{"id":102,"date":"2016-11-16T01:40:10","date_gmt":"2016-11-16T01:40:10","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.confer.co.nz\/nzresus2018\/?page_id=102"},"modified":"2018-04-20T00:50:26","modified_gmt":"2018-04-20T00:50:26","slug":"speakers","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/www.confer.co.nz\/nzresus2018\/speakers\/","title":{"rendered":"Speakers"},"content":{"rendered":"
\t\t\t\t Biographies for our presenters will be available here as soon as they are confirmed. Please check back here on a regular basis to read more about our conference speakers.<\/p>\n \t\t\t\t Decisions regarding starting and stopping resuscitation can be aided by considering the four principles of biomedical ethics espoused by Beauchamp and Childress: respect for patient autonomy; beneficence; non-maleficence; and justice. However, during a resuscitation there is not much time to consider these and the patient usually has impaired decision-making capacity.<\/p>\n A model of consent, called presumed consent using professional substituted judgement, considers the benefits and harms of resuscitation from the perspective of the patient, and best respects these principles.<\/p>\n Mike Ardagh, (ONZM, PhD, MBChB, DCH, FACEM), is Professor of Emergency Medicine at the University of Otago, Christchurch, Specialist in Emergency Medicine and Clinical Lead for Hospital HealthPathways at the Canterbury District Health Board, Christchurch, New Zealand. His PhD is in bioethics with a particular focus on the ethics associated with decision making during resuscitation.<\/p>\n Malcolm Battin is a neonatologist at Auckland City Hospital. He has a long standing research interest in neonatal neurological injury, particularly neonatal encephalopathy (NE) in the term infant, and had served on the NE working group of the PMMRC since 2008.<\/p>\n \t\t\t\t Active learning engages learners in the\u00a0learning\u00a0process. Active learning uses meaningful\u00a0learning activities to enable learners to engage with learning materials, participate in class, collaborate with each other, and apply knowledge to solve real-world problems. In this session, participants will be provided with an overview of practical strategies to enhance active learning with a specific focus on teaching resuscitation.<\/p>\n \t There is a clear relationship between evidence-based post resuscitation care and survival to, and functional status at hospital discharge. Resuscitation does not stop after return of spontaneous circulation and post resuscitation care is a key element of the resuscitation process. Nurses as the only health professionals with direct and constant patient contact 24 hours per day, play a key role in the delivery of evidence-based post resuscitation care and nursing care has a direct impact on patient outcomes following cardiac arrest. In this session the key elements of post resuscitation care, with a specific focus on evidence-based nursing management of cardiac arrest survivors will be presented.\u00a0<\/p>\n Professor Julie Considine Deakin University\u2019s Professor of Nursing at Eastern Health, one of Victoria\u2019s largest health services. Julie nationally and internationally recognised for her expertise in patient safety research and education. She has a particular interest in clinical decision making, predicting clinical deterioration, and nurses\u2019 role in improving resuscitation outcomes. Julie has over 150 publications and has attracted over $5M in research and project funding. She is a Fellow of the College of Emergency Nursing Australasia and Australian College of Nursing. She is a Senior Editor of the Australasian Emergency Nursing Journal, represents the College of Emergency Nursing Australasia on the Australian Resuscitation Council, and is the Australia and New Zealand representative on the ILCOR*\u00a0Basic Life Support TaskForce. \t\t\t\t Gerry will highlight the successes had with CVD over the years, the role of the Heart Foundation, why CVD is still a priority and the ongoing challenges we have in NZ.<\/p>\n Gerry is the current Medical Director of the Heart Foundation and the Clinical leader of the New Zealand cardiac network. He is a Cardiologist and Honorary Associate Professor in Medicine with the Waikato Clinical school of the University of Auckland. Heart. Gerry is an experienced general cardiologist, with a special interest in the prevention and management of coronary artery disease, hypertension and heart failure.He\u00a0 is an experienced interventional cardiologist who completed his interventional fellowship in Torotono Canada. Gerry is a graduate of Trinity College Dublin Ireland and moved to New Zealand in 1988. He successfully completed his FRACP in 1995 and is also a Fellow of the Cardiac Society of Australia and New Zealand. He became a Fellow of the European Society of Cardiology in 2012 and completed an MD thesis with the University of Auckland in 2013. Gerry is a busy clinical researcher with over 90 publications. Research interests include acute coronary syndromes, heart failure and systems of care.<\/p>\n \t\t\t\t With statistics showing that more than 63% of Australians and 66% of New Zealanders are overweight or obese, the implications for healthcare are many including those related to resuscitation of this cohort of patients. A review of literature showed that each aspect of the process of resuscitation including the initial deterioration, gaining intravenous access, initial patient handling, the physical requirements of cardiopulmonary resuscitation and post resuscitation care are all impacted by obesity of the patient. This paper will briefly outline these findings.<\/p>\n With a background critical care nursing, Tracy Kidd has provided nursing education in the tertiary and clinical setting since 1999. She completed a masters of nursing science focussing on the education needs of nurses working in rural urgent care services. Currently she works as a nurse educator throughout the Loddon Mallee Region in Victoria and has represented the Australian College of Nursing on the Australian Resuscitation Council since 2013.<\/p>\n \t\t\t\t<\/p>\n A\/Prof Helen Liley is a neonatologist at in Brisbane, Australia. She is a member of the Neonatal Task Force of the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation, and the Australian Resuscitation Council. She is an author of evidence-based guidelines including on neonatal resuscitation, ethics of research in children and paediatric and neonatal patient blood management. She collaborates with researchers in the School of Psychology at The University of Queensland to study human factors in neonatal resuscitation.<\/p>\n \t\t\t\t<\/p>\n Lindsay is a Consultant Neonatologist at Counties Manukau District Health Board, with research interests in Neonatal Echocardiography. He was an ILCOR Neonatal Resuscitation worksheet author for the 2010 review, and a Topic Co-Chair for the 2015 round. He is a co-author of the current NZRC NLS Course.<\/p>\n \t\t\t\t<\/p>\n Kevin is the Chief Executive of the New Zealand Resuscitation Council (NZRC) and current Chair of the CORE Advanced Instructors of New Zealand. He has been involved with the NZRC for over 10 years, including setting strategic direction, general management of operations, and developing education and training programmes. Kevin’s experience includes that of senior nurse in clinical cardiology and resuscitation educator at Waikato Clinical Campus. He is a co-opted member of the Australian Resuscitation Council, a past member of the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation\u2019s (ILCOR) Basic Life Support task force and currently is an ILCOR Domain Lead for airway and ventilation.<\/p>\n \t\t\t\t While the evidence base for making changes to paediatric resuscitation guidelines is sparse, the Paediatric Task Force of ILCOR (International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation) continues to rigorously evaluate the evidence available in order to provide up to date treatment recommendations for those who are involved in paediatric resuscitation. Despite many questions remaining unanswered, un-researched and the majority of publications being based upon large registry studies, with their inherent confounders, outcomes post paediatric cardiac arrests have slowly improved over the last decade or so around the world.<\/p>\n This update in paediatric resuscitation will give a brief overview of the recent published highlights of paediatric resuscitation. This will include, amongst others, the topics of outcomes after paediatric cardiac arrest, safety in hospitals, drugs in CPR and advanced airway placement before ROSC (Return of Spontaneous Circulation).<\/p>\n Gabrielle Nuthall is a Paediatric Intensivist who has worked as a specialist in the paediatric intensive care unit at Starship Children\u2019s Hospital in Auckland, New Zealand, for the last fifteen years. Prior to her present position she completed fellowships in paediatric intensive care in Vancouver and Toronto, having completed her training as a paediatrician in Australia and New Zealand.<\/p>\n Gabrielle\u2019s areas of interest are resuscitation, simulation, teaching and early warning scores. She is a founding member of the Starship Simulation Program, actively involved in the patient at risk team and deteriorating patient steering groups in Starship, an APLS instructor, a member of the New Zealand Resuscitation Council, on the Paediatric Task Force Committee of ILCOR.<\/p>\n \t\t\t\t During a cardiac arrest, Emergency Medical Services have constraints on how quickly they can respond. Community first response and bystanders can play and essential role in starting cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and early defibrillation using Automated External Defibrillation (AEDs). In this talk, we describe the role of first responders in Singapore, leveraging off dispatcher-assisted CPR, community CPR\/AED training, smartphone applications and innovative partnerships.<\/p>\n \t On June 6-7, 2015 at the Utstein Abbey near Stavanger, Norway, 36 Emergency Medical Services (EMS) leaders, researchers, and experts from throughout the world convened to address the challenge of how to increase community cardiac arrest survival and how to achieve implementation of best practices and worthwhile programs. The Global Resuscitation Alliance (GRA) issued a report laying out ten programs to improve survival and ten steps to achieve successful implementation. Such a global effort will promote best practices and offer help with implementation to countless communities. In this talk we describe Singapore\u2019s experience in implementing the 10 programs and the outcomes from these efforts.<\/p>\n \t Community first response and bystanders can play an essential role in the chain of survival. It is important to see first responders as our partners and collaborators. In this talk, we describe our experiences working with first responders and the community as part our Singapore\u2019s Pre-hospital Emergecny Care masterplan, and our efforts to engage callers during a cardiac arrest, volunteer first responders in our \u2018MyResponder\u2019 smartphone app program, and the \u2018Survivor Singapore\u2019 awards.<\/p>\n \t It takes a system to save a life-not just technology. However in this age of connectedness, social media and smartphones, technology can be an enabler and facilitator for community response. In this talk, we describe Singapore\u2019s experience in using technology, crowd-sourcing and existing information Techonlogy (IT) infrastructure to change community response. We describe efforts to link the cardiac arrest victim with volunteer responders, public access defibrillators and Emergency Medical Services.<\/p>\n A\/Prof Marcus Ong is a Senior Consultant, Director of Research, and Clinician Scientist, at the Department of Emergency Medicine in Singapore General Hospital.\u00a0 He is also Head, Data Analytics, Health Services Research Center (HSRC), Singhealth Services; Associate Professor and Associate Director, Health Services and Systems Research (HSSR), Duke-NUS Medical School. A\/Prof Ong also serves as Medical Director, Unit for Prehospital Emergency Care (UPEC) and Senior Consultant, Ministry of Health, Hospital Services Division. Finally he is Chairman, Pan Asian Resuscitation Outcomes Study (PAROS).<\/p>\n A\/Prof Ong\u2019s research studies focus predominantly on pre-hospital emergency care, medical devices, and health services research. His research has addressed issues such as out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA), improving ambulance deployment, acute myocardial infarction care and emergency care.<\/p>\n A\/Prof Ong has obtained more than S$12 million in research grants for his studies, which include geospatial diseases mapping, clinical drug trials, resuscitation and cardiovascular sciences, pre-hospital emergency care, and biomedical engineering. He is the Principal Investigator for an international, multi-centre cohort study of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest across the Asia-Pacific. This clinical research network has published more than 36 articles in peer-reviewed journals since 2009. In total, A\/Prof Ong has published more than 150 articles in international and local journals, such as Journal of the American Medical Association, American Journal of Medicine, Critical Care Medicine, Resuscitation, Annals of Emergency Medicine, etc.<\/p>\n A\/Prof Ong has also patented inventions using Heart Rate Variability for risk prediction of acutely ill patients and cooling solutions for therapeutic hypothermia. The technology is currently being developed into bedside triage devices that can help in risk stratification of critically ill patients and he is Scientific Advisor for Global Healthcare, a start-up company providing medical cooling solutions.<\/p>\n \t\t\t\t<\/p>\n Jasmeet Soar is consultant in intensive care medicine and anaesthesia at Southmead Hospital Bristol, UK. Jas is the current chair of the ILCOR ALS Task Force, Chair of the European Resuscitation Council ALS Working Group and an Editor for the journal Resuscitation.<\/p>\n He is a past Chair of the Resuscitation Council (UK), and chairs the ALS Course Subcommittee, and led the 2015 UK Guidelines process. He has an interest in ensuring we have guidelines that we can trust, are easy to use, and make a real difference to patient outcomes.<\/p>\n He has over 200 publications about resuscitation topics. Jas has had lead roles in the development of the iResus and Lifesaver apps.<\/p>\n \t\t\t\t<\/p>\n Fiona trained as a Cardiologist at Greenlane Hospital and as an Obstetric Physician at National Women\u2019s Hospital. She has combined these two areas to develop a particular interest in maternal heart disease in pregnancy. She is active in Women\u2019s Health promoting better diagnosis and management of women with heart disease. She has written an invited review in the Obstetric Medicine Journal and reviewed for the Obstetric Medicine Journal and the Internal Medicine Journal.<\/p>\n \t\t\t\t<\/p>\n Dr. John McCarthy is the Principal Technical Specialist for Geospatial Analysis at the Ministry of Health. After completing a PhD in Quantitative Human Geography at the University of Leeds (UK) and a short stint as a Demographic Analyst in the private sector, John held a Postdoctoral Fellow role at the GeoHealth Laboratory (University of Canterbury) for nearly four years before moving to the Ministry of Health where he has been since February 2017.<\/p>\n \t\t\t\t GoodSAM is a platform that enables ambulance services to alert trained volunteers and dispatch staff to emergencies. It is a highly advanced technical platform with considerable flexibility built on governance, security and innovation. The principal focus has been on enabling CPR and AED provision prior to ambulance service arrival in cardiac arrest, however it has roles in impact brain apnoea and many other medical (and non-medical) emergencies. The service is already saving lives regularly across the UK and in states in Australia. The platform is now officially launching across New Zealand. This talk will discuss the development and principals of the system, as well as new elements including team communications, AED tracking and video triage.<\/p>\n Please do sign up for GoodSAM (www.goodsamapp.org<\/a>) – simply down load the App, upload your medical ID (e.g. your work badge) and select New Zealand: and the most relevant organisation \/ group for you to join (e.g. Registered Healthcare Professional).<\/p>\n Mark Wilson is a Consultant Neurosurgeon and Pre-Hospital Care Specialist at Imperial College, London. He is Professor of Brain Injury and Hon Professor (the Gibson Chair) of Pre-Hospital Care at the Royal College of Surgeons Edinburgh. His specialist interests are traumatic and hypoxic brain injury, and the brain in extreme environments. He has worked extensively overseas and as an expedition doctor.<\/p>\n He is co-founder and medical director of GoodSAM (www.goodsamapp.org<\/a>), an App and platform that alerts trained bystanders to cardiac arrests near them and has compiled the world’s largest AED Registry. The system was originally built because of the hypoxic brain injury seen in his air ambulance work, usually related to trauma, but has since expanded into considerably more, especially cardiac arrest. The latest developments in video triage and assistance in clinical decision making, are set to radically change the way ambulance services can deliver care.<\/p>\n
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\n\t\t\t\t<\/a><\/p>\nLook forward to an\u00a0inspiring lineup of internationally recognised
\nspeakers at our conference<\/h1>\n
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\n\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\tPresentation Outline
\n\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t<\/a>
\n\t\t\t\t\t\tPreview
\n\t\t\tmodal-<\/p>\nIs it ethical?<\/h2>\n
Mike Ardagh<\/h2>\n
Malcolm Battin<\/h2>\n
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\n\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\tPresentation 1 Outline
\n\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t<\/a>
\n\t\t\t\t\t\tPreview
\n\t\t\tmodal-<\/p>\nStrategies to enhance active learning<\/h2>\n
\n\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\tPresentation 2 Outline
\n\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t<\/a>
\n\t\t\t\t\t\tPreview
\n\t\t\tmodal-<\/p>\nPost Resuscitation Care \u2013 The role of nurses in enhancing patient outcomes<\/h2>\n
Julie Considine<\/h2>\n
\n*International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation<\/p>\n
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\n\t\t\tmodal-<\/p>\nDevelopments in the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of heart disease in New Zealand<\/h2>\n
Gerry Devlin<\/h2>\n
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\n\t\t\tmodal-<\/p>\nPounds and Pressure: Resuscitation of the Bariatric Patient<\/h2>\n
Tracy Kidd<\/h2>\n
Helen Liley<\/h2>\n
Lindsay Mildenhall<\/h2>\n
Kevin Nation<\/h2>\n
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\n\t\t\tmodal-<\/p>\nThe latest in paediatric life support<\/h2>\n
Gabrielle Nuthall<\/h2>\n
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\n\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\tPresentation 1 Outline
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\n\t\t\tmodal-<\/p>\nCommunity first responder program in Singapore<\/h2>\n
\n\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\tPresentation 2 Outline
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\n\t\t\tmodal-<\/p>\nGlobal Resuscitation Alliance 10 Steps to Improve Survival<\/h2>\n
\n\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\tPresentation 3 Outline
\n\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t<\/a>
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\n\t\t\tmodal-<\/p>\nLooking after the responder<\/h2>\n
\n\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\tPresentation 4 Outline
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\n\t\t\t\t\t\tPreview
\n\t\t\tmodal-<\/p>\nUsing technology to change community response<\/h2>\n
Marcus Ong<\/h2>\n
Jasmeet Soar<\/h2>\n
Fiona Stewart<\/h2>\n
Dr. John McCarthy<\/h2>\n
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\n\t\t\tmodal-<\/p>\nGoodSAM<\/h2>\n
Mark Wilson<\/h2>\n