first live POCUS gameshow at the SOA this year.
Consultant in Intensive Care and Acute Medicine , UK
Jennie is a Consultant in Intensive Care and Acute Medicine in, the sometimes sunny but always beautiful, Cornwall in Southwest England.
She is an avid point of care ultrasonographer and teaches bedside scanning on a regular basis. She was a founding member of three of the major working groups for point-of-care ultrasound training in the UK (FUSIC, FAMUS and CACTUS). She continues to contribute educational material, time and enthusiasm to all three.
She has an interest in enhanced care delivered outside of the critical care setting. She has contributed to recent national guidance from the Society of Acute Medicine and Intensive Care Society helping define how this is best delivered.
She is mum to two young boys, cross-fit enthusiast and occasionally competent gardener.
ICS President and Consultant Intensivist and Anaesthetist,
Steve Mathieu is the President of the Intensive Care Society.
He is a Consultant in Critical Care at Portsmouth Hospitals University NHS Trust and the Divisional Director for Clinical Delivery (Critical Care, Anaesthetics, Theatres, Radiology, Pharmacy, Therapies, Blood Sciences and Pathology). He was previously the Clinical Director of Critical Care when the ICU was rated outstanding in all domains by the CQC.
His previous roles for the Society include Congress Director for State of the Art (SOA), Honorary Treasurer and Council Member.
He has interests in patient and staff experience, workforce and operational strategy as well as medical education and information technology. He is a co-founder and senior editor for The Bottom Line and set up and maintains the Portsmouth ICU website.
Twitter: @stevemathieu75
Chief Executive, Intensive Care Society
Sandy began her career as a radiographer, which led to her undertaking a PhD in Child Health. Making the decision to move away from a clinical setting, Sandy gained a wealth of experience operating at a senior management level, leading strategy and change programmes for non profit organisations and membership bodies particularly those involved in professional education, training, standards, research and international development. Sandy joined the Society in 2017.SOA Programme Director and Consultant Intensivist,
PJ was born in Iran and moved to the UK when he was 11 years old. He studied medicine at Guy’s and St. Thomas’ (UMDS) and after initially training to be a surgeon, he switched to anaesthesia and critical care medicine training in East London. He did his PhD with Mervyn Singer at UCL on mitochondrial dysfunction in sepsis and multiorgan failure before starting his consultant post at the Royal London Hospital in Whitechapel, London. His interests are metabolic response in critical illness and trauma. His current main focus is his passion for teaching: he runs the Critical Care MSc at Queen Mary University London and is a senior lecturer in the Critical Care and Perioperative Medicine Research Group at QMUL. He is also one of the associate editors of BJA Education. He is the current programme director of SOA and is very excited to bring education, research and debate to this multi-professional meeting, as well as great social events in the evenings (another one of his passions!).
Professor of Intensive Care Medicine ,
Prof Hugh Montgomery obtained a first-class degree in cardiorespiratory physiology/neuropharmacology before graduating from the Middlesex Hospital Medical school in 1987. He has since gained accreditation in general internal medicine, cardiology and intensive care medicine, and practices as a consultant in intensive care at the Whittington hospital in North London.Director of Research and Consultant in Neurocritical Care, Cambridge, UK
David Menon is Professor and Lead of the Perioperative, Acute, Critical Care and Emergency(PACE) Section in the Department of Medicine, and Consultant in Neurocritical Care, at the University of Cambridge. He is Principal Investigator at the Wolfson Brain Imaging Centre and at the John van Geest Centre for Brain Repair. He is Chair of the European Brain Trauma Consortium and serves on the Executive Committee of the International Neuro Trauma Society. He serves as Vice-Coordinator CENTER-TBI, a €30 million FP7 European multi-centre study of precision medicine and comparative effectiveness research in traumatic brain injury, as Joint Director of the Cambridge NIHR Global Health Research Group on Neurotrauma, and Coordinator of the International Traumatic Brain Injury Research (InTBIR) initiative. He was appointed as Emeritus Senior Investigator by the National Institute for Health Research (UK) in 2018. He leads the Immunology & Biomarkers Work Group in the UK COVID-CNS study, the Imaging Work Group for the GCS-COVID study of the Neuro Critical Care Society, and is a PI on the Immunoglobulin arm of REMAP-CAP. He has over 500 publications in peer reviewed journals, with a ‘h’ index of 123 (Google Scholar) and is listed as a “Highly Cited Researcher” by Clarivate. He has been Principal or Co-Investigator on grants over $50 million over the last 20 years, and has contributed to major textbooks and international guidelines. He is joint lead author on two Commissioned Issues of the Lancet Neurology on Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI; released at the European Parliament in 2017, and at the CENTER-TBI meeting in 2022). He was Executive Editor of the Report of the UK All Party Parliamentary Group on Acquired Brain Injury.
.
Professor of Cognitive and Computational Neuroscience , UK
Anil Seth is a neuroscientist, author, and public speaker who has pioneered research into the brain basis of consciousness for more than twenty-five years. He is Professor of Cognitive and Computational Neuroscience and Director of the Centre for Consciousness Science at the University of Sussex, Co-Director of the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research Program on Brain, Mind and Consciousness, a European Research Council Advanced Investigator, and Editor-in-Chief of the academic journal Neuroscience of Consciousness. He has published more than 200 research papers and has been recognized by Web of Science, over several years, as being in the top 0.1% of researchers worldwide. A former Wellcome Trust Engagement Fellow, in 2023 he was awarded the Royal Society Michael Faraday Prize for his services to public outreach. His two TED talks have been viewed more than fourteen million times, he has appeared in several films, and he has written for Aeon, The Guardian, Granta, New Scientist, and Scientific American, and he is lead scientist on the Dreamachine project. Prospect Magazine listed him as one of the Top 25 global thinkers for 2024. His book Being You: A New Science of Consciousness was an instant Sunday Times Bestseller and a 2021 Book of the Year for The Economist, The New Statesman, Bloomberg Business, The Guardian, The Financial Times and elsewhere.
Director of Artificial Intelligence for NHSX , UK
Dr Indra Joshi has a unique portfolio with experience stretching across data/AI strategy and implementation. A world-leading expert in digital health and AI technologies, she worked across the global health and AI portfolio of Palantir Technologies to enable better use of data to impact health and care. In 2020 she created the NHS AI Lab, a £250m investment leading to the development and deployment of over 100 AI technologies into UK health and care, whilst determining the right ethical guidance and regulations to protect patients.
She is a Founding Member of One HealthTech – a network which campaigns for the need and importance of better inclusion of all backgrounds, skillsets and disciplines in health technology. Alongside she is an associate editor for BMJ Leader, a Trustee for the Wellbeing of Women and Academies Enterprise Trust, a former member of the WHO digital health expert group, and most importantly a mum to two wonderful little munchkins.
Founder of SchoolDash , UK
Timo Hannay is the founder of SchoolDash (https://www.schooldash.com/), an education data analytics and technology firm. He is also a non-executive director of Sage Publishing, Educate Ventures and Arden University, and an advisor to several charities. In 2023, he convened the AI in Education Summit in London (https://www.edsummit.ai/). Timo was previously the founding managing director of Digital Science and before that variously ran the online business of Nature Publishing Group, worked as a consultant at McKinsey & Company, wrote for The Economist, and investigated brain physiology at the University of Oxford and Waseda University in Tokyo. He has a lifelong interest in brains, computers and learning of all kinds.
Tech Philosopher, UK
Dr Tom Chatfield is a tech philosopher, advisor and author of a dozen books exploring digital culture, published in over thirty languages. The most recent, Wise Animals, was published by Picador in February 2024. He's interested in what it means to use technology well. He writes, speaks and consults internationally, with a special interest in critical thinking, Artificial Intelligence and tech ethics.
He is currently Chair at the Authors' Licensing and Collecting Society; Chair of the Copyright Licensing Agency; a member of the British Library Advisory Council; and an Associate at the interdisciplinary think-tank Perspectiva. His recent work around future skills and technology includes designing and presenting the Economist's new critical thinking and Artificial Intelligence business courses.
Tom’s bestselling critical thinking textbooks for SAGE Publishing are used at companies, universities and institutions across the world. He has developed award-winning online courses for universities and businesses; is a past guest faculty member at the Said Business School, Oxford, for its Strategic Leadership Programme; and works as a consultant and advisor with some of the world’s leading companies.
Director of Science Engagement at The Royal Institution, UK
Dr Daniel Glaser is director of science engagement at the Royal Institution. He was Founding Director of Science Gallery London and before that Head of Engaging Science at Wellcome Trust. He had a weekly column and podcast series for the Guardian. He was the first scientist to judge for the Booker Prize and Scientist in Residence at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London. He used fMRI to examine how experience, prejudice and expectation alter the way we see the world. He studied maths and then English literature at Cambridge, doing a masters in machine learning at Sussex.
Professor of Consciousness and Cognition, Ireland
Lorina Naci is Associate Professor and leader of “Consciousness and Cognition” group at the School of Psychology, at Trinity College Institute of Neuroscience and Global Brain Health Institute, Trinity College Dublin: www.lorinanaci.org. She has made fundamental contributions to the understanding of how consciousness emerges from the healthy brain, and the detection of conscious awareness in some brain-injured patients, who appear to be in a vegetative state. Her work has enabled individuals, who had been unresponsive for several years to communicate their thoughts to the outside world. Her recent work focuses on developing novel biomarkers of healthy and disordered cognition in brain-injured and aging populations. Concurrently, she explores the medico–ethical and societal implications of these applications: https://www.tcd.ie/Neuroscience/Ethics/.
A second focus of her work is the investigation of early biomarkers of Alzheimer’s disease by combining neuroimaging, clinical, neuropsychological and physiological assessments. In the face of a global dementia pandemic, it is extremely important to understand the earliest cognitive/functional changes, and their underlying pathophysiologic mechanisms. This can lead to earlier diagnoses, potential targets for treatment, and better understanding of the disease itself. This work is carried out in collaboration with colleagues from Edinburgh, Cambridge and Oxford Universities (UK), within the PREVENT consortium.
Professor Naci’s work is routinely featured in academic textbooks and the international media. In 2017, she received the L’Oréal – UNESCO International Rising Talent Award, and in 2023 became a Fellow of Trinity College Dublin. Professor Naci serves as a member of the Governing Board of the Global Brain Health Institute, at Trinity College Dublin and University of California San Francisco, USA, and Council member of ‘Neuroscience Ireland’, Ireland’s national neuroscience society. She is funded by the Irish Research Council, and Enterprise Ireland, the Alzheimer’s Society of the UK, the Wellcome Trust, etc.
Professor of Neurology at the UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology and Honorary Consultant Neurologist at the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, Queen Square
Parashkev Nachev leads a multi-disciplinary research group with 15 years’ experience in the development and application of complex modelling in neurology and neuroscience, spanning representational, predictive, and prescriptive tasks, with scientific, clinical, and operational objectives. The group has been focused over the past five years on building deep generative models of large-scale multimodal volume imaging data operable in real-world clinical environments.
Professor of Philosophy, UK
Dr Philip Goff is Professor of Philosophy at Durham University. His research focuses on consciousness and the ultimate nature of reality. Goff is best known for defending panpsychism, the view that consciousness pervades the universe and is a fundamental feature of it. Goff’s books include Why? The Purpose of the Universe, Galileo’s Error: Foundations for a New Science of Consciousness, Consciousness and Fundamental Reality, and Is Consciousness Everywhere? Essays on Panpsychism. Goff has published many academic articles as well as writing extensively for newspapers and magazines, including Scientific American, Wall Street Journal, The Guardian, Aeon, and the Times Literary Supplement.
Website: https://philipgoffphilosophy.com/
Podcast: https://www.youtube.com/@MindChat
Social Media: https://twitter.com/Philip_Goff
Medical Director and Director of Education and Standards, GMC
Professor Colin Melville trained in anaesthesia and emergency medicine and became the first substantive Consultant in Emergency and Intensive Care Medicine in Hull in 1996. His work in medical education and leadership developed soon after in 1997, and included roles such as Clinical Director, Medical Director, and Director of Medical Education. Colin was responsible for the local introduction of foundation training in 2005, becoming Foundation School Director shortly afterwards. He also oversaw the delivery of modernising medical careers for Hull and East Yorkshire and helped to develop the final year curriculum for the first cohort of Hull York Medical School (HYMS) students in 2007.
Following a brief period as Interim Undergraduate Dean for HYMS in 2011, Colin took up a full time clinical academic post in 2012 as Head of MBChB and then Head of Medical Education at Warwick Medical School before moving to Lancaster University in 2015 as Head of Lancaster Medical School. Throughout this period Colin maintained his clinical practise as Consultant in Intensive Care Medicine.
In January 2017 Colin took up his role as Director of Education and Standards at the GMC where, as a member of the executive, he has made significant contributions to the work of the GMC; overseeing the launch of several key documents in support of postgraduate medical education, the review of Outcomes for Graduates and work to progress the development and delivery of a Medical Licensing Assessment as a common threshold for entry to the UK medical register.
In 2020 he led the GMC education and ethical standards response to COVID. This included overseeing derogations to ensure progression through postgraduate training was uninterrupted without reducing the GMC standards or impact on patient safety, ensuring the introduction of FiY1 in the 2020 graduating cohort would safely support the NHS response to the first wave of COVID in Spring 2020, and advice for the profession on wide ranging ethical issues. This has formed the basis of ongoing work to make sure the positive benefits are carried forward in changes to the way medical education is structured and delivered, and with a review of its core professional guidance, Good medical Practice.
In 2018, Colin was made an Honorary Fellow of the Academy of Medical Educators, was appointed Honorary Professor of Medical Education at the University of Manchester and expanded his leadership role in the GMC becoming Medical Director alongside his role as Director of Education and Standards. In 2022 he was appointed Visiting Professor at Anglia Ruskin University.
He was part of the collaboration that established the NHS Clinical Entrepreneurs Programme in England and remains an active part of the programme. He also provides mentoring and coaching to early career doctors and other professionals to support and encourage the next generation of potential medical leaders. And continues to maintain a portfolio of educational research, co-authoring several papers on new approaches to written assessment.
You can find Colin on X (@drcolinm) where he posts and shares information on topics related to medical education and the regulatory work of the GMC, but is also known to share pictures of his garden!!
Consultant Intensivist and Anaesthetist, UK
Stephen is a Consultant in Intensive Care & Deputy Medical Director at Royal Papworth Hospital Cambridge. His clinical, education and research interests lie in cardiothoracic intensive care, patient safety and quality improvement. Stephen’s management responsibilities include Quality & Safety, Estates & Facilities and Critical Care. He is also President of the Intensive Care Society (ICS) and Chair of the Medusa Injectable Medicines Guide Advisory Board. Previously Stephen was Clinical Lead of the Eastern Academic Health Science Network (EAHSN) Patient Safety Collaborative, Clinical Lead for Postgraduate Leadership Development at Cambridge University Health Partners and Member of the East of England Clinical Senate Council.Specialty Doctor and and ICS Specialty Doctor Professional Advisory Group Chair,
Dr Michelle Hatch
Michelle is an SAS Specialty Doctor currently working in Intensive Care Medicine in North Wales.
Michelle qualified in Medicine in Edinburgh in 1989. She took nearly 20 years out of medical practice before returning in 2014. Michelle is the SAS Tutor for Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board and is the current chair of the Intensive Care Society’s SAS Professional Advisory Group. She is a passionate advocate for the SAS role and for women in medicine.
Intensive Care Trainee and Trainee Doctor Professional Advisory Group Chair,
Dr Bakare is currently an Advanced Trainee in Intensive Care Medicine and Anaesthesia in Northwest London. She graduated with Honours from the University of Bristol and commenced her career in the West Country before pursuing Specialty Training in Northwest London. As an elected member of the Trainee Advisory Group of the Intensive Care Society and leverages her expertise to contribute actively to the society's Equality, Diversity, and Inclusion (EDI) Working Group. She also holds the additional responsibility of serving as the EDI lead on the Editorial Board for GPCISv3.
Dr Bakare is deeply passionate about advancing Equity in Healthcare and Medical Education, with clinical interests spanning Major General Surgery and Transfer Medicine.
Clinical Reader in Critical Care Nephrology, Queen Mary University of London and Consultant Intensivist & Nephrologist, Barts Health NHS Trust,
Dr Prowle is Clinical reader in Critical Care Nephrology in the Critical Care and Perioperative Medicine Research Group at William Harvey Research Institute, Queen Mary University of London and is an Honorary Consultant Physician in Intensive Care Medicine and Renal Medicine at the Royal London Hospital, Barts Health NHS Trust.
Dr Prowle graduated with distinction in medicine from the University of Cambridge in 1999 and undertook Doctoral Research under the supervision of Prof Rinaldo Bellomo (the most published and highly cited researcher in the history of Australian Medicine) in Melbourne, Australia leading to the award of his MD research doctorate in 2012.
His research interests include the pathogenesis, diagnosis and outcomes of Acute Kidney Injury, Renal replacement Therapy in the ICU the Epidemiology of Critical Illness and its recovery and the impact of multi-morbidity of high risk surgical and ICU outcomes. Since 2009 he has co-authored over 160 peer-reviewed publications and 30 book chapters with an H-index of 51 (GS).
He is an active senior contributor to national and international collaborations in critical care nephrology including the Acute Disease Quality Initiative (ADQI), Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes AKI Group and the UK Kidney research Consortium Clinical Studies Group in AKI (as co-chair).
Consultant Intensivist,
Daniel studied human medicine in Zurich (Switzerland) and is board certified in Internal Medicine and Critical Care. After a research fellowship in London (Bloomsbury Institute of Intensive Care Medicine, Prof. Mervyn Singer), he started to work as a consultant at the University Hospital Zurich. He completed his habilitation in 2023 and is engaged in diverse research projects including extracorporeal devices, sepsis and ARDS.Consultant in Sleep and Ventilation, Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust
Dr Mandal qualified in medicine at Guy’s, King’s and St Thomas’ medical school, following graduation she specialised in respiratory medicine. Having undertaken a period of research, Dr Mandal received a PhD from King’s College London, for her work in the investigation and management of ventilatory failure.
Dr Mandal presents at international conferences and has published in several internationally peer reviewed journals, demonstrating the use of novel diagnostic techniques in ventilatory failure and has published widely within this field. She also published clinical data on the post acute management of COVID-19. She is the lead Consultant Physician in Sleep and Ventilation at the Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust, focussing on the management of sleep disordered breathing, the service covers a large geographical area treating range of patients with often complex needs including those with progressive neurological disorders and ventilatory failure.
Clinical director of critical care at King's College Hospital,
Tom Best is clinical director of critical care at King's College Hospital and has an interest in the medical built environment and it's clinical impact.
He has lead on major projects including several critical care refurbishments and conversions as well as a CT scanner built to enable rapid diagnosis and treatment for major trauma patients. This resulted in the first direct to CT, from pre hospital, pathway.
Over the last 10 years he has lead on design and delivery of the King’s Critical Care Centre - the largest project of its kind in Europe. This major collaboration is due to complete with the ground breaking out door intensive care rehab roof garden early 2025.
In 2020 Tom received and MBE for services to critical care.
Executive Chairman, Brandon Medical
Graeme graduated from the University of Nottingham. He is a Chartered Engineer with post-graduate degrees in Manufacturing Engineering and Manufacturing Management from both Nottingham and Cranfield Universities.
Previous roles included Manufacturing Engineer at Ford Motor Company, Manufacturing Development Manager at Premier Farnell PLC and Deputy Managing Director of Farnell Cayson Ltd.
Today, Graeme is Executive Chairman of Brandon Medical and Co-Owner with his brother Adrian. He also serves as a Director of Medilink North of England, a professional association dedicated to growing the Healthcare Technology sector and is Chairman of the Hospital Turnkey Suppliers Association. Graeme was awarded “Director of the Year” by the Institute of Directors in 2010 for his role in the development of Brandon Medical into a well-respected medical technology business.
Consultant Intensivist ,
Sara graduated from Queen’s University, then moved to the North East of England for her postgraduate training. She was elected onto the Trainee Professional Advisory Group in 2019. She has CCT’d in Intensive Care Medicine and Anaesthesia in April this year and has recently taken up a consultant post at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Gateshead.C
Sara has an interest in medical education and multi-disciplinary learning and sits on the ICS Education Subcommittee. Locally, she sits on the Anaesthesia Learning in the North East (A-LiNE) Executive and is on the faculty for a number of exam preparation courses. Clinically Sara has interests in care of the critically ill obstetric patient and transfer medicineConsultant in ICM & Anaesthesia, Newcastle Training Programme Director for Intensive Care, and ACCS within the Northern School of Anaesthesia & Intensive Care Medicine,
No bio provided
Consultant in Anaesthesia and ICM,
Cathy is a consultant in anaesthesia and critical care in the North East. Primarily she works in a DGH (Darlington Memorial) with sessions every four weeks in a tertiary critical care unit (James Cook University Hospital, Middlesbrough). Her specialist interest is sustainable healthcare and she is the clinical lead for sustainability at County Durham and Darlington NHS Foundation Trust.
Specialist Anaesthetist and Intensivist , Darlington Memorial Hospital
Katherine is a Specialist Anaesthetist and Intensivist at Darlington Memorial Hospital. She trained as a mentor with NEMO (the North East Mentoring Organisation) in 2021, and has mentored people from various specialties and backgrounds across the U.K. through NEMO.
A mentoring session convinced Katherine to push herself for promotion, and as a result she was the first Specialist Anaesthetist/Intensivist to be appointed in her Trust.
When not working or mothering, Katherine can often be found outdoors trail-running or spending time in cold water, and wholeheartedly recommends mentoring as a tool for helping to get your own ducks in a row.
Consultant in Acute Medicine and ICM,
Kay is a Dual consultant in Acute Medicine and Critical care in the Northern Deanery. She trained less than full time and started as a less than full time consultant in a DGH. Kay has since taken on more job roles including Acute Medicine Ultrasound lead after qualifying to be a FAMUS supervisor and she is co-research lead for the critical care and soon to be a Principal Investigator for the first time. She has also recently been appointed as her Trust’s flexible working champion.
Consultant in Anaesthesia & ICM,
Louise is a Consultant in Intensive Care Medicine and Anaesthesia at the Royal Victoria Infirmary in Newcastle upon Tyne. She trained as a mentor using the Egan mentoring model in 2015 after a mentoring session helped her make the most of the opportunities available post FRCA. Shortly after, she co-founded and now leads NEMO (the North East Mentoring Organisation) which promotes and coordinates mentoring within the Northern Region to all regardless of role and specialty. Louise has facilitated on mentoring courses throughout the UK and has offered taster mentoring sessions at Anaesthesia and Urology conferences. Passionate about mentoring, she recommends just giving it a go!
Consultant Intensivist , UK
Dr Zudin Puthucheary is a Clinical Senior Lecturer in Intensive Care Medicine at the William Harvey Institute, Queen Mary, University of London, and a Consultant at the Royal London Hospital Adult Intensive Care Unit. He graduated from Nottingham University in 1997, and moved to London post MRCP in 2000. Following a 3-year stint in Sydney, he started his Respiratory training in Bristol, before completing his critical care training in London. He worked as a Respiratory and Critical Care Consultant at National University Hospital Singapore before returning to the UK.
His research focusses on acquired functional disability, and the use of metabolic, nutritional and exercise interventions to prevent and treat muscle wasting, and has published over 100 papers with a H index of 39. Zudin is a nationally elected Council member of the Intensive Care Society (UK). He was the inaugural chair of the UK National Post-Intensive Care Rehabilitation Collaborative, a multi-professional cross-disciplinary group focussing on rehabilitation and restitution of critical illness survivors. His work on acute muscle wasting has won awards from the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine , European Society of Anesthesia, the British Thoracic Society, the Intensive Care Society, The American Society of Enteral and Parenteral Nutrition and Zudin was named a Global Rising Star by the Australia and New Zealand Intensive Care Society.
He chairs the UK National Post-Intensive Care Rehabilitation Collaborative, a multi-professional cross-disciplinary group focussing on rehabilitation and restitution of critical illness survivors.
:
@Zudin_P
Professor of Human & Applied Physiology , UK
Stephen Harridge obtained his PhD from the University of Birmingham in after which he undertook post-doctoral research in Scandinavia, initially at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm and then at the Copenhagen Muscle Research Centre. On return to the UK, he held academic positions at the Royal Free Hospital School of Medicine and in the Department of Physiology at University College London, where he was also a Wellcome Trust Research Fellow.
He was appointed Professor of Human & Applied Physiology at King’s College in 2005 and is head of the Centre for Human and Applied Physiological Sciences. He is also co-Director of Ageing Research at King’s (ARK). He was Editor-in-Chief of the Scandinavian Journal of Medicine and Science in Sports from 2012 - 2023.
His research is multi-disciplinary, using single cell through to whole-body exercise physiology approaches. This has primarily been with the aim of increasing understanding of the biology of human skeletal muscle regarding its function and adaptability. A particular focus has been on healthy human ageing, but his research also encompasses the effects of critical illness and the aerospace environment.
Consultant Geriatrician, UK
Carly is a Consultant Geriatrician at Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust, and a Clinical Senior Lecturer at King's College London having completed her Higher Specialist Training in Birmingham. During training, she completed a PhD at the University of Birmingham on the subject of acute sarcopenia. She also co-founded the Geriatric Medicine Research Collaborative and was the previous Chair of the BGS Trainees Council. She now works clinically in Geriatric-Oncology Liaison, and acute "front door" frailty. She is the Chief Investigator for the FORCE:SEE Study and a member of the European Academy for Medicine of Ageing, following completion of this course in 2023.
ICS Director of Research and Professor of Critical Care and Epidemiology,
Nazir is a Professor of Critical Care and Epidemiology and one of the Intensive Care Society's Directors of Research. Nazir’s programme of research focuses on health services research and health care quality improvement for acutely ill patients. His research aims to directly improve the quality of care for patients before, during and after an episode of acute or critical illness through rigorously conducted research and engagement with key stakeholders. He has a particular research interest in epidemiological methods and using linked 'big' data, multimorbidity and end-of-life care in acute and critical care settings.
His current programme of work includes NIHR-funded work to apply artificial intelligence (AI) methods in the context of multimorbidity (AIM-CISC) in which he co-leads work to develop AI tools to reduce adverse events. Furthermore, he leads Innovate UK funded work to improve multimorbidity recognition in emergency care settings using data analytics.
:
@ICULone
Consultant Perioperative Geriatrician, UK
Dr Nia Humphry is a Consultant Perioperative Geriatrician, starting the POPS service in Cardiff and Vale University Health Board in 2020. She took on the position of Deputy Chair of the BGS POPS SIG in April 2023 and looks forward to contributing towards the development of POPS services nationally, as well as locally in South Wales.
Alongside clinical work, Nia is a Senior Clinical Lecturer at Cardiff University, delivering components of the MSc in Clinical Geriatrics and supervising students completing postgraduate studies. She has a research interest in the impacts of sarcopenia and nutritional status on older patients undergoing surgery and was awarded a BGS Specialist Registrar Start-Up Grant in 2016.
Anaesthetics and intensive care medicine trainee ,
Adam is an anaesthetics and intensive care medicine trainee in the West Midlands. He is currently an NIHR Doctoral Research Fellow at the University of Warwick, and his PhD is looking at health inequalities in resuscitation. His clinical and research work focuses on care of the critically ill patient, from their initial prehospital treatment through to post-resuscitation and critical care management. Adam is the TRIC network secretary.Consultant Intensivist ,
I am a consultant in intensive care and a member of the legal and ethics group of the intensive care society having previously been a council member of the ICS.
I am interested in how we make decisions in respect to caring for patients in intensive care in particular appropriateness of medical interventions and futility. I have led a number of legal and ethical seminars on this subject and written a couple of papers bringing together lawyers and clinicians to address complex real life clinical situations that frequent intensive care.
I am also clinical director for research within Somerset Foundation Trust which is now one of the largest hospital trusts in England and oversee development of their research programme.
I live on a small holding in Somerset and keep bees which are plagued by wasps in the summer who steal their honey and kill them in the process. I also host badgers and foxes. They have few obvious morals when it comes to survival and indeed, I no longer keep chickens or ducks as the badgers and foxes will inevitably eat them. For animals and insects’ life is a game of survival driven by an overwhelming desire for food….
Intensive care is calm, controlled, and ethical in comparison!
Consultant Psychiatrist in Eating disorders ,
Dr ACM is a consultant psychiatrist in eating disorders at Addenbrooke’s hospital in Cambridge. She is a trained child psychiatrist and neurodevelopmental specialist who now works in an adult eating disorders service with a large student population. Dr ACM is the head of school for psychiatry in the East of England and the vice chair of the Eastern Division of the Royal College of Psychiatrists. Her research interest is in compulsive behaviour.
Partner at Kennedys Law,
Rob leads Kennedys’ healthcare team in Cambridge. He advises NHS Trusts on healthcare law, medical negligence litigation, end of life decisions, judicial reviews, consent and capacity to treatment, inquests and mental health and capacity law. Working with NHS Resolution he manages a team of lawyers working on clinical negligence claims of the utmost severity, including cerebral palsy, neurological injuries, neonatal deaths and psychiatric injuries. He has a specialist practice in medical treatment cases involving declarations to treat and withdrawal of treatment and lectures on these topics. He is legal advisor to the Intensive Care Society’s LEAG and to Thrive LDN, a mental health taskforce. He sits on the Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Trust clinical ethics advisory group. During the pandemic, Rob actively advised the ICS and the National Executive Critical Care Committee. Rob’s recent high profile cases include: AH v Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (2021) – obtaining a declaration to withdraw ventilation from a 56 year old, described as “the most complex COVID patient in the world” and Tafida Raqeeb v Barts Health NHS Trust and others (2019) – complex Judicial Review and treatment case concerning withdrawal of life sustaining treatment for 5 year old Muslim child.
Consultant Intensivist and Anaesthetist, UK
I am a Consultant in Critical Care at the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh and Honorary Clinical Senior Lecturer at the University of Edinburgh. I am Chair of the FICM Legal & Ethical Policy Unit and hold an MA in Healthcare Ethics and Law from the University of Manchester. I'm an elected member of the FICM Board, sit on the FICM Professional Affairs and Safety Committee and am vice chair of the FFICM SOE examiner's group. I am an author for the FICM midnight law series and recently chaired a multi-specialty working group to develop guidance for the management of patients with severe eating disorders referred to critical care.
Consultant Intensivist,
Aoife Abbey is a Consultant Intensivist at University Hospital Coventry and Warwickshire. She is an Intensive Care Society, Council member and chair of the Society's Equality, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) group.
Aoife is author of an international published non-fiction book Seven Signs of Life and section editor for From the inside at Intensive Care Medicine
Critical Care Trainee and Research Fellow,
Dr Luke Flower is a specialty registrar and clinical research fellow in Intensive Care Medicine. He is also Co-Chair of the UK’s Trainee Research in Intensive Care Network, a member of the Intensive Care Society’s Equality, Diversity and Inclusion, Working Group and an Associate Editor for the Journal of the Intensive Care Society.
His research interests include immune dysregulation in acute respiratory distress syndrome and cardiogenic shock. Alongside this he is an enthusiastic ultrasound educator and was the Lead Editor of the textbook ‘Point-of-Care Ultrasound in Critical Care’.
He is passionate about improving LGBTQ+ healthcare and over the past three years has worked with several national organisations to help improve the experiences of LGBTQ+ patients in critical care and received the Intensive Care Society’s ICU People Champion Award for his work.
Consultant Intensivist ,
I am a consultant in Critical Care and Anaesthesia at the Western General Hospital and Royal Infirmary, Edinburgh. My interests include neurocritical care, point of care ultrasound, and gender in medicine. I was chair of the Women in Intensive Care Medicine (WICM) group, a subcommittee of the FICM Career, Recruitment and Workforce Committee from 2017-2020, and stood down from this role to undertake a PhD at the Usher institute, University of Edinburgh to examine the drivers and effects of the gender balance within intensive care medicine in the UK. I am ICM lead for Autistic Doctors International, a peer support and advocacy group.
Professor of Practice (Anaesthesia) ,
Andrew is an anaesthetist/former intensivist at St Mary’ Hospital, Paddington, Professor of Practice (Anaesthesia) at Imperial College London, Civilian Consultant Advisor to the Royal Air Force, and President of the Triservice Anaesthetic Society.
He’s a Past President of the Association of Anaesthetists and the Royal Society of Medicine Anaesthesia Section, and former Council Member of the World Federation of Societies of Anaesthesiologists and the Royal College of Anaesthetists (co-opted).
He was the first out gay man to hold any of those positions.
He served in the RAF from 1984 until 1997 when he was dismissed for being gay.
He’s married to Philip (also an anaesthetist/former intensivist) and owned by Dudley the Airedale (@bletchleybark)
Registrar in Intensive Care Medicine and Anaesthesia,
I am a registrar in Intensive Care Medicine and Anaesthesia. Having been on the other side of healthcare, I am taking a long and winding road towards CCT. I have paced myself to ensure I could successfully achieve my career aspirations, when my life took an unexpected turn. I will be talking at SOA 2024 from the perspective of a budding intensivist and of someone who has experienced an unexpected bereavement. Losing my daughter Juno thrust me into serious incident investigation and coroners inquest from the parent side of the table. I pride myself on being open and honest about my experiences, knowing that there is power within our story.
Specialist Physiotherapist, UK
Simon Hayward is a Specialist Practice Development Physiotherapist in Lung Ultrasound (LUS) at Blackpool Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust. He studied Physiology (BSc Hons) at Kings College London before reading Physiotherapy (BSc Hons) at Manchester Metropolitan University in 2003.
Most of Simon’s experience has been in acute NHS respiratory services, and he has been using LUS to inform my clinical practice since 2013. In 2016 he initiated a LUS training programme aimed primarily at physiotherapists. To date over 400 Physiotherapists have attended his Introduction to Lung Ultrasound course, which is run around the UK and Europe with clinicians and academics gaining theoretical knowledge and practical skills in LUS.
Simon considers himself an early career researcher and has published numerous studies and reviews around LUS along with a scoping review looking at the use of LUS in physiotherapy practice and a systematic review. More recently he has published qualitative work on the barriers to Physiotherapy LUS implementation. He has been invited to speak and present on LUS at numerous national and international conferences and is considered the leading authority on physiotherapy-led LUS within the UK.
Between 2018 and 2023 Simon was a Focused Ultrasound Intensive Care (FUSIC) committee member as the AHP representative.
Clinical Specialist Physiotherapist, Critical Care and Respiratory, UK
Deb is a Clinical Specialist Physiotherapist in Critical Care and Respiratory Physiotherapy. As a FUSIC mentor, she supports physiotherapists progressing through the accreditation process, and outreaches to other Trusts as a mentor. Clinically Deb has been using Lung Ultrasound since 2019 and can has seen the benefits of LUS clinically as a tool for assessment and treatment planning. Aside from this, Deb has a keen interest in Rehabilitation and weaning, as well as physiotherapy management of patients with acute respiratory failure. Deb has an MSc in Physiotherapy and Education and loves nothing more than supporting education and progressing professionals through their career development.
Clinical Specialist Speech & Language Therapist, UK
Jodi is a clinical doctoral research fellow at University College London and speech and language therapist at The National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery in the UK. Her clinical and research expertise lie in the assessment and management of swallowing and motor speech disorders in adults living with neurological and neuromuscular disease.
Jodi’s PhD is focused on understanding the profile of dysphagia in Myotonic Dystrophy Type 1. This involves the use of quantitative muscle ultrasound to assess the size and structure of the muscles involved in swallowing. Jodi has a special interest in the use of ultrasound as a tool to support the assessment and management of speech, voice and swallowing across a variety of client groups. She chairs the International ultrasound SLT working group and has led on the publication of four peer-reviewed publications which explore the utility of ultrasound in this area.
Dietitian in Critical Care and ICS AHP Professional Advisory Group, Chair,
Danielle obtained her Nutrition and Dietetics degree at the University of Wollongong and after working for a short time in Sydney, she moved to London and has been the Principal Critical Care Dietitian at Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust (GSTT) for the past 11 years. Danielle has recently completed a Health Education England / National Institute for Health Research (HEE/NIHR) Clinical Doctoral Research Fellowship where she explored the measurement and prevention of skeletal muscle wasting during critical illness and the effect on recovery. On the back of this, she was awarded the prestigious British Dietetic Association Rose Simmonds Award for the best research publication of 2019. Danielle has been instrumental in guiding critical care dietetic services during the COVID-19 pandemic, being awarded British Dietetic Association Roll of Honour in 2020 and 2021 for her work.
Senior Lecturer Cardiff University, UK
On both national and international stages, Dr Smith provides pan-profession leadership on the use of ultrasound imaging in healthcare, with a particular emphasis on point of care ultrasound (PoCUS). This involves working with different professions, specialities and healthcare systems to develop robust and sustainable solutions to their use of PoCUS. Central to this is application of the PoCUS triangle approach, whereby the interrelated elements of (i) scope of practice, (ii) education & competency and (iii) governance are defined and aligned; each solution is bespoke to the particular requirements and context of the 'end user' profession, speciality or healthcare systemConsultant Intensivist & Anaesthetist and National FUSIC® Lung Lead, UK
Justin Kirk-Bayley is a Consultant Intensivist & Anaesthetist at Royal Surrey NHS Trust in Guildford, UK where he has been Clinical Lead for ICU, and is now Deputy Medical Director. His clinical passion is for pragmatic delivery of point of care ultrasound, having run a training fellowship for over a decade and being a part of the ICS’s FUSIC committee. He has published and teaches ultrasound around the world. As his Trust’s Professional Director for Therapeutics, he is committed to medication safety and optimisation, lecturing internationally about improvement in medication process and has helped found the Turning the Tide group to improve the UK’s use of intravenous fluids. (@Turningthe_Tide)
Professor, Consultant and Research Director in Intensive Care Medicine,
No bio provided
Specialist Intensive Care Sister, UK
Kate is a Specialist Sister in ICU in Plymouth. Her role is to support patients, loved ones and staff pre and post ICU discharge. She is a nurse researcher in rehabilitation after critical illness and the founder of the #Rehablegend campaign. The campaign shares patient stories to share best practice, improve patient experience, support quality improvement and clinical research and raise awareness of the importance of rehabilitation for all. Her work was recognised with a Parliamentary Award for care and compassion in 2019, National Patient Experience Award in 2019. Her work during 2020/2021 supporting patients with COVID saw her awarded with a British Empire Medal for services to improve patient experience. She is the deputy chair of the National Rehabilitation Collaborative and is keen to develop national work to support recovery after ICU.
Patient Advocate,
Rebecca (37) was diagnosed with stage 3 bowel cancer at the age of 30.
She underwent surgery leaving her with a permanent ileostomy.
Following her first chemotherapy treatment she suffered a series of four cardiac arrests.
Rebecca used her enjoyment of sport to help her in her recovery; completing her first ever triathlon a year after her surgery (10 months after her ICU stay), and ran her first ever half marathon sixteen months after ICU. (After which she was interviewed for ITV national news).
After her initial recovery, Rebecca has got a DNACPR, Advanced Directive and ReSPECT form. She is passionate about talking about end-of-life planning, and was on a Radio 4 programme ‘Do Not Resuscitate’. She is keen to show that it isn’t a negative to complete such documents, while living life to the max.
She is keen to share her experience of being a patient, and a young woman with a stoma, to help others going through similar journeys.
Consultant Pharmacist,
Richard is a clinical academic pharmacist specialising in critical care practice. He is a consultant pharmacist in critical care at Sheffield Teaching Hospitals and honorary senior clinical lecturer in pharmacy at The University of Manchester.
Richard’s research interests include medicines optimisation and medication safety in the critically ill patient. Richard recently completed a post-doctoral NIHR ICA programme clinical lectureship in which he identified and developed a complex intervention to improve medication safety for intensive care patients transferring to a hospital ward. His current research builds on this, developing related observational and interventional projects to improve patient outcomes post-intensive care.
Senior Psychosexual Therapist, UK
Trudy is a Senior Psychosexual Therapist. She has worked in sexual health for over 25 years, and specialises in combining medical treatments with sex therapy. Trudy was also the specialist psychosexual therapist in the Channel 4 documentary The Week The Women Came.
She leads a team of 4 psychosexual therapists at the Leger clinic in Doncaster (a “one stop shop” for all areas of sexual difficulty, either medical or psychological). Trudy has worked in sexual health for over 25 years and specialised as a psychosexual therapist in 2002 after training at the Porterbrook Clinic at Sheffield. Trudy’s specialist interest is combining medical treatments with sex therapy to optimise outcomes for patients. She is a Senior Accredited Member and Supervisor of COSRT (College for Sex & Relationship Therapists) and Registered with UKCP (UK Council for Psychotherapy). She is also a member of ATSAC (The Association for the Treatment of Sexual Addiction & Compulsivity) and a Committee Member for the British Society of Sexual Medicine.
She won Yorkshire Woman of the Year award in 2004.
Professor of Critical Care and Rehabilitation , UK
David McWilliams is a Professor of Critical Care and Rehabilitation and Clinical Academic Physiotherapist at University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire NHS Trust and Coventry University's Centre for Care Excellence. He is the chair of the physiotherapy working group for the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine, and Chair of the Intensive Care Society National Rehabilitation Collaborative. David was a member of the guideline development group for the NICE guideline ‘Critical Illness rehabilitation’ and is currently leading an NCEPOD study into rehabilitation and recovery following critical illness. David is recognised as an international expert on critical care physiotherapy and rehabilitation, regularly presenting both nationally and internationally on the subject
Director, Monash Partners Academic Health Science Centre,
Professor Carol Hodgson is a clinical trialist with particular expertise in long-term outcomes after critical illness. She leads, as Director, Monash Partners Academic Health Science Centre which aims to ensure research is implemented and translated into healthcare to improve patient outcomes. She is Head of the Division of Clinical Trials and Cohort Studies in the School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, and Deputy Director of the Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Research Centre, Monash University. She has worked in ICU at Alfred Health for over 25 years where she is a Specialist Physiotherapist.
Consultant Clinical Psychologist ,
Dr Julie Highfield is a Consultant Clinical Psychologist & Lead for Organisational Health in Adult and Paediatric Critical Care, Cardiff. She is the National Project Director for Wellbeing in the Intensive Care Society. She has a long experience of working as a psychologist in medical and health care settings and works closely with staff in their experience of working in healthcare, as well as advising managers on matters of workforce wellbeing. Julie has worked with the British Psychological Society and its Division of Clinical Psychology in Wales. She led the BPS team writing the National Guidance for Staff in the Coronavirus Pandemic.
Julie works with the Welsh Assembly Government in various projects, including as the lead for Critical Care Workforce Task and Finish Group, and Modelling for Rehabilitation for patients post COVID-19, and the Wellbeing Conversation Tool. She has a number of publications and book chapters in the field of critical care, staff wellbeing, and leadership.
Consultant Intensivist ,
Dr Sam Clark is Consultant in Critical Care at Mid-Cheshire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust. He has a sub-specialty interest in Palliative Care, working regular sessions with the Specialist Palliative Care Team in his organisation. He has led the writing of guidelines with the Intensive Care Society (ICS), including for ‘the transfer of critically ill adults to an outdoor space during end of life care’, and is currently working with multiple organisations to publish guidance for the transfer of critical care patients to their preferred place of death for end-of-life care. Sam is also a Co-chair for the ‘End of life and Palliative Care in Intensive care research Network (EPCIN)’, which serves as an international professional community where the two fields meet.
Alongside these roles, Sam is enthusiastic about the contributions of Critical Care teams towards goals for environmental sustainability. He leads the PPE workstream for the ICS’ Environment and Sustainability Working Group, most notably campaigning locally, regionally, and nationally to reduce inappropriate non-sterile glove use, in collaboration with other organisations including the British Association for Critical Care Nurses (BACCN), and the Infection Prevention Society (IPS). Sam is the co-lead for a recently launched regional sustainability network across Cheshire and Mersey Critical Care Teams (SPIN-CM), and is a contributing author to the new Environmental Sustainability section of the upcoming GPICS Version 3 guidelines. He is also contributing to a collaboration between the ICS and the Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Society (ANZICS) to produce an update to the ‘Sustainability Toolkit’.
Co-Director, Coma and Disorders of Consciousness Research Centre, UK
Professor Jenny KItzinger is co-director of the Coma and Disorders of Consciousness Research Centre at Cardiff University (cdoc.org.uk) - a multi-disciplinary group of researchers exploring the ethical, legal and social dimensions of vegetative and minimally conscious states. She is co-author of multiple papers about the decision-making process around life-sustaining treatment and particularly the place of a person’s own values in ‘best interests’. This work has informed online training for healthcare professionals (cdoctraining.org.uk) and a website resource for patients’ families (healthtalk.org) which has been used by over 50,000 people and won a BMA award for its information on ethical issues.
Clinical Psychologist, UK
Polly Fitch is a Consultant Clinical Psychologist working in Adult Critical Care at the Royal London Hospital in East London. Working in this role since 2017 she has responsibility for delivering psychological interventions for patients, relatives, and staff in the Intensive Care Unit. She has particular interests in talking about death and dying in acute health settings including how best to facilitate difficult news conversations and support end of life situations. She has specialist experience of facilitating discussions and decision making around complex medical information in the context of a diverse patient population with differing health beliefs. In addition, she is committed to working with colleagues across the Trust to promote reflection and learning in relation to communicating about death and bereavement, including facilitating Schwartz Rounds, Death Cafes and co-organising the Barts Health Annual Bereavement Conference. She has previously held posts in the Tower Hamlets Palliative Care Team (with specialist input to respiratory services) and the Tower Hamlets Community Learning Disability Service. She retains strong links with health psychologists working across the borough. She is a member of PINC-UK (Psychologists working in Intensive Care), the BPS and is HPC registered.
ICS Director of Research and Professor of Critical Care and Epidemiology,
Nazir is a Professor of Critical Care and Epidemiology and one of the Intensive Care Society's Directors of Research. Nazir’s programme of research focuses on health services research and health care quality improvement for acutely ill patients. His research aims to directly improve the quality of care for patients before, during and after an episode of acute or critical illness through rigorously conducted research and engagement with key stakeholders. He has a particular research interest in epidemiological methods and using linked 'big' data, multimorbidity and end-of-life care in acute and critical care settings.
His current programme of work includes NIHR-funded work to apply artificial intelligence (AI) methods in the context of multimorbidity (AIM-CISC) in which he co-leads work to develop AI tools to reduce adverse events. Furthermore, he leads Innovate UK funded work to improve multimorbidity recognition in emergency care settings using data analytics.
:
@ICULone
Professor of Critical Care Nursing, UK
Professor Louise Rose, RN, PhD is a Professor of Critical Care Nursing at King’s College London, UK and an honorary Professor in Critical Care and the Lane Fox Respiratory Unit at St Thomas’ Hospital in London. Prior to joining King’s she was an Associate Professor at the University of Toronto. Her research program focuses on improving outcomes and the healthcare experience of mechanically ventilated patients across the care continuum from the emergency department, intensive care unit, specialised weaning centre and in the home. She also has extensive clinical experience in critical care in four countries. Since commencing her research career she has been awarded 90 peer reviewed research grants and has over 180 peer reviewed publications.Professor of Intensive Care Medicine ,
Prof Hugh Montgomery obtained a first-class degree in cardiorespiratory physiology/neuropharmacology before graduating from the Middlesex Hospital Medical school in 1987. He has since gained accreditation in general internal medicine, cardiology and intensive care medicine, and practices as a consultant in intensive care at the Whittington hospital in North London.ICS Director of Research, Consultant Intensivist and Nephrology, UK
Marlies is a Consultant in Critical Care & Nephrology at Guy’s & St. Thomas’ Foundation Trust, London and Honorary Senior Lecturer at King’s College London.
Following medical school in Goettingen (Germany), she completed her postgraduate training in the United Kingdom and Canada. She is one of the Directors of Research at the Intensive Care Society, and actively involved in the Renal Association. She is Deputy Chair of the AKI working group of the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine.
Her clinical and research interests include acute kidney injury in the critically ill, including biomarkers and long-term complications, and all aspects related to acute renal replacement therapy.
Consultant Physiotherapist, UK
Ema is a Consultant Therapist (Physiotherapist by background) in Critical Care at University Hospitals Bristol and Weston NHS Foundation Trust. Her area of clinical expertise and interest is ventilation, weaning and complex airway clearance.
Having completed the Advanced Cardiorespiratory Physiotherapy Msc programme at University College London (UCL) in 2012, Ema has continued her research focusing on the use of Mechanical Insufflation-Exsufflation (MI-E) and other cough augmentation strategies. Her current PhD work focuses on the use of MI-E in the intubated population which is funded through the NIHR Clinical Academic Research Fellowship pathway.
Extra-curricular activities include contributions to the Undergraduate Physiotherapy programme at the University of the West of England, and post-graduate teachings at University College London and Brunel University. She sits on the Intensive Care Society Physiotherapy Professional Advisory Group and Education Committee, the Equity, Diversity and Belonging Committee of the CSP, and ICUsteps support group network. She has been part of the multi-professional authorship for BTS/ICS documents related to Respiratory Support Units and Weaning Centres. Most recently, she is part of the NHSElect working group for the development of a Critical Care Capability Framework.
Clinical Academic Physiotherapist ,
Owen is a Clinical Academic Physiotherapist in critical care at Oxford University Hospitals and a post-doctoral researcher at the University of Oxford. His research interests centre around the rehabilitation of patients throughout their recovery pathway following an admission to critical care. He has recently completed his NIHR clinical doctoral research fellowship evaluating the musculoskeletal health state of ICU survivors.
Clinical lecturer at the University of Bristol,
Mike is a clinical lecturer at the University of Bristol. He is interested in the nervous system response to critical illness, and how that response could be modulated to improve outcomes for patients. He studies torpor, which is akin to a brief period of hibernation, as a model for a naturally occurring centrally generated protective response to physiological challenge. His current work focuses on inducing synthetic torpor-like states in species for which it is not a natural behaviour, and assessing the impact of this state on models of critical illness and the immune response. The long-term aim is to be able to control the metabolic rate of critically ill patients so that they can tolerate cardiorespiratory failure without the need for invasive and injurious interventions such as are currently employed on the ICU. He also sits on a committee at the European Space Agency, whose aim is to explore the potential for human hibernation during long-term space flight.
Intensive Care Trainee and Trainee Doctor Professional Advisory Group Chair,
Dr Bakare is currently an Advanced Trainee in Intensive Care Medicine and Anaesthesia in Northwest London. She graduated with Honours from the University of Bristol and commenced her career in the West Country before pursuing Specialty Training in Northwest London. As an elected member of the Trainee Advisory Group of the Intensive Care Society and leverages her expertise to contribute actively to the society's Equality, Diversity, and Inclusion (EDI) Working Group. She also holds the additional responsibility of serving as the EDI lead on the Editorial Board for GPCISv3.
Dr Bakare is deeply passionate about advancing Equity in Healthcare and Medical Education, with clinical interests spanning Major General Surgery and Transfer Medicine.
Consultant Intensiveist and ICS Honorary Secretary,
Andy is a consultant in ICM working in Leeds Teaching Hospitals, having been appointed in 2005. He is Clinical Director for Adult Critical Care in Leeds, and an elected Intensive Care Society Council member. He graduated in Liverpool in 1995, where he completed his clinical training in anaesthesia and intensive care medicine.
Andy is strong interest in point-of-care ultrasound, having been a founding member of the FICE committee, current member of the FUSIC committee and co-author of a number of POCUS accreditation programmes. Other interests include ethical decision making and advance care planning, the science of quality improvement and IV fluids education.
No bio provided
Advanced trainee in Anaesthetics and Intensive Care Medicine,
Alex is an advanced trainee in Anaesthetics and Intensive Care Medicine, undergoing higher specialist training in West Yorkshire. He has multiple interests within critical care including point of care ultrasound use, medical education and quality improvement. Alex is one of the founding members of ORCA, an interactive online resource for radiology education in acute care.Clinical Academic in Intensive Care Medicine
Ingeborg Welters finished her specialist training in Anaesthesia at University Hospital Giessen, Germany, in 1999 followed by fellowships in Intensive Care and cardiac anaesthesia. She obtained her MD (Dr. med.) for work on haemostatic and immune changes during heart surgery and was awarded the venia legendi (PhD equivalent) in anaesthesia for researching effects of anaesthetics on leukocyte function and gene transcription. Funded by the German Research Society (DFG) she worked as visiting scholar at State University of New York for 12 months. She also completed a Master degree in management of health and social care organisations with honours. In 2005 she moved to Liverpool to continue her career as clinical academic in Intensive Care. She was appointed as Associate Professor for Anaesthesia, Intensive Care and Pain Medicine at Justus-Liebig-Universität Giessen, Germany, and promoted to Personal Chair in 2009.
Ingeborg’s research interests focus on cardiovascular dysfunction in acute illness. Her research has been funded by NIHR, the British Heart Foundation and EU Horizon 2023.
Consultant Intensivist and Anaesthesia, UK
Tim is a Consultant in Intensive Care Medicine & Anaesthesia at Liverpool University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust.
Having completed his post-graduate training in the Mersey region, he undertook a fellowship at King’s College Hospital where he developed his interest in major trauma and liver disease in Critical Care.
He is an Intensive Care Consultant at Aintree University Hospital, supporting the hospital’s role as the region’s major trauma centre, tertiary referral centre for head & neck surgery, complex vascular surgery, acute stroke services, as well as a full range of emergency surgical & medical services. He is the department’s major trauma lead and has acted as PI for a number of research trials, mainly relating to major trauma.
His Anaesthetic role is at the Royal Liverpool University Hospital where he works with the Hepatobiliary team in one of the UK’s busiest liver resection units.
Outside of work, Tim & his wife (who is a Consultant in Anaesthesia & PHEM) have two young daughters who ensure there’s never a dull (or quiet) moment at home. He enjoys cooking for friends and cycling (although probably not in the optimal ratio) and is a late convert to skiing.
Consultant in Critical Care and Respiratory , UK
Robert is a consultant in Critical Care and Respiratory Medicine at Liverpool University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust. Apart from critical care he has a major interest in weaning and long-term ventilation in Liverpool and the North West Regional Spinal Injures Centre in Southport. He is also an Honorary Senior Lecturer at University of Liverpool active in both research and teaching.
Consultant in Cardiothoracic Anaesthesia and Intensive Care ,
Neil is a Consultant in Cardiothoracic Anaesthesia and Intensive Care at Liverpool Heart and Chest Hospital. Liverpool Heart and Chest Hospital is a standalone specialist trust providing care for patients in the North West of England and beyond. It provides all the routine cardiac services with specialist expertise in minimally invasive cardiac surgery, major aortic surgery and TAVI.
Neil has a particular interest in critical care echo and ECMO. He enjoys teaching and training and has previously been the College Tutor for anaesthesia training in the department. He is now the Clinical Lead for Critical Care and enjoys the challenges of developing the quality of services there.
ICS Director of Research, Consultant Intensivist and Nephrology, UK
Marlies is a Consultant in Critical Care & Nephrology at Guy’s & St. Thomas’ Foundation Trust, London and Honorary Senior Lecturer at King’s College London.
Following medical school in Goettingen (Germany), she completed her postgraduate training in the United Kingdom and Canada. She is one of the Directors of Research at the Intensive Care Society, and actively involved in the Renal Association. She is Deputy Chair of the AKI working group of the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine.
Her clinical and research interests include acute kidney injury in the critically ill, including biomarkers and long-term complications, and all aspects related to acute renal replacement therapy.
Professor of Critical Care,
Tim Walsh is Professor of Critical Care at the University of Edinburgh and Honorary Consultant in Critical Care at Edinburgh Royal Infirmary. He is also Director Innovation for NHS Lothian, and Health Innovation South East Scotland. He is Head of the Academic Dept of Anaesthesia, Critical Care, and Pain Medicine in the University of Edinburgh, and Co-director of Acute Care Edinburgh a multidisciplinary research grouping in the University of Edinburgh Usher Institute.
Tim leads a multidisciplinary clinical research group with interests including transfusion medicine, sedation in the critically ill, recovery from critical illness and the epidemiology and prevention of ICU acquired infection. He has a particular interest in large pragmatic clinical trials, complex health intervention trials, and the evaluation of novel diagnostics and technologies in acute care. He is a past Chairman of the NIHR UK Critical Care Research Network and UK Critical Care Research Group.
Critical Care Clinical Dietitian & Senior Research Fellow, Australia
Emma is a National Health and Medical Research Council Emerging Leadership Fellow and leads the Nutrition Program at the Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Research Centre, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia. Emma has 19 years of clinical dietetic experience, including as a senior dietitian in the ICU at The Alfred Hospital, Melbourne. After completing her PhD in 2018, Emma’s primary research interest is the effect of long term nutrition interventions for the critically ill. Emma is internationally recognized as a critical care dietitian and researcher, ranked in the top 1% on Expertscape for critical care and many clinical nutrition topics and regularly presents both nationally and internationally. Emma has more than 100 peer reviewed publications and has been a named investigator on more than $>10 million dollars of research funding, including $4.2 million as CIA). Emma is CI-A on the recently completed INTENT trial that is investigating a whole-hospital nutrition intervention in critically ill patients (NCT03292237) and was awarded a MRFF 2022 Clinician Researcher: Nurses, Midwives and Allied Health grant of $1.49 million titled "A national platform for improving quality of nutrition care for critically ill adults and children".
Professor of Clinical Nursing , UK
Professor Natalie Pattison is a clinical academic who has worked clinically in cancer, critical care and critical care outreach. She is a Professor of Clinical Nursing with a joint appointment across the University of Hertfordshire and East and North Herts NHS Trust. Natalie also holds a Researcher in Residence (ICU) position at Imperial College London, working in the CATO team, with an honorary contract with Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust. She is the clinical lead for critical care follow-up services, combining this with a research role. Her research interests focus on her clinical area of critical care and critically ill ward patients, end of life in critical care, and disability in critical care. She is widely published in critical care supportive care. She is Chair of the National Outreach Forum, immediate past-Chair of UK Critical Care Research Group, and the UK Critical Care Nursing Alliance. She is also Deputy Lead for the National Institute for Health Research National Specialty Group for Critical Care.
Consultant Intensivist , UK
Dr Zudin Puthucheary is a Clinical Senior Lecturer in Intensive Care Medicine at the William Harvey Institute, Queen Mary, University of London, and a Consultant at the Royal London Hospital Adult Intensive Care Unit. He graduated from Nottingham University in 1997, and moved to London post MRCP in 2000. Following a 3-year stint in Sydney, he started his Respiratory training in Bristol, before completing his critical care training in London. He worked as a Respiratory and Critical Care Consultant at National University Hospital Singapore before returning to the UK.
His research focusses on acquired functional disability, and the use of metabolic, nutritional and exercise interventions to prevent and treat muscle wasting, and has published over 100 papers with a H index of 39. Zudin is a nationally elected Council member of the Intensive Care Society (UK). He was the inaugural chair of the UK National Post-Intensive Care Rehabilitation Collaborative, a multi-professional cross-disciplinary group focussing on rehabilitation and restitution of critical illness survivors. His work on acute muscle wasting has won awards from the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine , European Society of Anesthesia, the British Thoracic Society, the Intensive Care Society, The American Society of Enteral and Parenteral Nutrition and Zudin was named a Global Rising Star by the Australia and New Zealand Intensive Care Society.
He chairs the UK National Post-Intensive Care Rehabilitation Collaborative, a multi-professional cross-disciplinary group focussing on rehabilitation and restitution of critical illness survivors.
:
@Zudin_P
Consultant Anaesthetist , UK
Gareth is a Senior Clinical Lecturer and Consultant Anaesthetist at University of Manchester and Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust. He completed his PhD at the University of Manchester, funded by an MRC Clinical Research Training Fellowship. During this time he investigated circadian regulation of pneumonia.
He also works as a clinician (general and transplant anaesthetist) at Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust. He was recently awarded £2.5million grant as the Chief Investigator for Protect Airways, part of the “confederation” of Respiratory Critical Care Trials.
Professor of Experimental Medicine,
Kenny Baillie graduated from the University of Edinburgh, BSc(Hons) in Physiology in 1999 and MBChB in 2002. After junior house officer jobs in the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, he trained in hospital medicine at the Western Infirmary, Glasgow, before being appointed to a training scheme in anaesthesia and critical care medicine in South East Scotland. During this time he led a series of high altitude research projects, involving several expeditions to Bolivia, and ran a charity, Apex (altitude physiology expeditions). He was appointed as a clinical lecturer on the ECAT (Edinburgh Clinical Academic Track) at the University of Edinburgh in 2008.
Kenny’s research interest is the genetics of host susceptibility to severe infection. He led the GenISIS (Genetics of Influenza Susceptibility in Scotland) study and the host genetics component of the MOSAIC (Mechanisms of Severe Influenza Consortium) study. In his role as working group chair for genomics, pathogenesis and pharmacology for the International Severe Acute Respiratory Infection Consortium (ISARIC), he led the development of an integrated biological sampling protocol for use in outbreaks, which is supported by the World Health Organization and has been adopted in many countries throughout the world.
Intensive Care Nurse,
ICU Nurse, 1.5 years experience in Acute Medical Unit In Russells Hall Hospital, Dudley. Nearly 5 in a permanent post in General ICU Bristol Royal Infirmary, and still active doing agency shifts in ICU.
Medical Liaison Officer, bioMerieux
No bio provided
Consultant Intensivist and Anaesthetist,
Dr. Jonny Wilkinson (MBChB.MRCP.FRCA.FFICM) is a Consultant in Intensive care medicine and Anaesthesia in Northampton, UK. He trained in Nottingham, where he undertook a fellowship in thoracic anaesthesia. He is the editor in chief of the Oxford Handbook of Thoracic Anaesthesia and founder of www.criticalcarenorthampton.com. When not on Twitter , he is a national and international expert in point of care ultrasound, with specialist interests in the use of handheld devices to assess the critically ill patient. He is a course director for Advanced Trauma Life support and NICE IV fluid lead for his trust, promoting safe fluid prescription and education on fluid physiology. He is a member of the ICS council and the FUSIC committee (Focused Intensive Care Ultrasound). He is faculty for The State of The Art Intensive Care Society meeting, the International Fluid Academy, the Critical Care Symposium and RA-UK. He enjoys speaking / teaching on all that is ultrasound, nationally and Internationally.Consultant in Intensive Care and Anaesthesia ,
Monica Jackson is consultant in Intensive Care and Anaesthesia at South Tyneside and Sunderland Trust. Having trained in Oxford, UK and Christchurch, NZ she returned to her North East roots for specialty training. Keen on anything that can improve the patient experience in ICU, she is a current member of the FUSIC blocks committee. She has interests in POCUS, education and advanced decision making.
Consultant Anaesthetist & Clinical Lead for Acute Pain, UK
Jenny is a consultant anaesthetist working in South Wales, UK. She was elected to the board of RA-UK in May 2023, where she is lead for EDI. Clinical interests include acute pain and regional anaesthesia. She has recently lead the international research priority setting exercise for regional anaesthesia.
Senior clinical fellow in critical care and anaesthesia ,
I completed my training in ITU and anaesthesia in India and have maintained a great interest in trauma anaesthesia and critical care. 2020 marked the end of my one-year fellowship with the Academy of Regional Anaesthesia (AORA) in India. I stayed on as a consultant at the same institute after the fellowship where I trained around twenty fellows and trainees in POCUS and regional anaesthesia annually. I relocated to the UK a year ago and have continued to organise local workshops for regional anaesthesia. I am currently working as a clinical fellow in critical care and anaesthesia at Northampton General Hospital.
Consultant Anaesthetist,
Amit is a Consultant Anaesthetist and Lead for Regional Anaesthesia at Guy's & St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust, & also works at Cleveland Clinic, London.
He is also an Honorary Senior Lecturer at King’s College London.
He is an Ultrasound Guided Regional Anaesthesia (UGRA) enthusiast and was the first ever fellow in Regional Anaesthesia at Guy's & St Thomas'. He holds the ESRA European Diploma in Regional Anaesthesia (EDRA)
Additionally, Amit has been: President of the London Society for Regional Anaesthesia (LSORA) ands President of RA-UK, as well as a council member of the European Society of Regional Anaesthesia (ESRA).
Amit has created a series of Ultrasound Regional Anaesthesia Video tutorials on YouTube, and has an active social media profile and uses his X account to help share knowledge of Regional Anaesthesia, the occasional Dad Joke, and a few of his attempts at poetry! His most recent project has been creating a Regional Anaesthesia Podcast called “Block It Like It’s Hot”
He has numerous publications in regional anaesthesia covering General Anaesthesia-Free Breast Surgery and fascial plane blocks, and has authored numerous review articles, editorials, guidelines and Delphi consensus projects on aspects of regional anaesthesia.
Anaesthetic Trainee , UK
Dr Mani Bahra is an ST6 Anaesthetic Registrar on the North Central London School rotation with special interests in regional anaesthesia, perioperative medicine and medical education. She recently joined the Board of RA-UK as the Trainee Representative and is also a member of the ESRA Residents and Trainees representative group. She is dedicated to ensuring a consistent and equitable approach to teaching regional anaesthesia.
Consultant in Anaesthesia and Critical Care ,
Deborah Horner is a Consultant in Anaesthesia and Critical Care at Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and Deputy Chief Medical Officer.
Her dual interests in Critical Care and Obstetric Anaesthesia have led to an interest in the provision of Enhanced and Critical Care for sick women in her own hospital, regionally and nationally. She is Yorkshire & the Humber Maternal and Enhanced Critical Care (MEaCC) steering group Chair, represents the OAA on the national MEWS working group and Chair of the Intensive Care Society Maternal Critical Care group.
She is married with 2 children and a very spoilt Labrador.
Consultant Intensivist and Obstetric Medicine , UK
Katie is an adopted Geordie having graduated in Newcastle-upon-Tyne and completing most of her training in the North East in Intensive Care, Anaesthesia and Obstetric Medicine. She is Consultant at the Royal Victoria Infirmary in Newcastle-upon-Tyne where she works in both Intensive Care and Obstetric Medicine. Katie has a particular interest in Obstetric Critical Care. She undertook RCP Obstetric Medicine credentialling at St Thomas’ Hospital in London in 2022. Having been involved in setting up the Maternal Medicine Network within the North East and North Cumbria Katie now works as lead Obstetric Physician within the Network. She is an MBRRACE-UK maternal mortality review assessor and an active member of the UK Obstetric Surveillance System (UKOSS) Steering Committee. Katie has been involved in the creation of a number of national guidelines and publications related to critically unwell obstetric patients and regularly teaches on this topic. Outside of work she loves to bake (complete with sticky fingers and copious sprinkles courtesy of her children), swim and spend time exploring the beautiful North East with her family.
Senior Lecturer Critical Care, UK
Nicky is a Senior Lecturer at Keele University who started her career in Critical Care in the late 1980s in the Midlands on a general Intensive Care Unit, before combining with the Cardiac ITU in early 2000. During this time, she completed her post registration Intensive Care course for adults, BSc (HONS) Nursing Studies and Post Graduate Diploma in Education. In clinical practice, she had special interest in advanced life support, obstetrics and paediatrics. Nicky completed her shortened course in Intensive Care for Children at Great Ormond Street.
Moving into higher education in 2008, Nicky has developed the post registration programmes in Critical Care, and Advanced Critical Care Practitioner (ACCP), and acute care for midwives. Remaining passionate about critical care education, Nicky works with the Critical Care National Nurse Leads (CC3N) and the Education Forum, working collaboratively in developing the National Standards for Adult Critical Care Education and the associated clinical competencies Steps 1,2,3,4, and bespoke competencies relating to cardiac and obstetrics. She was also part of the team developing the educational framework for Nursing Associates in Critical Care.
In 2020, continuing with apprenticeship development, Nicky was part of the national trailblazer group for the Enhanced Clinical Practitioner standard and has since developed the Enhanced Clinical Practitioner BSc and Post Graduate Diploma for a wide range of healthcare practitioners commencing in September 2022, one of the first HEIs to deliver this standard. This includes routes for Critical Care and neonatal nurses.
Nicky is a Senior Fellow with the Higher Education Academy. Nicky’s research and publications focus on Moral Distress, the critical care work environment and curriculum design. She is currently undertaking her Doctorate in Education with a focus on Critical Care nurses’ longevity in clinical practice.
Consultant Intensivist ,
Steve Cantellow is a Consultant Intensivist and Clinical Director of Urgent and Emergency Care at Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust. He holds the position of Maternity Lead for the East Midlands Critical Care Network and contributes as a member of the Intensive Care Society’s Maternity Working Group and the ESAIC’s Subforum for the Obstetric Patient. Beyond maternal critical care, his interests include transfer medicine and systems-level human factors.
Dietitian in Critical Care and ICS AHP Professional Advisory Group, Chair,
Danielle obtained her Nutrition and Dietetics degree at the University of Wollongong and after working for a short time in Sydney, she moved to London and has been the Principal Critical Care Dietitian at Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust (GSTT) for the past 11 years. Danielle has recently completed a Health Education England / National Institute for Health Research (HEE/NIHR) Clinical Doctoral Research Fellowship where she explored the measurement and prevention of skeletal muscle wasting during critical illness and the effect on recovery. On the back of this, she was awarded the prestigious British Dietetic Association Rose Simmonds Award for the best research publication of 2019. Danielle has been instrumental in guiding critical care dietetic services during the COVID-19 pandemic, being awarded British Dietetic Association Roll of Honour in 2020 and 2021 for her work.
Chief Executive, Intensive Care Society
Sandy began her career as a radiographer, which led to her undertaking a PhD in Child Health. Making the decision to move away from a clinical setting, Sandy gained a wealth of experience operating at a senior management level, leading strategy and change programmes for non profit organisations and membership bodies particularly those involved in professional education, training, standards, research and international development. Sandy joined the Society in 2017.Physiotherapist in Critical Care and and ICS Physio Professional Advisory Group, Chair,
Becky is a Physiotherapist working in Oxford and is the Chair of the ICS Physiotherapy Professional Advisory Group. Since qualifying in 2006 she has remained committed to the speciality of intensive care, and to the recovery of critically ill patients across their entire pathway. Throughout her career she has developed interests in multiprofessional education, service development, and advanced practice, and is currently undergoing accreditation as an Advanced Clinical Practitioner. Becky has continued to make contributions to a range of educational sessions for multiprofessional groups, at undergraduate and multiple stages of postgraduate training. She is keen to ensure that all professional groups have opportunities to advance knowledge and skills in all domains of clinical practice, and actively promotes the sharing and exchange of knowledge and practice, critical analysis and development. Quality improvement remain a key focus of her work, and she is dedicated to projects stemming from clinical practice.ICS Honorary Treasurer and Consultant Intensivist , UK
Dr Paul Dean is a Consultant in intensive care at Royal Blackburn Teaching Hospital, East Lancashire Hospitals NHS Trust, and former Chair of the Society's Standards Division. He continues to be responsible for leading national work such as the Guidelines for the Provision of Intensive Care Services (GPICS), setting the standard in which every ICU in the country should operate.
Paul is also Medical Lead for Lancashire and South Cumbria Critical Care Network.
:
@d1975p
Advanced trainee in Anaesthetics and Intensive Care Medicine,
Alex is an advanced trainee in Anaesthetics and Intensive Care Medicine, undergoing higher specialist training in West Yorkshire. He has multiple interests within critical care including point of care ultrasound use, medical education and quality improvement. Alex is one of the founding members of ORCA, an interactive online resource for radiology education in acute care.Specialist Respiratory Physiotherapist ,
Becky Hayes is a specialist Respiratory Physiotherapist based in critical care at Basildon Hospital. She completed her undergraduate studies in Sport Rehabilitation in Cumbria, followed by a Masters degree in Physiotherapy. Last year, together with the wider multiprofessional team, she conducted a Quality Improvement Project to establish whether implementing an early rehabilitation programme could have a positive impact on patient physical and functional outcomes in critical care. She will be presenting this at SOA24.
ECMO Lead Physiotherapist,
I am the ECMO Lead Physiotherapist at the Bristol Royal Infirmary, a 45 bedded critical care unit in a busy inner-city hospital. Our specialities are SARF, Surgery, Oncology and Cardiac Services. Prior to my current post I worked at St. Thomas' Hospital in London as a critical care, cardiac and surgery team lead. I am very passionate about early mobilisation, ventilation and the management of SARF patients.
Dual ICM and Anaesthetics ,
Marc is a (very nearly cooked) dual ICM and Anaesthetics trainee in West Yorkshire. He fell back on a career in medicine after his attempts to become an astrophysicist/engineer/DJ all failed.
Interests include organ donation, regional anaesthesia, vinyl records and traveling to this fair city to repeatedly fail to watch Everton win.
Clinical Specialist Physiotherapist ,
Cordy is a Clinical Specialist Physiotherapist in Critical Care at Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust (BTHFT). She has a particular interest in rehab during and after intensive care, as well as tracheostomy management and weaning, MDT working and Simulation training.
Cordy has completed an MSc in Respiratory Physiotherapy at Sheffield Hallam University, and has previously chaired the West Yorkshire Critical Care Network Rehab forum. She is now a member of the National Critical Care AHP group.
With MDT members at BTHFT she has recently set up a post ICU support group for patients and loved ones to come together and gain the benefits of peer support.
She hopes to work with wider groups to develop the BTHFT virtual post ICU recovery hub for it to be accessible and relevant to all.
Trainee in anaesthesia,
Dan is currently an ST6 trainee in anaesthesia in West Yorkshire. He is working on several trust-wide quality improvement projects in his role as Chief Registrar including implementation of a hospital at night system and development of a tracheostomy database. His other interests include medical education and trainee wellbeing.
Quality Lead Nurse ,
Rachel has worked at Salford Care Organisation’s Critical Care Unit for the last 16 years. She is currently a Quality Lead Nurse involved in supporting Quality Improvement, staff and patient experience across Critical Care.
ACCS Trainee, University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire
Jin was born in South Korea and settled in the UK when he was 4. Having studied medicine at UCL, he spent the pandemic working in A&E (with a brief stint in Critical Care) and is now completing his Anaesthetics post at University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire as an ACCS trainee. His interests include music, sound engineering and medical education, in decreasing order of competence.
Critical Care Trainee and Research Fellow,
Dr Luke Flower is a specialty registrar and clinical research fellow in Intensive Care Medicine. He is also Co-Chair of the UK’s Trainee Research in Intensive Care Network, a member of the Intensive Care Society’s Equality, Diversity and Inclusion, Working Group and an Associate Editor for the Journal of the Intensive Care Society.
His research interests include immune dysregulation in acute respiratory distress syndrome and cardiogenic shock. Alongside this he is an enthusiastic ultrasound educator and was the Lead Editor of the textbook ‘Point-of-Care Ultrasound in Critical Care’.
He is passionate about improving LGBTQ+ healthcare and over the past three years has worked with several national organisations to help improve the experiences of LGBTQ+ patients in critical care and received the Intensive Care Society’s ICU People Champion Award for his work.
Intensive Care Trainee,
Amy is the TRIC Network co-Chair and Specialty registrar based in Wessex.Intensive Care Trainee,
Tom is an ACCS Anaesthetics trainee in North Central and East London, currently at The Royal London Hospital. Tom is a national trainee representative to the Intercollegiate Committee for ACCS Training and lead investigator for the TRIC network project 23/24, assessing current practice of identification of difficult airways in Critical Care Units across the UK.ICS President and Consultant Intensivist and Anaesthetist,
Steve Mathieu is the President of the Intensive Care Society.
He is a Consultant in Critical Care at Portsmouth Hospitals University NHS Trust and the Divisional Director for Clinical Delivery (Critical Care, Anaesthetics, Theatres, Radiology, Pharmacy, Therapies, Blood Sciences and Pathology). He was previously the Clinical Director of Critical Care when the ICU was rated outstanding in all domains by the CQC.
His previous roles for the Society include Congress Director for State of the Art (SOA), Honorary Treasurer and Council Member.
He has interests in patient and staff experience, workforce and operational strategy as well as medical education and information technology. He is a co-founder and senior editor for The Bottom Line and set up and maintains the Portsmouth ICU website.
Twitter: @stevemathieu75
Consultant Intensivist , UK
Dr Zudin Puthucheary is a Clinical Senior Lecturer in Intensive Care Medicine at the William Harvey Institute, Queen Mary, University of London, and a Consultant at the Royal London Hospital Adult Intensive Care Unit. He graduated from Nottingham University in 1997, and moved to London post MRCP in 2000. Following a 3-year stint in Sydney, he started his Respiratory training in Bristol, before completing his critical care training in London. He worked as a Respiratory and Critical Care Consultant at National University Hospital Singapore before returning to the UK.
His research focusses on acquired functional disability, and the use of metabolic, nutritional and exercise interventions to prevent and treat muscle wasting, and has published over 100 papers with a H index of 39. Zudin is a nationally elected Council member of the Intensive Care Society (UK). He was the inaugural chair of the UK National Post-Intensive Care Rehabilitation Collaborative, a multi-professional cross-disciplinary group focussing on rehabilitation and restitution of critical illness survivors. His work on acute muscle wasting has won awards from the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine , European Society of Anesthesia, the British Thoracic Society, the Intensive Care Society, The American Society of Enteral and Parenteral Nutrition and Zudin was named a Global Rising Star by the Australia and New Zealand Intensive Care Society.
He chairs the UK National Post-Intensive Care Rehabilitation Collaborative, a multi-professional cross-disciplinary group focussing on rehabilitation and restitution of critical illness survivors.
:
@Zudin_P
Lyvonne Tume RN RSCN RNT Dip App Sci (Nurs), B Nurs, Clinical MSc (Critical Care) PGDE PhD
Director of the Clinical Research development Programme at Alder Hey
Lyvonne Tume is Professor of Critical Care Nursing at Edge Hill University and Alder Hey Children’s Hospital, Liverpool. She has worked at Alder Hey (in PICU) since 2004. She undertook her PhD 2006-2010 at LJMU on the impact of nursing interventions in children with severe traumatic brain injury.
She is an Associate Editor for Nursing in Critical Care and on the editorial board for Pediatric Critical Care Medicine and the Journal of Parental and Enteral Nutrition. She is an intensive care nurse with over 35 years’ experience in Australia and in the UK. She has over 170 peer reviewed publications and has held several NIHR research grants. She is currently the chief investigator for an NIHR HTA-funded multicentre trial of no routine gastric residual volume measurement to guide enteral feeding in critically ill children (GASTRIC-PICU). She is a member of the NIHR HTA funding panel.
Her research interests focus mainly on improving nutrition in critically ill children, particularly around enteral feeding, but she also focuses on respiratory critical care: making endotracheal suctioning safer, weaning mechanical ventilation, and preventing extubation failure. She is also committed to implementing research evidence into clinical practice.
Her research takes an ‘critical care across the lifespan’ approach with work in neonatal, paediatric, and adult intensive care. She is a visiting professor for the School of Health Sciences in Geneva and is a member of the NIHR HTA and a European funding panel.
Anaesthetic trainee,
I am a core anaesthetic trainee based in the East of England and plan to dual train in anaesthesia and critical care. This will be my first SOA conference and I’m excited to share our proposed project investigating how we carry out laboratory investigations on our critically ill patients and how this might be improved.
ST5 single-specialty ICM trainee,
Olly is an ST5 single-specialty ICM trainee in Mersey and a part-time PhD student at the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine. He has a research interest in respiratory infection and global health, having previously worked in Sierra Leone and Bangladesh.
Clinical Fellow in ICM and Anaesthetics, University Hospitals Sussex NHS Trust
Ultan is currently a Clinical Fellow in ICM and Anaesthetics. He has completed both ACCS-Acute Medicine and Anaesthetic core training and is starting Anaesthetic ST4 training in Brighton in August. His aim is to dual train in ICM and Anaesthetics
Consultant, Department of Anesthesiology at the University Hospital in Göttingen, Germany.
Prof. Dr. Anselm Bräuer DEAA is consultant at the Department of Anesthesiology at the University Hospital in Göttingen, Germany.
He has graduated after studying medicine in Würzburg and Göttingen and has completed his six years of residency in Göttingen and Halle. After registration as a specialist in anesthesiology he acquired additional titles in emergency medicine and intensive care medicine. He has specialized knowledge in transesophageal echocardiography and neuromonitoring.
In the last 25 years he has conducted many clinical trials and published more than 90 articles about hypothermia and 20 book chapters. He is author of the monography “Perioperative Temperature Management” and co-author of the German, Austrian and Swiss guideline for the prevention of perioperative hypothermia.
Consultant Intensivist and Anaesthetist and NHSBT,
Ben is a consultant in intensive care and anaesthesia at Torbay Hospital, South Devon. He has been the national education lead for organ donation with NHS Blood and Transplant for the last 7 years, delivering, alongside the education team, the acclaimed national Deceased Donation Simulation Course. The team won the inaugural ICS education award in 2020 and deliver education around donation, ethical decision making and end of life conversations to national and international audiences. In his spare time he enjoys landscape photography and slow running.Specialist Nurse in Organ Donation, NHSBT
I joined NHSBT’s Professional Development Team following time as a Specialist Nurse Organ Donation with the Northern Region at James Cook University Hospital, Middlesbrough. This was following a long career in critical care with a wide range of critical care experience with leadership experience both in critical care and in the volunteer and charity business sector.
I work collaboratively with national and regional medical leads to develop and deliver training opportunities for NHSBT partners in the clinical areas both in the UK and internationally. This includes the highly regarded and award winning National Deceased Donation Course. This course provides donation education to both adult and paediatric trainees becoming our next generation of consultants. Induction programmes for CLODs and Trust/Health board Organ Donation Committee Chairs are core to local donation service leadership and conference opportunities achieve a wider audience reach. My role also supports a more cohesive multidisciplinary approach across the package of education programmes the Professional Development Team deliver.
Our aim is to build confidence and excellence in donation practice, train in multidisciplinary ways and remain world class by providing a high level of engagement, interest and academic rigour whilst complementing specialist nurse training for a cohesive approach.
I am passionate about the family end of life experience, teamwork, simulation, service improvement and innovation using a wide variety of forums to have the greatest impact and reach as possible.
Specialist nurse in organ donation, NHSBT
I joined in NHSBT in 2014 as a Specialist Nurse – Organ Donation within the London region at UCLH and GOSH. I then moved into a regional professional development role for three years. I have always had a passion for donor management and optimisation, and I was able to move into my current post, National Professional Development Specialist – Donor management and optimisation designing and developing educational programmes on the topic.
Consultant Intensivist ,
Amit is a Consultant Intensivist at the Royal Free Hospital, London, and an Honorary Consultant Lung Transplant Physician at University Hospitals Birmingham. He is a clinical lead for lung utilisation within NHSBT and current chair of the UK Association of Lung Transplant Physicians.
Amit trained in Edinburgh, Glasgow, Oxford and London. He undertook an ISHLT travelling scholarship to Toronto General Hospital (2017) and an MRC Chain-Florey PhD fellowship at Imperial College, using computational genomics to study transplant fungal immunobiology (2020).
Hi professional interests are donor optimisation on the ITU and infectious complications in the immunocompromised host.
Cardiothoracic Anaesthetist and Intensivist, UK
Antonio Rubino is a cardiothoracic anaesthetist and Intensivist at Royal Papworth Hospital in Cambridge. He is clinical lead for Organ Donation for the Eastern Region as part of the National Transplant service. He is Intenisve Care Society's national lead for the focused transoesohpageal echocardiography (fTOE) program. His research interest include critical care ultrasounds, ECMO and cardiothoracic donor organs optimisation.
Consultant Transplant Surgeon , UK
Rachel Thomas is a Consultant Transplant Surgeon in Edinburgh Transplant Centre and a lead surgeon in the National Organ Retrieval Service. Rachel trained in Edinburgh and Glasgow transplant units and completed her fellowship in Oxford Transplant Centre, focusing on pancreas transplant.
Rachel completed her MD in 2013 at University of Edinburgh. For this, Rachel was Chief Investigator for the HOT study (Heme Oxygenase 1 in renal Transplant) looking at ways to protect deceased donor renal transplants from inevitable ischaemic injury. This work led to funding for a multicentre trial and Rachel was awarded the Moynihan Prize from ASGBI.
Her current QI interest is in Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) and a successful pilot was completed in 2021, which has now changed standard renal transplant practice and she is part of NHSBT Guideline committee and ERAS Society Guidelines lead. Rachel’s current research interest is in the impact of Normothermic Regional Perfusion retrieval technique on quality of kidney grafts.
Rachel also has an interest in teaching and mentoring and holds an honorary contract with University of Edinburgh. She regularly teaches undergraduate and postgraduate students locally and nationally and is a tutor on Edinburgh Surgical Sciences programme.
Consultant Intensivist and NHSBT, UK
Dr Dale Gardiner is a Consultant in Adult Intensive Care Medicine at Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust and the Associate Medical Director – Deceased Organ Donation at NHS Blood and Transplant.
His professional interests are medical ethics, the diagnosis of death and deceased organ donation.
Dale is a Board Member of the Faculty of Intensive Care Medicine and Chair of the Professional Affairs and Safety Committee. He is co-chair of the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges task and finish group to update the 2008 Code of Practice for the Diagnosis and Confirmation of Death.
Originally, Dale came from Australia but migrated to the UK in 2002.
Professor of Intensive Care Medicine , UK
Dr Dan Harvey is a Consultant in Intensive Care Medicine at Nottingham University Hospitals, Hon. Professor at the University of Nottingham, and a member of the UK Intensive Care Society Legal & Ethical Advisory Group. Dan has an active research interest as National Lead for Innovation & Research in Organ Donation for NHS Blood and Transplant, and joint Chief Investigator for the SIGNET study, the world's largest interventional study in organ donation.
Professor of Intensive Care Medicine ,
Prof Hugh Montgomery obtained a first-class degree in cardiorespiratory physiology/neuropharmacology before graduating from the Middlesex Hospital Medical school in 1987. He has since gained accreditation in general internal medicine, cardiology and intensive care medicine, and practices as a consultant in intensive care at the Whittington hospital in North London.Senior Trainee in Critical Care and ICS Sustainability Working Group, co-Chair,
Eleanor Damm is the co-chair of the Environmental Sustainability workgroup at the Intensive Care Society and an elected member to its Trainee Advisory group. She is an active member of the GREEN-ICU research collaboration based at the University of Brighton. She is a Dual Trainee in ICM and Anaesthesia in the West Midlands.
Consultant Intensivist ,
Dr Sam Clark is Consultant in Critical Care at Mid-Cheshire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust. He has a sub-specialty interest in Palliative Care, working regular sessions with the Specialist Palliative Care Team in his organisation. He has led the writing of guidelines with the Intensive Care Society (ICS), including for ‘the transfer of critically ill adults to an outdoor space during end of life care’, and is currently working with multiple organisations to publish guidance for the transfer of critical care patients to their preferred place of death for end-of-life care. Sam is also a Co-chair for the ‘End of life and Palliative Care in Intensive care research Network (EPCIN)’, which serves as an international professional community where the two fields meet.
Alongside these roles, Sam is enthusiastic about the contributions of Critical Care teams towards goals for environmental sustainability. He leads the PPE workstream for the ICS’ Environment and Sustainability Working Group, most notably campaigning locally, regionally, and nationally to reduce inappropriate non-sterile glove use, in collaboration with other organisations including the British Association for Critical Care Nurses (BACCN), and the Infection Prevention Society (IPS). Sam is the co-lead for a recently launched regional sustainability network across Cheshire and Mersey Critical Care Teams (SPIN-CM), and is a contributing author to the new Environmental Sustainability section of the upcoming GPICS Version 3 guidelines. He is also contributing to a collaboration between the ICS and the Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Society (ANZICS) to produce an update to the ‘Sustainability Toolkit’.
Consultant ENT Surgeon, Brighton and Sussex University Hospitals
Professor Mahmood Bhutta is a consultant ENT surgeon with over 20 years of experience, based at The Montefiore Hospital, Hove and BMI Goring Hall Hospital, Worthing. He specialises in hearing loss, ear discharge, tinnitus. dizziness, hearing implants and cholesteatoma. He is an expert in treating conditions like glue ear, holes in the eardrum, and earwax buildup, as well as otology (disease of the ear), which he studied in order to gain his Doctor of Philosophy qualification from the University of Oxford. Professor Bhutta is a consultant to the World Health Organisation on the prevention of deafness and hearing loss.
In 2006 Mahmood founded the Medical Fair and Ethical Trade Group (hosted at the British Medical Association) in response to labour rights abuses in the manufacture of medical products, including surgical instruments, gloves and textiles. He works with the NHS, and international procurement organisations and NGOs, to foster better working conditions in healthcare supply chains
Areas of research: Environmental sustainability in healthcare systems; labour rights in healthcare supply chains; ear and hearing care.
Area of expertise: Sustainable healthcare, health systems, ear and hearing disorders
Healthcare Programme Director at Greener By Default, USA
As the Healthcare Programme Director with Greener By Default, Heidi consults with hospitals to apply behavioural science to menuing and food service/catering operations, nudging diners towards sustainable plant-based food while preserving freedom of choice. Her background includes working in the hospitality and catering sector as well as over 25 years as a public health Registered Dietician, where she led projects ranging from healthy default beverage policy to workplace wellbeing and diabetes prevention initiatives, plus directing a dietetic internship programme. She has a Bachelor’s degree in Marketing from DePaul University, completed her dietetics programme at Loyola University Chicago, and holds a Master’s degree in Nutrition from Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science. Heidi’s current work focuses on the intersection of healthy food and climate change resilience, and she also serves on her local sustainable food policy council in Denver, Colorado, USA.Consultant Haematologist , UK
Dr Shireen Kassam is a Consultant Haematologist, Certified Lifestyle Medicine Physician and Visiting Professor of Plant-Based Nutrition. She is founder of Plant-Based Health Professionals UK, a community interest company that provides education on healthy plant-based diets. Her first book, Eating Plant-Based, Scientific Answers to Your Nutrition Questions, co-authored with her sister Zahra, was published in January 2022. She has also co-edited the textbook Plant-Based Nutrition in Clinical Practice, published in September 2022,
ICS President and Consultant Intensivist and Anaesthetist,
Steve Mathieu is the President of the Intensive Care Society.
He is a Consultant in Critical Care at Portsmouth Hospitals University NHS Trust and the Divisional Director for Clinical Delivery (Critical Care, Anaesthetics, Theatres, Radiology, Pharmacy, Therapies, Blood Sciences and Pathology). He was previously the Clinical Director of Critical Care when the ICU was rated outstanding in all domains by the CQC.
His previous roles for the Society include Congress Director for State of the Art (SOA), Honorary Treasurer and Council Member.
He has interests in patient and staff experience, workforce and operational strategy as well as medical education and information technology. He is a co-founder and senior editor for The Bottom Line and set up and maintains the Portsmouth ICU website.
Twitter: @stevemathieu75
Consultant Intensivist and Anaesthetist,
Ganesh Suntharalingam OBE is a former ICS President, former SOA organiser, and former Mr. Universe (*one of these statements may be incorrect). He is an intensivist at Northwick Park and Ealing hospitals and chair of the NW London Critical Care Network.
He has a longstanding (but amateur) interest in healthcare architecture and in spending your tax money, having been clinical design champion for a £65M acute hospital PFI and primary clinical project board lead for a £25M ED new build and a £13M theatre redevelopment. He is on the organising committee and a standing chair for the influential European Healthcare Design congress.
He is relatively disaster-prone, and among other things was ICS President during the first year of the pandemic. Prior to this he led the critical care response to the TGN1412 drug trial emergency, the world's first molecular biology major incident. In 2006 he appeared on CNN's evening news bulletin alongside Tony Blair and Saddam Hussein. He is the only one of these to still be in post.
Consultant Intensivist,
Aoife Abbey is a Consultant Intensivist at University Hospital Coventry and Warwickshire. She is an Intensive Care Society, Council member and chair of the Society's Equality, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) group.
Aoife is author of an international published non-fiction book Seven Signs of Life and section editor for From the inside at Intensive Care Medicine
Consultant Intensivist , Australia
Chris is an Intensivist and ECMO specialist at the Alfred ICU in Melbourne, where he is Deputy Director (Education). He is a Clinical Adjunct Associate Professor at Monash University and is the Lead for the Clinician Educator Incubator programme. He is an internationally recognised Clinician Educator with a passion for helping clinicians learn and for improving the clinical performance of individuals and collectives.
After finishing his medical degree at the University of Auckland, he continued post-graduate training in New Zealand as well as Australia’s Northern Territory, Perth and Melbourne. He has completed fellowship training in both intensive care medicine and emergency medicine, as well as post-graduate training in biochemistry, clinical toxicology, clinical epidemiology, and health professions education. He is one of the founders of the FOAM movement (Free Open-Access Medical education) and is co-creator of LITFL.com. He has developed many critical care courses and has taught around the world. He is passionate about the use of translational simulation to improve systems, processes, and patient care. His one great achievement is being the father of three amazing children.
No bio provided
ICM Advanced Trainee,
I am currently a single specialty ICM Advanced Trainee in the Severn region. I’ve lived the medical nomadic life that has led me to London, Belfast and Newcastle before planting my feet back down in Bristol for specialist training, where I had graduated almost a decade earlier. My specialist interests include medical ethics, having gained an LLM in Medical Law and Ethics in 2022, as well as quality improvement and patient safety having completed my SSY in QI.
In my spare time I can usually be found at the train station with my toddler watching the trains go by or trying to relive my youth at music festivals.
Critical Care Trainee and Research Fellow,
Dr Luke Flower is a specialty registrar and clinical research fellow in Intensive Care Medicine. He is also Co-Chair of the UK’s Trainee Research in Intensive Care Network, a member of the Intensive Care Society’s Equality, Diversity and Inclusion, Working Group and an Associate Editor for the Journal of the Intensive Care Society.
His research interests include immune dysregulation in acute respiratory distress syndrome and cardiogenic shock. Alongside this he is an enthusiastic ultrasound educator and was the Lead Editor of the textbook ‘Point-of-Care Ultrasound in Critical Care’.
He is passionate about improving LGBTQ+ healthcare and over the past three years has worked with several national organisations to help improve the experiences of LGBTQ+ patients in critical care and received the Intensive Care Society’s ICU People Champion Award for his work.
Advance Trainee in Intensive Care Medicine ,
Jeanie is an Advance Trainee in Intensive Care Medicine in the Severn region, currently working at the Royal United Hospital in Bath. Jeanie has taken a rather circuitous route to CCT, having completed GP training, briefly working as a salaried GP, before returning to the world of ICM and Anaesthesia. She is due to complete her training this year in ICM and Anaesthetics, after which she will be working in Perth, Australia as an Anaesthetic fellow with training in Simulation and Echo. She has an interest in Education, Simulation, Medical Law and Ethics, and is working towards a masters in Healthcare Law and Ethics.
CT3 Anaesthetics Trainee ,
Jennifer is a CT3 Anaesthetics Trainee based in Kent. With a background in intensive care and anaesthetics, she has gained experience across diverse units, including cardiothoracic, COVID, and general ICU settings. Throughout her clinical work, Jennifer is dedicated to advancing patient care through the study and teaching of human factors, leveraging these interests to enhance patient care and drive progress in medical practices.
Intensive Care Trainee and Trainee Doctor Professional Advisory Group Chair,
Dr Bakare is currently an Advanced Trainee in Intensive Care Medicine and Anaesthesia in Northwest London. She graduated with Honours from the University of Bristol and commenced her career in the West Country before pursuing Specialty Training in Northwest London. As an elected member of the Trainee Advisory Group of the Intensive Care Society and leverages her expertise to contribute actively to the society's Equality, Diversity, and Inclusion (EDI) Working Group. She also holds the additional responsibility of serving as the EDI lead on the Editorial Board for GPCISv3.
Dr Bakare is deeply passionate about advancing Equity in Healthcare and Medical Education, with clinical interests spanning Major General Surgery and Transfer Medicine.
President of College of Intensive Care Medicine of Australia and New Zealand, Australia
Rob trained in the UK, having originally been in the first year of the combined 'Barts and the London' in 1995. He moved over to NZ in 2004 and dual trained in General Medicine and Intensive Care (FRACP and FCICM) but works full-time in ICU at Auckland Hospital Department of Critical Care Medicine (DCCM)- which is a tertiary ICU providing trauma, neurosurgery, liver and renal transplant and haem/onc services. It was the first ICU set up in Australasia in the early 1960's. He moved over a year ago from Middlemore Hospital, having spent 6yrs at the National Burns and Spinal ICU.
He joined the College of Intensive Care Medicine of Australia and New Zealand (CICM) as a trainee rep and is the current CICM President over 12yrs. He was the Education lead for the College, and has published on the history of ICU training in Australia and New Zealand, as well as setting up collaborations with the UK. He has recently finished writing the inaugural chapter on 'Obesity' for the next edition of 'Oh's Intensive Care'.
Critical Care Clinical Dietitian & Senior Research Fellow, Australia
Emma is a National Health and Medical Research Council Emerging Leadership Fellow and leads the Nutrition Program at the Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Research Centre, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia. Emma has 19 years of clinical dietetic experience, including as a senior dietitian in the ICU at The Alfred Hospital, Melbourne. After completing her PhD in 2018, Emma’s primary research interest is the effect of long term nutrition interventions for the critically ill. Emma is internationally recognized as a critical care dietitian and researcher, ranked in the top 1% on Expertscape for critical care and many clinical nutrition topics and regularly presents both nationally and internationally. Emma has more than 100 peer reviewed publications and has been a named investigator on more than $>10 million dollars of research funding, including $4.2 million as CIA). Emma is CI-A on the recently completed INTENT trial that is investigating a whole-hospital nutrition intervention in critically ill patients (NCT03292237) and was awarded a MRFF 2022 Clinician Researcher: Nurses, Midwives and Allied Health grant of $1.49 million titled "A national platform for improving quality of nutrition care for critically ill adults and children".
Consultant Physician, UK
Euan is a Consultant Clinical Toxicologist and past Director of the Edinburgh unit of the National Poisons Information Service (NPIS). The NPIS provide clinical advice to healthcare professionals across the UK on the management of poisoned patients via the online database TOXBASE, and a national 24-hour telephone line.
He is one of a small team of toxicologists providing direct clinical care for patients admitted to Scotland’s only dedicated poisons unit in the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, while also contributing to the national on call rota providing clinical advice to healthcare professionals across the UK.
He has a keen interest in medical education. He is an Honorary Senior Clinical Lecturer with the University of Edinburgh and the Assessment Lead for Edinburgh Medical School. He also sits on the Medical Schools Council national standard setting committee for the upcoming UK MLA exam.
ICS Director of Research, Consultant Intensivist and Nephrology, UK
Marlies is a Consultant in Critical Care & Nephrology at Guy’s & St. Thomas’ Foundation Trust, London and Honorary Senior Lecturer at King’s College London.
Following medical school in Goettingen (Germany), she completed her postgraduate training in the United Kingdom and Canada. She is one of the Directors of Research at the Intensive Care Society, and actively involved in the Renal Association. She is Deputy Chair of the AKI working group of the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine.
Her clinical and research interests include acute kidney injury in the critically ill, including biomarkers and long-term complications, and all aspects related to acute renal replacement therapy.
Director, Monash Partners Academic Health Science Centre,
Professor Carol Hodgson is a clinical trialist with particular expertise in long-term outcomes after critical illness. She leads, as Director, Monash Partners Academic Health Science Centre which aims to ensure research is implemented and translated into healthcare to improve patient outcomes. She is Head of the Division of Clinical Trials and Cohort Studies in the School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, and Deputy Director of the Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Research Centre, Monash University. She has worked in ICU at Alfred Health for over 25 years where she is a Specialist Physiotherapist.
Professor of Experimental Medicine,
Kenny Baillie graduated from the University of Edinburgh, BSc(Hons) in Physiology in 1999 and MBChB in 2002. After junior house officer jobs in the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, he trained in hospital medicine at the Western Infirmary, Glasgow, before being appointed to a training scheme in anaesthesia and critical care medicine in South East Scotland. During this time he led a series of high altitude research projects, involving several expeditions to Bolivia, and ran a charity, Apex (altitude physiology expeditions). He was appointed as a clinical lecturer on the ECAT (Edinburgh Clinical Academic Track) at the University of Edinburgh in 2008.
Kenny’s research interest is the genetics of host susceptibility to severe infection. He led the GenISIS (Genetics of Influenza Susceptibility in Scotland) study and the host genetics component of the MOSAIC (Mechanisms of Severe Influenza Consortium) study. In his role as working group chair for genomics, pathogenesis and pharmacology for the International Severe Acute Respiratory Infection Consortium (ISARIC), he led the development of an integrated biological sampling protocol for use in outbreaks, which is supported by the World Health Organization and has been adopted in many countries throughout the world.
Professor of Intensive Care Medicine , UK
I completed my clinical and academic training in Anaesthesia & Intensive Care Medicine in the Eastern region and was appointed as an Academic Consultant working within the Neurosciences and Trauma Critical Care Unit (NCCU) at Cambridge University Hospitals in 2006. My PhD was in the field of neuro-imaging (MR and Positron Emission Tomography (PET)) following traumatic brain injury (TBI). I was awarded a Clinician Scientist fellowship from the Academy of Medical Sciences/Health Foundation in 2004 and have maintained a research program funded by the Wellcome Trust, Medical Research Council (UK), European Union, and National Institute of Academic Anaesthesia that examines mechanisms responsible for secondary neuronal injury, their temporal profile, and implications for eventual neurocognitive recovery following TBI. I have published extensively within the field of neurosciences & critical care and am a reviewer for relevant specialist medical journals and national/international grant awarding bodies. In 2022 I was appointed as Clinical Professor of Intensive Care Medicine, University of Cambridge, UK.
Consultant Neuro Intensivist ,
Manni Waraich is a consultant neuro intensivist and clinical lead for neurocritical care at the National Hospital for Neurology & Neurosurgery, Queen Square London having previously been a consultant at Southampton Wessex Neurosciences ICU. She is the national lead for the ICS FUSIC brain module which is currently under development with a release date late spring/early summer 2024. She has written chapters on neurocritical care and brain ultrasound for the Oxford Handbook of Anaesthetic Emergencies; Neurology: A Queen Square Textbook and Point of Care Ultrasound in Critical Care.
Consultant in Neurosciences, Trauma, Critical Care Medicine and Emergency Medicine, UK
Virginia Newcombe is an academic consultant in Neurosciences and Trauma Critical Care Medicine and Emergency Medicine at Addenbrooke’s Hospital, Cambridge. She holds an NIHR Rosestrees Trust Advanced Fellowship and a Royal College of Emergency Medicine Professor. Her main research interests focus on the use of imaging and biomarkers to understand pathophysiology, prognostication and trajectory of outcome after traumatic brain injury.
:
@vfjn2
Critical Care Neurologist , USA
Brian received his B.A. from Princeton University and M.D. from the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. He completed an internal medicine internship at Brigham and Women's Hospital, followed by neurology residency and neurocritical care fellowship at Massachusetts General and Brigham and Women’s Hospitals. He is currently a critical care neurologist at Massachusetts General Hospital, where he is Associate Professor of Neurology, Associate Director of the Center for Neurotechnology and Neurorecovery, and Director of the Laboratory for NeuroImaging of Coma and Consciousness.
Dr. Edlow's research focuses on detecting consciousness, predicting outcomes, and facilitating new therapies for patients with severe traumatic brain injury. His lab’s work has been continuously funded since 2010 by grants from the NIH, DOD, and multiple foundations. He is the recipient of the 2019 NIH Director’s New Innovator Award and the 2022 ANA Derek Denny-Brown Young Neurological Scholar Award.
Dr. Edlow serves on the Scientific Advisory Board of the Neurocritical Care Society’s Curing Coma Campaign, the Editorial Board of the Journal of Neurotrauma, and is Co-Chair of the NINDS Common Data Elements Project on Disorders of Consciousness. He also serves as the Principal Investigator of the DOD-funded ReBlast study, which aims to identify diagnostic biomarkers of blast-induced brain injury in United States Special Operations Forces Service Members.
Consultant Intensivist and Trauma , UK
Dr Victoria Metaxa is a full-time Critical Care and Major Trauma Consultant, at King’s College Hospital in London. She is a King's College London Honorary Clinical Senior Lecturer, and has a PhD in neurosciences and an MA in Medical Ethics and Palliative Care from Keele University. Her clinical interests include bioethics, end-of-life care, critical care outreach and the management of patients with haematological malignancies. Dr Metaxa is a member of the European Society of Intensive Care (ESICM) Ethics section, and the representative of the section in the e-learning committee. She is the UK National Outreach Forum board Secretary and a member of the Legal and Ethical Advisory Group of the UK Intensive Care Society (ICS).Consultant Physiotherapist, UK
Ema is a Consultant Therapist (Physiotherapist by background) in Critical Care at University Hospitals Bristol and Weston NHS Foundation Trust. Her area of clinical expertise and interest is ventilation, weaning and complex airway clearance.
Having completed the Advanced Cardiorespiratory Physiotherapy Msc programme at University College London (UCL) in 2012, Ema has continued her research focusing on the use of Mechanical Insufflation-Exsufflation (MI-E) and other cough augmentation strategies. Her current PhD work focuses on the use of MI-E in the intubated population which is funded through the NIHR Clinical Academic Research Fellowship pathway.
Extra-curricular activities include contributions to the Undergraduate Physiotherapy programme at the University of the West of England, and post-graduate teachings at University College London and Brunel University. She sits on the Intensive Care Society Physiotherapy Professional Advisory Group and Education Committee, the Equity, Diversity and Belonging Committee of the CSP, and ICUsteps support group network. She has been part of the multi-professional authorship for BTS/ICS documents related to Respiratory Support Units and Weaning Centres. Most recently, she is part of the NHSElect working group for the development of a Critical Care Capability Framework.
Consultant Speech and Language Therapist,
Sarah Wallace OBE FRCSLT is a Consultant Speech and Language Therapist (SLT) at Wythenshawe Hospital in Manchester and honorary senior lecturer at the University of Manchester. She specialises in Critical Care and has over 30 years of clinical experience as an SLT. After training in Manchester, Sarah has worked in hospitals and Non-Government Organisations in the UK, Singapore, Grenada (WI) and Cambodia. Whilst working clinically in cardiothoracic, ECMO and general critical care in Manchester, she also teaches and conducts research internationally, focussing on laryngeal injury, dysphagia and communication issues post intubation and tracheostomy. She has over 60 publications, several top cited articles winning awards from the BMJ and the ICS. She holds expert advisor roles with the Intensive Care Society (ICS), the National Tracheostomy Safety Project and the Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists (RCSLT) and has contributed to many policies, guidelines and initiatives including GPICS, FEES, NCEPOD and the ICS National Rehabilitation Collaborative. Sarah is also an Associate Editor for JICS. She has pioneered new treatments for laryngeal recovery in ICU, setting up the first FEES service in Asia and the UK and supports SLT service development in the UK, Sweden and Chile.
Consultant Intensivist and Anaesthetist,
Brendan qualified from the University of Sheffield and trained initially in general medicine in Yorkshire, the North East and then Australia. He returned to specialise in Anaesthesia & Intensive Care Medicine, appointed as a consultant at Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust, at Wythenshawe Hospital in 2009. He was appointed Manchester Academic Health Sciences Centre (MAHSC) Honorary Professor in 2022.
Brendan’s research interests in patient safety and airway management led to the initiation of the UK National Tracheostomy Safety Project, collaborating widely in developing educational resources to guide the multidisciplinary response to airway emergencies. Realising that the real work was in prevention of airway emergencies, Brendan helped to develop the Global Tracheostomy Collaborative in 2012, bringing together international expertise from Harvard to Melbourne with the goal of improving tracheostomy care ‘everywhere’ through quality improvement initiatives. Brendan has worked on and led a number of domestic and international quality improvement projects and research studies, securing significant grant funding.
Brendan and his team have won a number of awards for their work, including:
Outside of medicine, Brendan is entertained by a young(ish) family, plays guitar in the family rock band, "Death Metal Children of Rock," attempts to support Liverpool FC whilst living near Old Trafford, and tries to ride his road bike when it isn’t raining (too hard).
Speech and Language Therapist,
Helen has over 20 years experience working as a speech and language therapist (SLT) in the UK and New Zealand. She has worked extensively with patients with a tracheostomy in intensive care, H&N cancer and brain injury rehabilitation. She is a member of the International Group of SLTs Working in Ultrasound, whose pioneering work explores clinical applications of ultrasound in voice, speech, swallowing and tracheostomy. She is committee member and Treasurer of the Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists’ Tracheostomy Clinical Expert Network. Helen currently holds an NIHR Clinical Doctoral Research Fellowship, jointly hosted by Barnet Hospital (Royal Free London NHS FT), and the UCL Division of Surgery and Interventional Science. Her PhD focuses on how to choose the best size tracheostomy tube for adults in ICU, inspired by seeing first hand the effects of tube size on patient experience and recovery. She is passionate about humanising care in the ICU through person-centred, ‘whole-picture’ approaches to management.
Speech and Language Therapist,
Anna-Liisa Sutt is a Speech and Language Therapist whose work involves communication and dysphagia management of adult intensive care patients. Most of Anna-Liisa’s career to date has been in Brisbane, Australia. She has recently moved back to the UK to continue in a clinical post at The Royal London Hospital, alongside continued teaching commitments and research nationally and internationally. Her passion is improving the management of patients with tracheostomies, from insertion to decannulation and longer-term outcomes. She is devoted to advancing SLT input and its evidence base in the critical care environment. In her PhD Anna-Liisa assessed the effect of one-way valves on regional ventilation and communication success of ventilated ICU patients with a tracheostomy.Consultant Intensivist and Anaesthesia,
Ned Gilbert-Kawai is a Consultant in Critical Care Medicine & Anaesthesia at The Royal Liverpool University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust. Ned completed his PhD at University College London on the effect of hypoxia on microcirculation and then undertook a Masters in Genomic Medicine at Imperial College London. He was the Chief Scientific Officer for the Xtreme Everest 2 expedition (UCL Centre for Altitude, Space and Extreme Environment (CASE) Medicine, 2013), and has since maintained an interest in both cardiovascular physiology and genomic medicine. He is an associate editor of the Journal of Intensive Care Society and an examiner at the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine Exams.
Consultant in Intensive Care, Acute & General Internal Medicine ,
Prashant is a Consultant in Intensive Care, Acute & General Internal Medicine at William Harvey Hospital (East Kent Hospitals). He is an honorary senior lecturer at Queen Mary University London (QMUL), giving lectures regarding the role of echocardiography in resuscitation and chairing tutorials on diagnostics and imaging modalities in resuscitation. He teaches and lectures at both regional and national ultrasound and echo conferences and courses.
He is member of the national Focused Ultrasound in Intensive Care (FUSIC) committee and is BSE Level 2 accredited in Critical Care Echocardiography. He is a FUSIC & FICE (Focused Intensive Care Echocardiography) supervisor & mentor and runs national FUSIC courses. He is published in research in the use of echo and ultrasound in Intensive Care and Acute Medicine and in the assessment of haemodynamic status using echo.
Prashant was the Chief Investigator (CI) for the national lung ultrasound and echo CORONA study (COre ultRasOund of covid in iNtensive care & Acute medicine) assessing the lung ultrasound features and the incidence of left and right ventricular dysfunction in COVID ICU patients. He is the creator and co-host of Ultra Live, the world’s first live POCUS gameshow at the SOA this year.
Senior Clinical Lecturer in Critical Care,
I am a senior clinical lecturer in critical care medicine at the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, working clinically at the Aintree site of Liverpool University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust. Since my doctorate was awarded in 2016 I have developed a translation research career focusing on treatment and prevention of severe infection. During this time, I spent two years working at the Malawi-Liverpool Welcome Trust Clinical Research Programme (2019-2021) before returning to Liverpool in July 2021. My current research focuses on controlled human infection models to accelerate vaccine development for respiratory pathogens and developing improved care pathways for patients with multimorbidity in sub-Saharan Africa. Website: https://www.lstmed.ac.uk/about/people/dr-ben-morton
Consultant in Paediatric Intensive Care ,
Rum is a Consultant in Paediatric Intensive Care and Deputy Medical Director at Sheffield Children's NHS Foundation Trust. She is Clinical Lead of Yorkshire & Humber Paediatric Critical Care Operational Delivery Network, Training Advisor for Royal College of Paediatric and Child Health’s Paediatric Intensive Care Medicine Intercollegiate SAC, as well as Clinical Member of the Clinical Reference Group of Paediatric Critical Care – NHS England.
Her clinical interests include transition from paediatrics to adult critical care and diabetic ketoacidosis where she has co-authored national guidelines for both. Her focus is also to promote equitable access to health care for children and young people.
Her other interests include development and training of postgraduate doctors in paediatrics and paediatric critical care, improving patient safety and quality of care, as well as increasing awareness of sepsis and its management. And, walking in the Peak District, travel and photography.
Professor of Medical Statistics , UK
David is Co-Director of the Intensive Care National Audit & Research Centre (ICNARC), Honorary Professor of Medical Statistics at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and a Fellow of the Royal Statistical Society. David joined ICNARC in 2002 following his PhD in biostatistics from the University of Cambridge progressing to Head Statistician before being appointed Co-Director in 2023.
As Head Statistician, David oversaw development of the prognostic models underpinning ICNARC’s National Audit Programme. He also oversees the statistical work of ICNARC’s UKCRC-registered Clinical Trials Unit, with a programme of research including multicentre randomised controlled trials, large multicentre cohort studies and methodological research.
ICNARC Co-Director, UK
Paul is Co-Director, and Clinical Trials Unit Director, at the Intensive Care National Audit & Research Centre (ICNARC) . Paul is an epidemiologist with over 20 years’ experience of conducting multicentre randomised clinical trials, initially in Cancer, but at ICNARC focussed in adult and paediatric critical care. Paul is currently the Joint-Chief Investigator for the UK-ROX trial (NIHR130508), which is a highly challenging trial within the critical care setting, using extensive data collected routinely by the national clinical audit for critical care (Case Mix Programme) database.
Paul is the lead for the Development of an adaptive platform trial in paediatric critical care and sits on the REMAP-CAP International Trial Steering Committee. He sits on both the NIHR Critical Care National Specialty Specialty Group, which has responsibility for overseeing delivery of studies on the NIHR portfolio for critical care, and the UK Critical Care Research Group.
Director of the NIHR HSDR Programme and Director of ICNARC, UK
Professor Kathy Rowan is the Director of the NIHR Health and Social Care Delivery Research Programme, Director of the Intensive Care National Audit & Research Centre (ICNARC), Honorary Professor at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine and Adjunct Professor (Research) at Monash University, Australia.
In 1994, following her PhD from the University of Oxford, Professor Rowan founded ICNARC, an independent, not-for-profit, scientific organisation to facilitate improvements in the structure, process, outcomes and experiences of critical care - for patients and for those who care for them. ICNARC manages a broad programme of clinical audit and clinical/health services research, nationally and internationally.
Professor Rowan was awarded the Humphry Davy Medal by the UK Royal College of Anaesthetists (2004), completed a Harkness Fellowship (2005), received the President’s Prize with honorary life membership of the UK Intensive Care Society (2019) and Officer of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (Queen’s Birthday Honours’ List 2021) for services to research and intensive care.
Consultant Intensivist , USA
Hannah Wunsch is a critical care doctor and Professor and Vice Chair for Research in the Department of Anaesthesiology at Weill Cornell Medicine.
Born in Boston and raised in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Hannah attended Harvard College, graduating with a BA in Biology. She attended Washington University School of Medicine and received a Master's Degree in Epidemiology from the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine. She completed an anaesthesia residency and critical care fellowship at Columbia University. She was on faculty in the Department of Anaesthesiology at Columbia and then at the University of Toronto where she held a Canada Research Chair, before moving to Weill Cornell Medicine in 2023.
Hannah holds research funding from the NIH, US Department of Defense and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. Her work focuses on the delivery and outcomes of critical care using large databases. Her research has been published in The Lancet, JAMA, BMJ and many specialty journals.
Hannah is the author of the book The Autumn Ghost: How the Battle Against a Polio Epidemic Revolutionized Modern Medical Care. Her writing has also appeared in The Globe & Mail, The Literary Review of Canada, McSweeney's, and other journals. She lives on the Upper West Side of Manhattan and the village of Woods Hole on Cape Cod, Massachusetts
ICS President Elect and Consultant Intensivist , UK
Shondipon is a Consultant in intensive care and anaesthesia at Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and the Intensive Care Society's Honorary Secretary. He is also the Society's Learning Division Chair leading the education and ultrasound programme across the UK.
:
www.ics.ac.uk
:
@shond3
Senior Clinical Lecturer in Critical Care,
I am a senior clinical lecturer in critical care medicine at the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, working clinically at the Aintree site of Liverpool University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust. Since my doctorate was awarded in 2016 I have developed a translation research career focusing on treatment and prevention of severe infection. During this time, I spent two years working at the Malawi-Liverpool Welcome Trust Clinical Research Programme (2019-2021) before returning to Liverpool in July 2021. My current research focuses on controlled human infection models to accelerate vaccine development for respiratory pathogens and developing improved care pathways for patients with multimorbidity in sub-Saharan Africa. Website: https://www.lstmed.ac.uk/about/people/dr-ben-morton
Reader in Sepsis Research, Uganda
Dr Shevin Jacob is an infectious diseases physician who obtained his Doctorate of Medicine at Oregon Health & Sciences University (1999-2004) and a Masters in Public Health from the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health (2002-2003). He underwent post-graduate training in internal medicine at the University of Virginia (2004-2007) and infectious diseases at the University of Washington (UW) (2008-2012), after which he remained as a faculty member within the UW Department of Medicine until 2017. In 2017, he shifted his academic home to the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine in the UK where he is currently Reader in Sepsis Research.
Dr Jacob currently lives in Uganda where, for over 15 years, he has been conducting research aimed to improve the management and outcomes of patients hospitalized with life-threatening infections in resource-constrained settings. As part of his research portfolio, he has led multinational consortia that focus on strengthening sepsis research capacity in sub-Saharan Africa to uncover and address knowledge gaps along the patient care continuum. Dr Jacob also has over a decade of experience as a consultant to the World Health Organization on a wide range of sepsis-related topics [including case management of viral haemorrhagic fevers (VHF)] and is the co-founder and a Director of Walimu (a Ugandan NGO), the Secretary General for the African Sepsis Alliance and Board and Executive Committee Member for the Global Sepsis Alliance. In 2018, his alma mater, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, recognised his work in sepsis and VHF by awarding him with the Leadership in Public Health Practice Award.
Reader in Emerging and High Consequence Infectious Diseases , UK
Tom is a Reader in Emerging and High Consequence Infectious Diseases and Director of Global Health Trials Unit. After completing undergraduate training at University of Leeds, Tom undertook his general duties in the Defence Medicine Services and then higher specialist training in Liverpool in Infectious Disease and General Internal Medicine. He was seconded to the department of Pandemic and Epidemic Diseases at HQ WHO for a year before the 2013-15 EVD outbreak in West Africa, during which he and colleagues from the WHO clinical team led a step change in Ebola case management. For his Ph.D. he undertook a Wellcome Trust fellowship investigating the interaction of immune response, viral load and clinical course in a cohort of patients with Crimean-Congo Hemorrhagic Fever (CCHF) in Turkey. During the COVID-19 pandemic, he returned to HQ WHO clinical team and was deployed to South Korea before returning to support the UK NHS response.
Tom is a senior investigator within the AGILE trial platform(link is external)(opens in a new tab), leading AGILE International and the laboratory pillar. He is the candidate chief investigator on 2 early phase trials of novel therapeutics in COVID-19 in the UK and South Africa.
His research at LSTM is mainly focussed on High-Consequence Infectious Diseases, where he is the Co-Director of the ACTIVE platform - ACcelerating Therapeutics and dIagnostics in Viral HaEmorrhagic fever. He has active research programmes in Turkey, Sudan and West Africa.
Reader in Critical Care Medicine,
I am a reader in critical care medicine and health systems development at the Institute of Regeneration and Repair, University of Edinburgh. I co-lead the Wellcome Collaboration for Research, Implementation and Training for Critical care in Asia and Africa. Under this umbrella, I collaborate with clinicians and research consortiums to develop and implement near real time digital healthcare registries, support scalable population health surveillance, critical care benchmarking and service improvement. My work combines research methods, with a focus on person centred approaches.
Intensive Care and Acute Medicine Trainee, Malawi
I am an intensive care and acute medicine registrar, and a Wellcome Trust Clinical PhD Fellow at the Malawi-Liverpool-Wellcome Clinical Research Programme in Blantyre, Malawi. Prior to moving to Malawi, I conducted research in Madagascar (2015-2021), and completed an MSc in Epidemiology at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
My current research focuses on multimorbidity-associated emergency hospitalisation with a focus on development of health-system pathways and disease management in sub-Saharan Africa. Additionally, I lead a cohort study to understand pathology and outcomes of hypoxaemic patients in Malawi; and I co-lead the ultrasound arm of the BREATHE trial (Building Respiratory support in East Africa Through High flow versus low flow oxygen Evaluation).
Professor of Intensive Care Medicine ,
Dan Martin is a professor in anaesthesia and intensive care medicine at Derriford hospital and university of Plymouth.
His research interest is focused on oxygen physiology; in particular how humans adapt to low levels of oxygen and the potential harm caused by excessive oxygen. He was involved in a series of research expeditions to high altitude with the Xtreme Everest team defining oxygen physiology near the summit of Mount Everest where they recorded the lowest oxygen levels ever reported in humans. The group is studying the key adaptive processes required to survive such low levels of oxygen through a wide range of studies at various altitudes.
He is currently the chief investigator for the NIHR funded UK-ROX trial and EXAKT study in the UK. UK-ROX trial is investigating if giving a little less oxygen than usual to critically ill patients on a mechanical ventilator will improve their survival. The aim is to recruit 16,500 patients from 100 NHS intensive care units. In the EXAKT study we will be investigating the accuracy pulse oximeters in critically ill patients with different skin tones, to answer a very important question about these essential oxygen monitoring devices.
I am also very interested in exercise and how it can be used to improve clinical outcomes. We have used a tailored exercise intervention to train patients waiting for liver transplantation and I am the co-chief investigator of the NIHR-funded EXALT trial in which we will further evaluate the effect of exercise around the time of liver transplantation. I am also invoked with a study to explore the benefits of exercise programmes in patients awaiting bariatric surgery.
I am the National Institute of Academic Anaesthesia academic training coordinator and Royal College of Anaesthetists Bernard Johnson advisor for academic training. I am passionate about promoting academic training for both doctors in training and allied health professionals. I supervise a number of higher degree students including scientists, medical doctors and allied health professionals.
I have been the Editor in Chief of the Journal of the Intensive Care Society for the last four years and sit on the Council of the Intensive Care Society.
In 2015 I was awarded Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE), for services to the prevention of infectious diseases. This was the result of our work at the Royal Free Hospital in London, caring for patients with Ebola virus disease.
Clinical fellow in Critical Care ,
Clare is a clinical fellow in Critical Care at Aberdeen Royal Infirmary. She graduated from the University of Dundee in 2021 and completed her foundation training in NHS Grampian. She then undertook the clinical fellow position at Aberdeen Royal Infirmary and intends to pursue a career as an Intensivist.
Critical Care Research nurse at UCLH,
Ingrid Hass is a Critical Care Research nurse at UCLH. She has been part of the research team for five years where she combines both her experience as a clinical Intensive Care Nurse with the learning from her MSc in Advanced Practice Nursing. As part of her MSC she explored the implementation of wearable devices in the ward setting to prevent patient deterioration and improve hospital mortality and ICU admission rates. Her work was later selected as part of a poster presentation at the national Patient Safety Congress. She has an interest improving patient safety and outcomes through the deployment and integration of novel technology, leading to her involvement in both the Nightingale wireless monitoring study and Soapbox which she presents here today. She coordinates and leads on several Critical Care clinical trials, both observational and interventional.
Deputy Director for the South West Critical Care Network,
David Cain is the Deputy Director for the South West Critical Care Network. He is a Critical Care Consultant at Royal Cornwall Hospital, Truro and also works as a Transfer Consultant for the Retrieve Critical Care Transfer service. His interests include perioperative medicine, sepsis and digital medicine.Critical care pharmacist,
Paul is a highly specialist pharmacist – critical care at St Bartholomew’s Hospital and has been since the post was created in 2022. Prior to this he was a specialist cardiac pharmacist for 9 years, which included multiple rotations through critical care. His special interests include drug handling in critical illness and managing complex cardiac patients. Paul is passionate about collaborative working, learning from and sharing knowledge with all multidisciplinary team members to ensure holistic patient care.
ST5 dual ICM and anaesthetics trainee,
ST5 dual ICM and anaesthetics trainee based in Northern Ireland, only just beginning my journey into clinical research. Due to undertake research fellowship year in Belfast from August. Interests include neurocritical care and major trauma.Speech and Language Therapist,
Helen has over 20 years experience working as a speech and language therapist (SLT) in the UK and New Zealand. She has worked extensively with patients with a tracheostomy in intensive care, H&N cancer and brain injury rehabilitation. She is a member of the International Group of SLTs Working in Ultrasound, whose pioneering work explores clinical applications of ultrasound in voice, speech, swallowing and tracheostomy. She is committee member and Treasurer of the Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists’ Tracheostomy Clinical Expert Network. Helen currently holds an NIHR Clinical Doctoral Research Fellowship, jointly hosted by Barnet Hospital (Royal Free London NHS FT), and the UCL Division of Surgery and Interventional Science. Her PhD focuses on how to choose the best size tracheostomy tube for adults in ICU, inspired by seeing first hand the effects of tube size on patient experience and recovery. She is passionate about humanising care in the ICU through person-centred, ‘whole-picture’ approaches to management.
Consultant Intensivist ,
Amit is a Consultant Intensivist at the Royal Free Hospital, London, and an Honorary Consultant Lung Transplant Physician at University Hospitals Birmingham. He is a clinical lead for lung utilisation within NHSBT and current chair of the UK Association of Lung Transplant Physicians.
Amit trained in Edinburgh, Glasgow, Oxford and London. He undertook an ISHLT travelling scholarship to Toronto General Hospital (2017) and an MRC Chain-Florey PhD fellowship at Imperial College, using computational genomics to study transplant fungal immunobiology (2020).
Hi professional interests are donor optimisation on the ITU and infectious complications in the immunocompromised host.
Consultant Clinical Psychologist ,
Dr Julie Highfield is a Consultant Clinical Psychologist & Lead for Organisational Health in Adult and Paediatric Critical Care, Cardiff. She is the National Project Director for Wellbeing in the Intensive Care Society. She has a long experience of working as a psychologist in medical and health care settings and works closely with staff in their experience of working in healthcare, as well as advising managers on matters of workforce wellbeing. Julie has worked with the British Psychological Society and its Division of Clinical Psychology in Wales. She led the BPS team writing the National Guidance for Staff in the Coronavirus Pandemic.
Julie works with the Welsh Assembly Government in various projects, including as the lead for Critical Care Workforce Task and Finish Group, and Modelling for Rehabilitation for patients post COVID-19, and the Wellbeing Conversation Tool. She has a number of publications and book chapters in the field of critical care, staff wellbeing, and leadership.
Consultant Intensivist and Anaesthetist,
Marcus Peck is a consultant in anaesthesia and intensive care medicine at Frimley Park Hospital (Surrey, UK), chair of the Intensive Care Society (ICS)’s Focused Ultrasound for Intensive Care (FUSIC) committee, and author of the OUP textbook 'Focused Intensive Care Ultrasound'. He is a passionate ultrasound trainer and teaches widely. Marcus sits on several national committees, including the ICS Council and British Society of Echocardiography’s Professional Standards Committee, delivering UK ultrasound training and quality assurance. He relishes breaking down organisational barriers, and dreams of the day when bedside ultrasound is normal practise for all frontline clinicians.
Consultant Intensivist ,
Ashley Miller is an Intensivist at Shrewsbury and Telford Hospitals. His specialist area of interest is Intensive Care ultrasonography. The 1st person to become BSE accredited in Critical Care Echocardiography, he is a BSE committee member and examiner. He has co-authored guidelines for the BSE on assessing fluid responsiveness with echocardiography. He is an elected ICS council member and co-chair of the Focussed Ultrasound in Intensive Care (FUSIC) committee where he has helped introduce a modular curriculum and accreditation pathway for Intensive Care ultrasonography. He is a speaker on ultrasound at international conferences and teaches on ultrasound courses around the country. He is a published author on ultrasound and is co-editing a forthcoming textbook on critical care ultrasound.Advanced Practitioner in Critical Care and ICS APCC Professional Advisory Group, Chair,
Hannah is an Advanced Critical Care Practitioner and A/Professor in Advanced Clinical Practice, University of Nottingham UK.
Hannah specialises in Critical Care Echocardiography and Ultrasound and sits on the committee for Focussed Ultrasound in Intensive Care (FUSIC), taking a lead role in FUSIC Heart. Hannah is an approved supervisor and examiner for multiple accredited ultrasound programmes, including BSE and has over a decade of experience in ultrasound education.
Hannah is a keen clinical researcher and is currently conducting a study into the use of telemedicine to aid echocardiography mentoring on intensive care. Another research interest is characterisation of right ventricular (RV) injury. Hannah is co-chair for PRORVnet, an international RV centric research network and is proud to be an RV defender!
Consultant in Intensive Care and Acute Medicine , UK
Jennie is a Consultant in Intensive Care and Acute Medicine in, the sometimes sunny but always beautiful, Cornwall in Southwest England.
She is an avid point of care ultrasonographer and teaches bedside scanning on a regular basis. She was a founding member of three of the major working groups for point-of-care ultrasound training in the UK (FUSIC, FAMUS and CACTUS). She continues to contribute educational material, time and enthusiasm to all three.
She has an interest in enhanced care delivered outside of the critical care setting. She has contributed to recent national guidance from the Society of Acute Medicine and Intensive Care Society helping define how this is best delivered.
She is mum to two young boys, cross-fit enthusiast and occasionally competent gardener.
Consultant in Intensive Care, Acute & General Internal Medicine ,
Prashant is a Consultant in Intensive Care, Acute & General Internal Medicine at William Harvey Hospital (East Kent Hospitals). He is an honorary senior lecturer at Queen Mary University London (QMUL), giving lectures regarding the role of echocardiography in resuscitation and chairing tutorials on diagnostics and imaging modalities in resuscitation. He teaches and lectures at both regional and national ultrasound and echo conferences and courses.
He is member of the national Focused Ultrasound in Intensive Care (FUSIC) committee and is BSE Level 2 accredited in Critical Care Echocardiography. He is a FUSIC & FICE (Focused Intensive Care Echocardiography) supervisor & mentor and runs national FUSIC courses. He is published in research in the use of echo and ultrasound in Intensive Care and Acute Medicine and in the assessment of haemodynamic status using echo.
Prashant was the Chief Investigator (CI) for the national lung ultrasound and echo CORONA study (COre ultRasOund of covid in iNtensive care & Acute medicine) assessing the lung ultrasound features and the incidence of left and right ventricular dysfunction in COVID ICU patients. He is the creator and co-host of Ultra Live, the world’s first live POCUS gameshow at the SOA this year.
Consultant Intensivist & Anaesthetist and National FUSIC® Lung Lead, UK
Justin Kirk-Bayley is a Consultant Intensivist & Anaesthetist at Royal Surrey NHS Trust in Guildford, UK where he has been Clinical Lead for ICU, and is now Deputy Medical Director. His clinical passion is for pragmatic delivery of point of care ultrasound, having run a training fellowship for over a decade and being a part of the ICS’s FUSIC committee. He has published and teaches ultrasound around the world. As his Trust’s Professional Director for Therapeutics, he is committed to medication safety and optimisation, lecturing internationally about improvement in medication process and has helped found the Turning the Tide group to improve the UK’s use of intravenous fluids. (@Turningthe_Tide)
Consultant Intensivist , UK
Dr Zudin Puthucheary is a Clinical Senior Lecturer in Intensive Care Medicine at the William Harvey Institute, Queen Mary, University of London, and a Consultant at the Royal London Hospital Adult Intensive Care Unit. He graduated from Nottingham University in 1997, and moved to London post MRCP in 2000. Following a 3-year stint in Sydney, he started his Respiratory training in Bristol, before completing his critical care training in London. He worked as a Respiratory and Critical Care Consultant at National University Hospital Singapore before returning to the UK.
His research focusses on acquired functional disability, and the use of metabolic, nutritional and exercise interventions to prevent and treat muscle wasting, and has published over 100 papers with a H index of 39. Zudin is a nationally elected Council member of the Intensive Care Society (UK). He was the inaugural chair of the UK National Post-Intensive Care Rehabilitation Collaborative, a multi-professional cross-disciplinary group focussing on rehabilitation and restitution of critical illness survivors. His work on acute muscle wasting has won awards from the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine , European Society of Anesthesia, the British Thoracic Society, the Intensive Care Society, The American Society of Enteral and Parenteral Nutrition and Zudin was named a Global Rising Star by the Australia and New Zealand Intensive Care Society.
He chairs the UK National Post-Intensive Care Rehabilitation Collaborative, a multi-professional cross-disciplinary group focussing on rehabilitation and restitution of critical illness survivors.
:
@Zudin_P
Lead Nurse Associate Director and ICS Nursing Professional Advisory Group, Chair.,
Michaela joined North West London ACC Network as Lead Nurse /Associate Director at the end of January 2024 having spent almost 6 years as a matron at Southampton University Hospital Cardiac ICU. She has worked in critical care for over three decades where much of her career has been at UCLH and Cambridge.
Michaela has always had a passion for education, training, workforce and leadership.
Michaela is an elected council member at the Society and chair of the Society’s Nurse Professional Advisory Group. She is a member of the Critical Care National Network Nurse Leads Forum (CC3N), Critical Care Nurse Education Review Forum, a subgroup of CC3N and a member of UK Critical Care Nursing Alliance.
Consultant Intensivist and Trauma , UK
Dr Victoria Metaxa is a full-time Critical Care and Major Trauma Consultant, at King’s College Hospital in London. She is a King's College London Honorary Clinical Senior Lecturer, and has a PhD in neurosciences and an MA in Medical Ethics and Palliative Care from Keele University. Her clinical interests include bioethics, end-of-life care, critical care outreach and the management of patients with haematological malignancies. Dr Metaxa is a member of the European Society of Intensive Care (ESICM) Ethics section, and the representative of the section in the e-learning committee. She is the UK National Outreach Forum board Secretary and a member of the Legal and Ethical Advisory Group of the UK Intensive Care Society (ICS).Patient Safety Commissioner, UK
Dr Henrietta Hughes OBE started in September 2022 as the first Patient Safety Commissioner, an independent role recommended by the report First Do No Harm.
Acting as an independent champion for patients Henrietta leads a drive to improve the safety of medicines and medical devices by ensuring that patient voices are at the heart of the design and delivery of healthcare in England.
A practising GP and a member of the Health Honours Committee and the guiding group of the Women’s Health and Care Leaders Network, Henrietta was previously the National Guardian for the NHS and a Medical Director at NHS England. Henrietta has held executive and non-executive roles in the NHS and is Chair of Childhood First, a children’s charity.
Professor of Clinical Nursing , UK
Professor Natalie Pattison is a clinical academic who has worked clinically in cancer, critical care and critical care outreach. She is a Professor of Clinical Nursing with a joint appointment across the University of Hertfordshire and East and North Herts NHS Trust. Natalie also holds a Researcher in Residence (ICU) position at Imperial College London, working in the CATO team, with an honorary contract with Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust. She is the clinical lead for critical care follow-up services, combining this with a research role. Her research interests focus on her clinical area of critical care and critically ill ward patients, end of life in critical care, and disability in critical care. She is widely published in critical care supportive care. She is Chair of the National Outreach Forum, immediate past-Chair of UK Critical Care Research Group, and the UK Critical Care Nursing Alliance. She is also Deputy Lead for the National Institute for Health Research National Specialty Group for Critical Care.
President of College of Intensive Care Medicine of Australia and New Zealand, Australia
Rob trained in the UK, having originally been in the first year of the combined 'Barts and the London' in 1995. He moved over to NZ in 2004 and dual trained in General Medicine and Intensive Care (FRACP and FCICM) but works full-time in ICU at Auckland Hospital Department of Critical Care Medicine (DCCM)- which is a tertiary ICU providing trauma, neurosurgery, liver and renal transplant and haem/onc services. It was the first ICU set up in Australasia in the early 1960's. He moved over a year ago from Middlemore Hospital, having spent 6yrs at the National Burns and Spinal ICU.
He joined the College of Intensive Care Medicine of Australia and New Zealand (CICM) as a trainee rep and is the current CICM President over 12yrs. He was the Education lead for the College, and has published on the history of ICU training in Australia and New Zealand, as well as setting up collaborations with the UK. He has recently finished writing the inaugural chapter on 'Obesity' for the next edition of 'Oh's Intensive Care'.
Consultant Nurse in critical care & critical care outreach,
John is Consultant Nurse in critical care & critical care outreach at UCLH, theme lead at the NIHR Central London Patient Safety Research Collaboration, previously National Clinical Advisor at NHSE, and UK lead of the EU Horizon 2020 ‘Nightingale’ wireless monitoring development programme.
He set-up one of the first Critical Care Outreach services in the UK, was first Chair of the National Outreach Forum, and Programme Lead for Critical Care Outreach at the Department of Health 2002-2005.
During the pandemic, John was clinical nurse lead for the set-up and running of a new high-care respiratory unit at UCH, increasing critical care capacity by 25%.
From 2022, he has been co-lead of the NHS England national Patient Worry & Concern Improvement Collaborative - the precursor to the Martha’s Rule programme.
John sits on the Royal College of Physicians National Early Warning Score Advisory Group - writing two editions of the National Early Warning Score - and Society of Critical Care Medicine Taskforce.
Consultant Intensivist, Rotherham NHS Foundation Trust
Clare is a Consultant in ICM & Anaesthesia in Rotherham, South Yorkshire, having been appointed in 2014 and is a current ICS Council Member.
She has a keen interest in patient safety and governance, taking the lead for Critical Care Governance since 2015 and being an active member of the ICS Standards & Guidelines Committee.
She is a strong advocate for the care of young adults as they transition into the care of Adult Critical Care and was the lead author for the joint national guidelines between the ICS and PCCS (Paediatric to Adult Critical Care Transition).
Other interests include Organ Donation, having been a Clinical Lead for Organ Donation since 2019, and a representative of the ICS on the National Organ Donation Committee.
Consultant Intensivist and Anaesthetist, UK
Kris is a Consultant in Intensive Care Medicine and Anaesthesia at Sheffield Teaching Hospitals.
After medical school in Munich and a PhD in hepatobiliary research, he bimbled through several clinical specialties with posts in Germany, Australia and Cornwall, before finding his love for ICM in Sheffield.
Kris’s clinical and academic interests include critical care management of pulmonary hypertension, hyperinflammation/HLH, ICU management of patients with haematological malignancies and paediatric-to-adult critical care transition. He is a member of the national Hyperinflammation and HLH across specialty collaboration (www.hihasc.org), training programme director for ICM in Yorkshire and the Humber and, most importantly, dad to two brilliant boys aged 13 and 8.
Senior Sister in Critical Care, UK
Jo is a Senior Sister in Critical Care at Sheffield Teaching Hospitals.
She graduated from Sheffield University in March 2000 and has worked in Critical Care for 24 years. For the last 8 years Jo has been involved in the transition of paediatric patients into adult Critical Care services and she provides a nurse led transition service which supports all aspects of the patients journey from pre planning through to supporting the MDT post transition.
Jo also specialises in digital integration and co-leads the Critical Care digital service. She manages several quality initiatives including the Critical Care follow up service, audit services and Critical Care elective booking service.
She is mum to 3 lovely children and to her feline companions.
Consultant in Paediatric Intensive Care ,
Rum is a Consultant in Paediatric Intensive Care and Deputy Medical Director at Sheffield Children's NHS Foundation Trust. She is Clinical Lead of Yorkshire & Humber Paediatric Critical Care Operational Delivery Network, Training Advisor for Royal College of Paediatric and Child Health’s Paediatric Intensive Care Medicine Intercollegiate SAC, as well as Clinical Member of the Clinical Reference Group of Paediatric Critical Care – NHS England.
Her clinical interests include transition from paediatrics to adult critical care and diabetic ketoacidosis where she has co-authored national guidelines for both. Her focus is also to promote equitable access to health care for children and young people.
Her other interests include development and training of postgraduate doctors in paediatrics and paediatric critical care, improving patient safety and quality of care, as well as increasing awareness of sepsis and its management. And, walking in the Peak District, travel and photography.
Paediatric Critical Care Nurse, UK
Lucy has worked in the Paediatric Critical Care Unit for 20 years. After completing her nursing degree in Birmingham (back in the day when nursing degrees were a new concept) she moved back to Derbyshire and started as a Band 5 staff nurse.
As the PCCU Transition Nurse she works closely with young people and their families who require regular care on PCCU, usually due to long-term respiratory failure.
Other interests include staff health and wellbeing, the Psychological impact of working in PCCU, Safeguarding, Debriefing, Band 6 Nurse Development and Developmentally appropriate Healthcare for young people.
Consultant Clinical Psychologist ,
Dr Julie Highfield is a Consultant Clinical Psychologist & Lead for Organisational Health in Adult and Paediatric Critical Care, Cardiff. She is the National Project Director for Wellbeing in the Intensive Care Society. She has a long experience of working as a psychologist in medical and health care settings and works closely with staff in their experience of working in healthcare, as well as advising managers on matters of workforce wellbeing. Julie has worked with the British Psychological Society and its Division of Clinical Psychology in Wales. She led the BPS team writing the National Guidance for Staff in the Coronavirus Pandemic.
Julie works with the Welsh Assembly Government in various projects, including as the lead for Critical Care Workforce Task and Finish Group, and Modelling for Rehabilitation for patients post COVID-19, and the Wellbeing Conversation Tool. She has a number of publications and book chapters in the field of critical care, staff wellbeing, and leadership.
Chief Executive, Intensive Care Society
Sandy began her career as a radiographer, which led to her undertaking a PhD in Child Health. Making the decision to move away from a clinical setting, Sandy gained a wealth of experience operating at a senior management level, leading strategy and change programmes for non profit organisations and membership bodies particularly those involved in professional education, training, standards, research and international development. Sandy joined the Society in 2017.ICS President and Consultant Intensivist and Anaesthetist,
Steve Mathieu is the President of the Intensive Care Society.
He is a Consultant in Critical Care at Portsmouth Hospitals University NHS Trust and the Divisional Director for Clinical Delivery (Critical Care, Anaesthetics, Theatres, Radiology, Pharmacy, Therapies, Blood Sciences and Pathology). He was previously the Clinical Director of Critical Care when the ICU was rated outstanding in all domains by the CQC.
His previous roles for the Society include Congress Director for State of the Art (SOA), Honorary Treasurer and Council Member.
He has interests in patient and staff experience, workforce and operational strategy as well as medical education and information technology. He is a co-founder and senior editor for The Bottom Line and set up and maintains the Portsmouth ICU website.
Twitter: @stevemathieu75
Consultant Intensivist and Anaesthetist,
Ganesh Suntharalingam OBE is a former ICS President, former SOA organiser, and former Mr. Universe (*one of these statements may be incorrect). He is an intensivist at Northwick Park and Ealing hospitals and chair of the NW London Critical Care Network.
He has a longstanding (but amateur) interest in healthcare architecture and in spending your tax money, having been clinical design champion for a £65M acute hospital PFI and primary clinical project board lead for a £25M ED new build and a £13M theatre redevelopment. He is on the organising committee and a standing chair for the influential European Healthcare Design congress.
He is relatively disaster-prone, and among other things was ICS President during the first year of the pandemic. Prior to this he led the critical care response to the TGN1412 drug trial emergency, the world's first molecular biology major incident. In 2006 he appeared on CNN's evening news bulletin alongside Tony Blair and Saddam Hussein. He is the only one of these to still be in post.
Consultant Intensivist , USA
Hannah Wunsch is a critical care doctor and Professor and Vice Chair for Research in the Department of Anaesthesiology at Weill Cornell Medicine.
Born in Boston and raised in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Hannah attended Harvard College, graduating with a BA in Biology. She attended Washington University School of Medicine and received a Master's Degree in Epidemiology from the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine. She completed an anaesthesia residency and critical care fellowship at Columbia University. She was on faculty in the Department of Anaesthesiology at Columbia and then at the University of Toronto where she held a Canada Research Chair, before moving to Weill Cornell Medicine in 2023.
Hannah holds research funding from the NIH, US Department of Defense and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. Her work focuses on the delivery and outcomes of critical care using large databases. Her research has been published in The Lancet, JAMA, BMJ and many specialty journals.
Hannah is the author of the book The Autumn Ghost: How the Battle Against a Polio Epidemic Revolutionized Modern Medical Care. Her writing has also appeared in The Globe & Mail, The Literary Review of Canada, McSweeney's, and other journals. She lives on the Upper West Side of Manhattan and the village of Woods Hole on Cape Cod, Massachusetts
Consultant Speech and Language Therapist,
Sarah Wallace OBE FRCSLT is a Consultant Speech and Language Therapist (SLT) at Wythenshawe Hospital in Manchester and honorary senior lecturer at the University of Manchester. She specialises in Critical Care and has over 30 years of clinical experience as an SLT. After training in Manchester, Sarah has worked in hospitals and Non-Government Organisations in the UK, Singapore, Grenada (WI) and Cambodia. Whilst working clinically in cardiothoracic, ECMO and general critical care in Manchester, she also teaches and conducts research internationally, focussing on laryngeal injury, dysphagia and communication issues post intubation and tracheostomy. She has over 60 publications, several top cited articles winning awards from the BMJ and the ICS. She holds expert advisor roles with the Intensive Care Society (ICS), the National Tracheostomy Safety Project and the Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists (RCSLT) and has contributed to many policies, guidelines and initiatives including GPICS, FEES, NCEPOD and the ICS National Rehabilitation Collaborative. Sarah is also an Associate Editor for JICS. She has pioneered new treatments for laryngeal recovery in ICU, setting up the first FEES service in Asia and the UK and supports SLT service development in the UK, Sweden and Chile.
Professor of Critical Care,
Tim Walsh is Professor of Critical Care at the University of Edinburgh and Honorary Consultant in Critical Care at Edinburgh Royal Infirmary. He is also Director Innovation for NHS Lothian, and Health Innovation South East Scotland. He is Head of the Academic Dept of Anaesthesia, Critical Care, and Pain Medicine in the University of Edinburgh, and Co-director of Acute Care Edinburgh a multidisciplinary research grouping in the University of Edinburgh Usher Institute.
Tim leads a multidisciplinary clinical research group with interests including transfusion medicine, sedation in the critically ill, recovery from critical illness and the epidemiology and prevention of ICU acquired infection. He has a particular interest in large pragmatic clinical trials, complex health intervention trials, and the evaluation of novel diagnostics and technologies in acute care. He is a past Chairman of the NIHR UK Critical Care Research Network and UK Critical Care Research Group.
Consultant Intensivist and Anaesthetist,
Marcus Peck is a consultant in anaesthesia and intensive care medicine at Frimley Park Hospital (Surrey, UK), chair of the Intensive Care Society (ICS)’s Focused Ultrasound for Intensive Care (FUSIC) committee, and author of the OUP textbook 'Focused Intensive Care Ultrasound'. He is a passionate ultrasound trainer and teaches widely. Marcus sits on several national committees, including the ICS Council and British Society of Echocardiography’s Professional Standards Committee, delivering UK ultrasound training and quality assurance. He relishes breaking down organisational barriers, and dreams of the day when bedside ultrasound is normal practise for all frontline clinicians.
Lead Nurse Associate Director and ICS Nursing Professional Advisory Group, Chair.,
Michaela joined North West London ACC Network as Lead Nurse /Associate Director at the end of January 2024 having spent almost 6 years as a matron at Southampton University Hospital Cardiac ICU. She has worked in critical care for over three decades where much of her career has been at UCLH and Cambridge.
Michaela has always had a passion for education, training, workforce and leadership.
Michaela is an elected council member at the Society and chair of the Society’s Nurse Professional Advisory Group. She is a member of the Critical Care National Network Nurse Leads Forum (CC3N), Critical Care Nurse Education Review Forum, a subgroup of CC3N and a member of UK Critical Care Nursing Alliance.
Clinical Academic Physiotherapist ,
Owen is a Clinical Academic Physiotherapist in critical care at Oxford University Hospitals and a post-doctoral researcher at the University of Oxford. His research interests centre around the rehabilitation of patients throughout their recovery pathway following an admission to critical care. He has recently completed his NIHR clinical doctoral research fellowship evaluating the musculoskeletal health state of ICU survivors.
Dietitian in Critical Care and ICS AHP Professional Advisory Group, Chair,
Danielle obtained her Nutrition and Dietetics degree at the University of Wollongong and after working for a short time in Sydney, she moved to London and has been the Principal Critical Care Dietitian at Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust (GSTT) for the past 11 years. Danielle has recently completed a Health Education England / National Institute for Health Research (HEE/NIHR) Clinical Doctoral Research Fellowship where she explored the measurement and prevention of skeletal muscle wasting during critical illness and the effect on recovery. On the back of this, she was awarded the prestigious British Dietetic Association Rose Simmonds Award for the best research publication of 2019. Danielle has been instrumental in guiding critical care dietetic services during the COVID-19 pandemic, being awarded British Dietetic Association Roll of Honour in 2020 and 2021 for her work.