This course will be delivered by a skilled faculty of national and international experts. It is appropriate for multi-professional candidates with clinical roles in acute paediatrics.
Delivery methods:
· Face to face lectures, seminars and tutorials
· Simulated clinical learning sessions
· Self-directed learning and literature review with distance learning support
This will include:
D1/D2:
· Organisation of UK Paediatric Critical Care (PCC) services including quality, benchmarking and service improvement
· Physiological basis for critical illness
· Advanced pharmacology: drug choices, indications and side effects
· Organ support on the paediatric critical care unit: the physiological need and physics of therapy
· Right line, right place, right time
· Planning care for children with complex multisystem disease
· Human factors in critical care environments and crew resource management
· Current ‘Hot Topics’ in evidence-based PCC
· End of life care
D3:
· Development of a functional multi-disciplinary team
· Assessment of the critically ill child
· Resuscitation and stabilisation of all common paediatric emergencies with hands on experience
· Practical aspects of critical care transport and transport triage
· Introduction to transport crew resource management
· Framework for debriefing clinical events
· Principles behind governance and safety, quality, benchmarking and service improvement when out in the field
· Introduction to aeronautical transport principles
D4:
· Basis of cardiac disease in children as an introduction to paediatric cardiology and cardiac intensive care to include embryology and physiology
· Paediatric heart failure management
· Congenital cardiac lesions, including the postnatal presentation and early management relevant to the general practitioner.
· Specific lesions to be covered will include left heart obstruction, mixing lesions, left to right shunt, right heart obstruction and patent ductus
· Introduction to the concepts and practice of cardiopulmonary bypass
· Arrhythmia management
· Ethics and future directions of cardiac intensive care medicine