The Wessex Children’s & Young Adult’s Palliative Care Network have had a busy few months setting up training days, a quarterly journal club and network forum meetings to discuss complex cases and share experience and challenges. We held an Advance Care Planning training day in November exploring and training on the Children & Young Persons Advance Care Plan version 5, and a Practical Symptom Management training day in February, diving deep into symptom management at the end of life. We are developing guidelines and shared policies to support equitable end of life care across Wessex and working with integrated care boards, managed clinical networks and providers to support the development of sustainable 24/7 services. We are approaching the end of another 6 months and a Wessex 6 monthly update will follow shortly.
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The Wessex genetics service have released new guidance for clinical teams to help with requesting genetic testing for acutely unwell children or children with developmental delay. These new pathways can be found at the links below or under the genetics tab on the Guidelines page:
The conference committee is pleased to release the provisional programme for PIER 2024 which is taking place at Hope Church, Winchester on the 8th and 9th October. We are proud of a rich and diverse programme which covers everything from an in-depth look at for asthma and allergy through to ultrasound guided IV access for beginners and how civility in the workplace saves lives. Have a look at the provisional programme below... Early bird ticket pricing will be released after the Easter holidays, so now is a good time to book in your study leave requests if you can. Early bird pricing will only be available for a short time, so make sure you get your tickets early! We will have more information and a finalised programme in the next few weeks. If you have any questions, please leave them in the comments below. More information will be released on the conference webpage
The RCEM position statement November 2021 recommended that the use of the SNAP regime to treat paracetamol toxicity should become the default standard practise in all emergency departments. Prior to this uptake of the SNAP regime had been sporadic across the UK with some early adopter sites utilising in place of the previous 21hr standard 3 bag protocol with the benefit of a reduced length of NAC treatment.
As per the Lancet publication 2019, The SNAP regime has been shown to be as effective as the traditional regime in preventing liver injury, with fewer adverse reactions (anaphylactoid reactions). www.piernetwork.org/paracetamol-overdose-snap-protocol.html |
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