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October/November 2013
Critical Connections
The Complete News Source for Critical Care Professionals
Advance Program
9/30/13 7:00 PM
Fundamentals
January 8-9, 2014 | San Francisco Marriott Marquis | San Francisco, California, USA
With the power of visual medicine, you can make faster, better-informed clinical decisions that can improve patient outcomes.
Ultrasound examinations in the critical care setting are increasingly in demand because of equipment portability, ease of use and ability to provide immediate, accurate evaluations. Advances in ultrasound technology continue to improve imaging capabilities, leading to everexpanding applications. Register today for the Society of Critical Care Medicines (SCCM) two-day comprehensive course and gain the training needed to perform and interpret ultrasound imaging. Benefit from didactic presentations and hands-on skill stations. Topics to be covered include: Lung Ultrasound Echocardiographic Approach to Shock Hypovolemia and Volume Responsiveness Hemodynamic Measurements and Systolic Function Vascular Access and Non-Vascular Procedures Space for this course is limited. Register today to guarantee your seat! Visit www.sccm.org/ultrasound or call SCCM Customer Service at +1 847 827-6888.
9/30/13 7:00 PM
Critical Connections
The Complete News Source for Critical Care Professionals
Volume 12, Number 5 October/November 2013
Contents
World-Renowned Multiprofessional Faculty. . 23-26 Continuing Education Credit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Registration Form. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 Hotel and Travel Information. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 Guest Registration Form. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 Sightseeing Activities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
Editor
Secretary Craig Coopersmith, MD, FCCM Professor of Surgery Emory University School of Medicine Emory Center for Critical Care Atlanta, Georgia, USA
Departments
Presidents Message. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Section and Chapter News . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
Are you a Pulmonary and/or Critical Care Physician looking to join an innovative healthcare system in a vibrant region? Look no further than Sentara Medical Group.
We are looking for:
EDITORIAL CONTRIBUTIONS: You are invited to share your expertise and perspective. Please contact the managing editor at +1 847 827-7405 or mnielsen@sccm.org. Critical Connections reserves the right to edit all articles and classied ads.
Critical Connections mission is to provide SCCM members and critical care professionals with timely information regarding the practice of critical care and the Societys activities. Critical Connections is published bi-monthly by the Society of Critical Care Medicine, 500 Midway Dr., Mount Prospect, IL 60056-5811 USA. Application to mail at periodicals postage prices is pending at Mount Prospect, IL and additional post ofces.
POSTMASTeR: Send address changes to Critical Connections, Society of Critical Care Medicine, 500 Midway Dr., Mount Prospect, IL 60056-5811 USA. Canadian return mail address is Station A, Box 54, Windsor ON, N9A 6J5 Copyright 2013 by the Society of Critical Care Medicine. All rights reserved. Statements of fact and opinion are the responsibility of the authors alone and do not imply an opinion on the part of the ofcers or members.
Care Physicians in Virginia Beach, Norfolk, and Williamsburg, VA. Mixture of inpatient and outpatient services. Interventional bronchoscopies such as EVBUS and navigational bronchoscopy. opportunities
Quality. Transformation. Innovation. Sentara Medical Group brings together more than 400 primary care and specialty physicians to care for patients across Virginia and Northeastern North Carolina a beautiful and temperate region of Atlantic Ocean and Chesapeake Bay beaches, rivers and historical areas. It is a division of Sentara Healthcare, one of the most progressive and integrated health care organizations in the nation. Additional benets include: Competitive Compensation & Benets Administrative Support Reduced Individual Risks Access to Innovative Tools & Technologies Support and Resources of a Broad-Based, Nationally The Recognized Healthcare System Can you see yourself here? We do. Your future is waiting. Contact us today. Kay Miller, Sentara Physician Recruitment Maqnager KMMILLE1@Sentara.com (757) 252-3032
www.sentara.com/smgrecruiting
EOE M/F/D/F A Drug Free / Tobacco Free Workplace
Sentara Ad13.indd 1
9/30/13 7:00 PM
VISUALIZE THIS!
A 66-year-old female was admitted to the ICU following an Aortic Valve Replacement and a CABG x3. Patients vitals: EF 35%, BP 107/57, CVP 9, SVo2 60% and PAP 45/26. The patient was on multiple vasopressors and inotropes. In mere hours her condition worsened. An ImaCor ClariTEE probe was placed to manage this patients hemodynamics. The third hTEE imaging session was signicant, revealing the formation of a thrombus adjacent to the left atrium. With the patient becoming progressively unstable, the decision was made to return to the OR to remove the thrombus. The next morning hTEE was reviewed showing greatly improved hemodynamics and LV function. Why was hTEE signicant in this patient? hTEE management allowed the MD to gauge uid responsiveness more condently than with a PAC. And with direct visualization over time the thrombus was revealed and remedied. ImaCor hTEE imaging provides vital information on heart function, rapidly changing management in critically ill cardiac patients saving money and lives.
Presidents Message
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Critical Connections
9/30/13 7:00 PM
with these issues.5 These tools help define the new standard of routine care for our patients while we address their diseases and illnesses. As we think about routine care, let us not forget sleep. Sleep cycles are restorative, as we remember our physiology studies; 6 all the more reason to provide environments conducive to maintaining rapid eye movement (REM) cycles in critically ill patients. With our many monitoring devices providing data trends and pumps that regulate drips precisely, surely we can establish time when lights are lowered, noise controlled, and interruptions minimized in consideration of the patients sleep needs. It can be scheduled like we schedule medications and morning labs. Changing practice involves a true multiprofessional approach as it affects all of our disciplines. As we change our sedation and analgesia practice protocols, effective strategies must be developed so all team members are aware of the changes. Many teams use the morning rounds to revisit the protocol, check the pain, sedation, delirium, and mobility outcomes of the last 24 hours, and set goals for the day. The most common question I am asked is: how can this be done with a limited nursing staff ? It can be done; it is being done around the world and not just with nurse-patient ratios of 1:1.7 Certainly every system is different, so the how does vary. Quality improvement strategies generally are used to identify whats best for a given setting. However, the ICU staff has demonstrated extraordinary capabilities in routinely packing up patients, with all of their equipment and tubes, and taking them for computed tomography scans. Additionally, patients who are awake and alert, participating in their care, can reduce the time necessary for routine care. With the patients reporting what they need, the team can meet those needs and avoid complications that would consume more effort and lengthen ICU stays. Of course, ambulation will take more staff time, but it can be planned for those times of day when resources are available. Some ICU systems have created shift change overlaps, set ambulation times between routine medication deliveries, or designated non-nurse team members to meet the resource needs. Other systems have physical therapy personnel direct this activity. Our industry partners have developed new ambulatory equipment and even in-bed bicycle-like equipment, much like the over-the-bed trapeze we now commonly use in orthopedics. The adage, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure, is especially applicable to patient mobility. It must be done. We can do it. Those pioneers who have tested no-sedation periods and ambulation with ventricular assist devices have shown it. They have proven that the risk of extubation and line loss with ambulation is insignificant when we identify the risk and secure these items for the activity.8 Seeing is believing.9 Connections Critical
Change is never easy, but when you see the response to this new routine care from patients and families, you will know it is the right action.Updating routine care in the ICU is our challenge. It can be done. It must be done. We can do it. Reference and disclosures are available at www.sccm.org/criticalconnections.
Learn more about pain, agitation and delirium and access the guidelines at www.sccm.org/ Research/Quality.
Seeing is Believing
Check out this video highlighting the success of early mobility in the ICU!
Carol Thompson, PhD, CCRN, ACNP, FCCM, is professor of critical care nursing at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center in Memphis, Tennessee, USA. She is serving as the 2013 president of the Society of Critical Care Medicine.
West
St. Bernadine
San Bernardino, CA - Staff Intensivist
u
248-bed regional medical center, 18-bed ICU, located at the southern tip of San Francisco Bay
Southwest
Christus St. Michael
Texarkana, TX - Staff Intensivist
u
426-bed hospital, 40-bed ICU, state of the art facility located in West Houston
East
Kennedy University Hospital
Washington Township, NJ - Staff Intensivist
u u
Raritan Bay*
Grandview
Sellersville, PA - Staff Intensivist
u
*New Program
F O R
M O R E
I N F O R M AT I O N
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0296-COG_CritCON_Oct-Nov_F.indd 1
Four Centuries of Biomedical Research in the US Army Medical Corps: Benets and Challenges
Basil A. Pruitt, Jr., MD, FACS, MCCM Clinical Professor of Surgery Betty and Bob Kelso Distinguished Chair in Burn and Trauma Surgery University of Texas Health Science Center San Antonio, Texas, USA
October/November 2013
9/30/13 7:00 PM
Postgraduate Courses
Receive a comprehensive update on the latest clinical treatments and administrative strategies that you can incorporate into your everyday practice. All of the postgraduate courses offered this year are new. Register early to guarantee your top choice, as space for each course is limited. Breakfast and lunch are included in the registration fee.
January 9, 2014 Moscone Center South Case-Based Pearls in Neurocritical Care This year, Case-Based Pearls in Neurocritical Care will take a novel approach in the discussion of the differential diagnosis, workup, management and treatment of critically ill patients who present with neurological ndings. Participants will review patients who present with falls, altered mental status, coma, seizures, headache or focal neurological ndings. Topics will include: cardiac arrest, acute ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke, spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage, status epilepticus, neuromuscular disease, and acute spinal cord injury. The interplay of commonly used ICU medications and interventions and the neurological system, and prognosis for various neurological disease states will be discussed. Fundamentals of Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation (ECMO) This one-day course will take you through the basic management principles common to ECMO programs for both adult and pediatric patients. This comprehensive overview will be taught by leading experts practicing ECMO. Topics include: patient selection, equipment options, cannula placement, roller versus centrifugal pumps, anticoagulation, stafng models, and sedation and weaning. Case studies will be presented, and participants will have the opportunity to interface with ECMO equipment. ICU Management Paradigms for the 21st Century Leadership and ICU management in the 21st century will become increasingly more challenging as different payment models evolve. This coursewill present some of the newer care delivery models and controversies in todays ICU environment. At the completion of this course, participants should have a better understanding of alternative care delivery models,some areas of controversy, and the nancial structure within their ICUs. Less-Invasive Hemodynamic Monitoring The diversity of minimally invasive hemodynamic monitoring requires knowledge of the various techniques and parameters for the devices as well as their clinical validity. This interactive, hands-on course will provide relevant experience at skill stations, taught by experienced faculty. Review and discuss less-invasive cardiac output monitors, how they work, their pros and cons, and use in the critical care setting. Topics will cover: pulse wave analysis, transpulmonary thermodilution, esophageal ultrasound, near-infrared spectroscopy, and carbon dioxide rebreathing. Optimizing Mechanical Ventilation: Sharing Data Between Adult and Pediatric Patients This course covers management strategies to optimize mechanical ventilation for adult and pediatric critically ill patients. Particular emphasis will be placed on comparing and contrasting strategies between the adult and pediatric populations with a lively interactive discussion planned. Topics will include: invasive and noninvasive mechanical ventilation, permissive ventilation, strategies to promote spontaneous breathing, lung recruitment and adjunct therapies for acute lung injury. January 8-9, 2014 Moscone Center South Veterinary Respiratory Diagnostics and Therapeutics This course is designed for veterinary emergency and critical care practitioners, residents and interns. The rst day will focus on therapeutics and diagnostics for veterinary respiratory disease and will be given by the winner of the 2013 Jack Mara Scientic Achievement award. The second day will focus on advanced topics in veterinary critical care and will culminate in a mock exam for those preparing to sit for the ACVECC boards.
October/November 2013
9/30/13 7:01 PM
Learning Objectives
At the conclusion of the 43rd Critical Care Congress, participants should be able to:
Apply new knowledge and strategies to optimize the care of the
critically ill patient as provided by the multiprofessional team
Examine evidence-based medicine techniques to evaluate and improve patient care Review and integrate guidelines to measure performance and
identify areas for further study and improvement
ADMINISTRATION Critical Care Practitioners: Who Is on the Horizon? Getting Paid for Your Performance with Proper Coding ICU Informatics and Advanced Decision Analysis Novel Applications in Telemedicine Specialization of ICUs: Is It Right or Wrong? We Are the Champions: The Future of ICU Design CARDIOVASCULAR And RESUSCITATION Adult Congenital Heart Disease Bionics in the ICU Hydrogen Sulde: A Potential Therapy in Disparate Cardiovascular Disorders? New Developments in the Management of Cardiac Comorbidities Rapid Response Update Resuscitating in Austere Environments Whats Hot in Cardiac Arrest Research? Translation Research in Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation Research: Lessons Learned (Laerdal Award) Translational Resuscitation Science: An Evolving Story of Pets and Men ENDOCRINE AND RENAL Acute Kidney Injury: Armor Up! Dialysis in the ICU Its Just Saline How Can It Be Harmful? ETHICS AND END OF LIFE Changing Denition of Death Choosing Wisely: The Critical Care Societies Top 5 List (Critical Care Societies Collaborative Joint Session) Improving Critical Care Delivery to the Underserved Improving Efciency in the Use of ICU Beds: Current Controversies Palliative Care in the ICU When the Patient Lacks Capacity GI NUTRITION Can We Feed? Ensuring Optimal Early Enteral Nutrition Extrahepatic Issues in Decompensated Cirrhosis Feed Your Brain: Its Not Just About Calories! Malnutrition: New International Etiology-Based Diagnosis Stop Stressing Over Stress Ulcers HEMATOLOGY AND IMMUNOLOGY The Emerging Biology of Inammation-Induced Critical Illness Hemostatic Resuscitation and Acute Coagulopathy in the ICU Sepsis Immunosuppression Stem Cell Therapies in Critical Illness Update on Coagulation Sampling and Testing INFECTIOUS DISEASES Bench to Bedside: The Endothelium in Infection Optimizing Antimicrobial Therapy in the ICU Update on Encephalitis NEUROSCIENCE Delirium and Encephalopathy in the ICU Implications of Bedside Advanced Neuromonitoring Management of Cerebral Edema Understanding Sleep in Critically Ill Patients PEDIATRICS Children Are Not Small Adults and Adults Are Not Big Kids: Congenital Heart Disease Dazed and Confused in the Pediatric ICU Pediatric Acute Lung Injury The Psychological Impact of Admission to the Pediatric ICU Transfusing the Critically Ill Child Update in the Management of Pediatric Acute Kidney Injury Utilization of Ultrasound in Pediatric ICU What If? An Examination of Certain Policies Within the Pediatric ICU PHARMACOLOGY AND SEDATION Drug Shortages: Lessons Learned Extracorporeal Treatments in Poisoning (EXTRIP) Therapeutic Drug Monitoring: A Modern-Day Approach PLENARY From Heroism to Safe Design in the ICU Four Centuries of Biomedical Research in the US Army Medical Corps: Benets and Challenges Tackling Brain Injury: A Little Out of Focus Dont Just Do Something, Stand There Whats New and Whats Cool? Articial Intensigence: The Merger of Man and Machines in the ICU Critical Care Around the World: Global Challenges PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT Authors Primer for Critical Care Journals Best Science: Encore Presentations Frontline Provider Models for Stafng ICUs Late-Breaker I Late-Breaker II Merlin the Magician: Looking Back in Order to Look Forward Social Media and the Intensivist Filling in Critical Care Educational Gaps with Simulation Infection Control: How Are We Doing? (ACCM Town Hall) PULMONARY Adult Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome: The Cutting Edge Bridge to the Future: Extracorporeal Support in Adult Respiratory Failure Noninvasive Ventilation Obstructive Lung Disease in the ICU Pulmonary Hypertension Strategies for Severely Impaired Gas Exchange QUALITY AND PATIENT SAFETY Dont Be Alarmed: Preventing the Distraction Guidelines, Protocols and Checklists Human Factors, Human Errors Implementing the Pain, Agitation, Delirium, and Immobility Guidelines in the ICU Improving the Safety and Quality of Patient Care by Systems Engineering Is Personalized Critical Care Medicine Feasible? Making Decisions: Evidence Versus Experience Post-Intensive Care Syndrome SEPSIS Emerging Modulators of Sepsis-Induced Organ Failure and Death Implementing the Surviving Sepsis Bundles in the Medical-Surgical Unit Novel Approaches in Sepsis Retrospective Analysis of Experiences Learned from Landmark Sepsis Trials (Joint SCCM/ESICM Session) SURGERY AND TRAUMA The Stuff That Smells Bad When Your ICU Becomes Your Operating Room Year in Review Year in Review: Anesthesia Year in Review: Internal Medicine Year in Review: Neuroscience Year in Review: Nursing Year in Review: Pediatrics Year in Review: Pharmacology Year in Review: Surgery
October/November 2013
9/30/13 7:01 PM
This schedule is subject to change. Visit www.sccm.org/congress for the most up-to-date schedule.
= Ticketed session
Schedule of Events
8:00 A.m. - 5:00 P.m. 8:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M.
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 8
Current Concepts in Adult Critical Care - Day 1 (see page 10 for Day 2)
Moderators: Azra BIHORAC, Steven GREENBERG
LEARNING OBJECTIVES Evaluate patient cases and treatment modalities Discuss diagnostic and treatment options and controversies in the management of critical illness Examine administrative topics and quality improvement initiatives in the ICU
Current Concepts in Pediatric Critical Care - Day 1 (see page 10 for Day 2)
Moderators: Mark RIGBY, Ana Lia GRACIANO
LEARNING OBJECTIVES Discuss disease processes and effective goal-directed approaches to critical care management Examine controversial topics and the risk/benet ratios in pediatric critically ill patients Apply translational medical science to improve the outcomes of pediatric critically ill patients Evaluate patient cases and treatment modalities
Postgraduate Course
Veterinary Respiratory Diagnostics and Therapeutics Day 1 (see page 11 for Day 2)
Moderator: Benjamin BRAINARD
Learning Objectives Compare the tools available for pulmonary assessment in small animals Discuss the theories and practice for mechanical ventilation of the small animal patient Assess breed-specic pulmonary disease
8:00 a.m. - 8:45 a.m. >> Practice Variability: What Does It Mean When We All Do Things Differently in the ICU? Avery TUNG 8:45 a.m. - 9:30 a.m. >> Why Is the Kidney Important for Postoperative Patients? Azra BIHORAC 9:30 a.m. - 10:15 a.m. >> Postoperative Respiratory Failure and Role of Noninvasive Mechanical Ventilation Edward BITTNER 10:15 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. >> Break 10:30 a.m. - 11:15 a.m. >> Resuscitation End Points: Which One Is Optimal? Michael PINSKY 11:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. >> Transfusion for the Critically Ill Patient: When, What and Who? Ronald PEARL 12:00 p.m. - 1:00 p.m. >> Lunch
8:00 a.m. - 8:45 a.m. >> Introduction Benjamin BRAINARD 8:45 a.m. - 9:30 a.m. >> Pulmonary Function Testing Lesley KING 9:30 a.m. - 10:15 a.m. >> Advanced Imaging for Thoracic Disease Elizabeth ROZANSKI 10:15 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. >> Break
>> Discussions
1:45 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. >> Case Discussions Elizabeth ROZANSKI 2:30 p.m. - 3:15 p.m. >> Case Discussions Lesley KING 3:15 p.m. - 3:30 p.m. >> Break
Pratik PANDHARIPANDE
1:45 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. >> Optimizing Sedation and Analgesia in the ICU: The Role of Neuromonitoring Gilles FRASER 2:30 p.m. - 3:15 p.m. >> Innovation, Competency and Standardization in Critical Care Medicine Timothy BUCHMAN 3:15 p.m. - 3:30 p.m. >> Break
>> TBD
October/November 2013
9/30/13 7:01 PM
This schedule is subject to change. Visit www.sccm.org/congress for the most up-to-date schedule.
Schedule of Events
THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 2014
8:00 A.m. - 5:00 P.m. 8:00 A.m. - 5:00 P.m.
= Ticketed session
Current Concepts in Adult Critical Care - Day 2 (see page 9 for Day 1)
Moderators: Azra BIHORAC, Steven GREENBERG
LEARNING OBJECTIVES Evaluate patient cases and treatment modalities Discuss diagnostic and treatment options and controversies in the management of critical illness Examine administrative topics and quality improvement initiatives in the ICU
Current Concepts in Pediatric Critical Care - Day 2 (see page 9 for Day 1)
Moderators: Mark RIGBY, Ana Lia GRACIANO
LEARNING OBJECTIVES Discuss disease processes and effective goal-directed approaches to critical care management Examine controversial topics and the risk/benet ratios in pediatric critically ill patients Apply translational medical science to improve the outcomes of pediatric critically ill patients Evaluate patient cases and treatment modalities
Postgraduate Course
THURSDAY, JANUARY 9
8:00 a.m. - 8:45 a.m. >> How Is the Affordable Care Act Going to Change the Practice of Critical Care Medicine? Charles HOBSON 8:45 a.m. - 9:30 a.m. >> Postoperative Care of the Cardiac Surgical Patient Steven GREENBERG 9:30 a.m. - 10:15 a.m. >> Management of the Patient with Acute-on-Chronic Liver Failure in the ICU Ram SUBRAMANIAN 10:15 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. >> Break
8:00 a.m. - 8:45 a.m. >> Life with a Single Ventricle: A Long and Winding Road Ana Lia GRACIANO 8:45 a.m. - 9:30 a.m. >> Anticoagulation and Clots in the Pediatric ICU Edward Vincent FAUSTINO 9:30 a.m. - 10:15 a.m. >> Progress and Participation in National Pediatric ICU Study Groups Thomas RICE 10:15 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. >> Break 10:30 a.m. - 11:15 a.m. >> Late Career Practice Options Thomas NAKAGAWA 11:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. >> Independent Practitioners in the Pediatric ICU Zena HARRIS 12:00 p.m. - 1:00 p.m. >> Lunch 1:00 p.m. - 1:45 p.m. >> Case Studies II Ana Lia GRACIANO, Mark HALL 1:45 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. >> Role of Nutrition and Pharmaconutrition in Pediatric Critical Care Brian JACOBS 2:30 p.m. - 3:15 p.m. >> Delirium and Neurodegeneration in the Pediatric ICU Heidi SMITH 3:15 p.m. - 3:30 p.m. >> Break 3:30 p.m. - 4:15 p.m. >> Are Neurointensivists Needed in the Pediatric ICU? Robert TASKER 4:15 p.m. - 5:00 p.m. >> Immune Responsiveness: Benet or Harm in Pediatric Sepsis? Mark HALL
8:00 a.m. - 8:15 a.m. >> Introduction to Course, Format and Agenda Lillian SU 8:15 a.m. - 8:45 a.m. >> ECMO Past, Present and Future: An Adult and Pediatric Overview of Perspectives of Evidence and Indications Heidi DALTON, Steven CONRAD 8:45 a.m. - 9:15 a.m. >> Picking the Appropriate Patients and What History Tells Us Daniel BRODIE 9:15 a.m. - 9:45 a.m. >> Overview of Devices, Cannula and Spare Parts: Roller Versus Centrifugal Steven CONRAD 9:45 a.m. - 10:15 a.m. >> Venovenous Versus Venoarterial: Whats All the Hype About the Avalon? Marco RANIERI 10:15 a.m. - 10:45 a.m. >> Break
10
October/November 2013
9/30/13 7:02 PM
This schedule is subject to change. Visit www.sccm.org/congress for the most up-to-date schedule.
= Ticketed session
Schedule of Events
8:00 A.m. - 5:00 P.m. 8:00 A.m. - 5:00 P.m.
Postgraduate Course
Veterinary Respiratory Diagnostics and Therapeutics Day 2 (see page 9 for Day 1)
Moderator: TBD
Learning Objectives Compare the tools available for pulmonary assessment in small animals Discuss the theories and practice for mechanical ventilation of the small animal patient Assess breed-specic pulmonary disease
Postgraduate Course
Postgraduate Course
8:00 a.m. - 8:45 am >> Advanced Hemodynamics: From Physiology to Pathology Part 1 Andre SHIH 8:45 a.m. - 9:30 a.m. >> Advanced Hhemodynamics and Transthoracic Pressure Andre SHIH 9:30 a.m. - 10:15 a.m. >> Transthoracic Pressure Manipulation: Make the Chest Work for You! Andre SHIH 10:15 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. >> Break
THURSDAY, JANUARY 9
8:00 a.m. - 8:15 a.m. >> Introduction Michael WALL 8:15 a.m. - 8:45 a.m. >> Pulse Waveform Analysis Wolf Benjamin KRATZERT 8:45 a.m. - 9:15 a.m. >> Transpulmonary Thermodilution Adam EVANS 9:15 a.m. - 9:45 a.m. >> Esophageal Ultrasound Brian WESSMAN 9:45 a.m. - 10:00 a.m. >> Break
11:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. >> Do We Need 24-Hour Intensivists? Carl SHANHOLTZ, Jeremy KAHN 12:00 p.m. - 1:00 p.m. >> Lunch 1:00 p.m. - 1:45 p.m. >> Breakout Session 1: How to Leverage Data to Select Quality and Safety Initiatives Craig LILLY, Bruce GREENBERG, Isabelle KOPEC, John McILWAINE, Marc ZUBROW 1:45 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. >> Advanced Practice Providers and Pharmacists as Part of the ICU Team Timothy BUCHMAN 2:30 p.m. - 3:15 p.m. >> Do Weaning Protocols Work? Robert KACMAREK 3:15 p.m. - 3:30 p.m. >> Break 3:30 p.m. - 4:15 p.m. >> Do Sedation/Analgesia Protocols Work? Richard RIKER 4:15 p.m. - 5:00 p.m. >> Breakout Session 2: Building High-Fidelity ICU Teams on the Fly Craig LILLY, Bruce GREENBERG, Isabelle KOPEC, John McILWAINE, Marc ZUBROW
October/November 2013
| 11
9/30/13 7:02 PM
This schedule is subject to change. Visit www.sccm.org/congress for the most up-to-date schedule.
Schedule of Events
8:00 A.m. - 5:00 P.m. 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM
= Ticketed session
Postgraduate Course
Postgraduate Course
Optimizing Mechanical Ventilation: Sharing Data Between Adult and Pediatric Patients
Moderators: Ira CHEIFETZ, Robert HYZY
LEARNING OBJECTIVES Compare and contrast mechanical ventilation strategies for adult and pediatric patients for the mutual education of both disciplines Discuss strategies to promote lung protective ventilation for critically ill patients Describe novel approaches for the management of adult and pediatric patients with refractory hypoxemic respiratory failure
11:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. >> Jumpin on the Bed Katherine BIAGAS 12:00 p.m. - 1:00 p.m. >> Lunch
THURSDAY, JANUARY 9
8:00 a.m. - 8:15 a.m. >> Introduction Ira CHEIFETZ, Robert HYZY 8:15 a.m. - 9:30 a.m. >> Conventional Mechanical Ventilation: Compare and Contrast Adult and Pediatric Management Approaches John MARINI, Ira CHEIFETZ 9:30 a.m. - 10:15 a.m. >> Optimizing Lung Volume: Optimal PEEP and Lung Recruitment Maneuvers Robert KACMAREK 10:15 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. >> Break
2:30 p.m. - 3:15 p.m. >> Permissive Ventilation (Permissive Hypercapnia; Permissive Hypoxemia; Rationale; Physiology/ Pathophysiology) Neil MacINTYRE 3:15 p.m. - 3:30 p.m. >> Break
Compare and Contrast Adult and Pediatric (Surfactant, Prone Positioning, Inhaled Medical Gases, Nutritional Supplements) Robert HYZY, John ARNOLD
12
October/November 2013
9/30/13 7:02 PM
This schedule is subject to change. Visit www.sccm.org/congress for the most up-to-date schedule.
= Ticketed session
Schedule of Events
10:30 A.m. - 11:30 A.m. 10:30 A.m. - 12:30 P.m.
Opening Session
Welcome from Congress Co-Chairs Lifetime Achievement Award Winner Presidential Address
J. Christopher FARMER, MD, FCCM
Professor of Medicine and Consultant in Critical Care Medicine Mayo Clinic Phoenix, Arizona, USA
>> Pharmacologic Management of Obstructive Lung >> Permissive Hypercapnia in Obstructive Lung Disease:
Gone But Not Forgotten Robert HYZY
>> Interoperability: A Cornerstone of Systems Integration >> Project Emerge: A Pilot Systems Engineering
Approach to Eliminate Harm in the ICU Adam SAPIRSTEIN Brian PICKERING
Plenary Session
FRIDAY, JANUARY 10
>> Circadian Rhythms and Interventions to Improve Sleep >> Sleep Disturbances After Recovery from Critical
Break
10:30 A.m. - 11:30 A.m.
>> MicroRNAs in Sepsis and Other Inammatory >> Programmed Death-1 Protein in Sepsis
Richard S. HOTCHKISS
>> Prevention
>> Coding for Surgery and ICU Procedures >> Noncritical Care for ICU Patients
Todd DORMAN
October/November 2013
| 13
9/30/13 7:02 PM
This schedule is subject to change. Visit www.sccm.org/congress for the most up-to-date schedule.
Schedule of Events
11:30 A.m. - 12:30 P.m. 10:30 A.m. - 12:30 P.m.
= Ticketed session
NON-CE SESSION
>> Recovering from the ICU: A Survivors Story >> Questions and Answers
Maurene HARVEY, Alison CLAY, Theodore IWASHYNA
>> Job search, interviews, and contract negotiating >> Creating an Expressive and Powerful Presentation
Paul WISCHMEYER
FRIDAY, JANUARY 10
NON-CE Session
>> What Is the Right Level of ICU Occupancy That Optimizes Patient Outcomes? Scott HALPERN >> Can We Reduce ICU Costs Through High-Quality
End-of-Life Care? J. Randall CURTIS
>> Unexpected Transfusion Reactions: From TransfusionRelated Acute Lung Injury to Immune Suppression Mark HALL Philip SPINELLA
Oral Abstracts
3:45 P.M. - 5:45 P.M.
NON-CE SESSION
Noninvasive Ventilation
Moderator: Robert KACMAREK
LEARNING OBJECTIVES Review the latest techniques in providing noninvasive ventilation Discuss the efcacy of noninvasive ventilation in treating primary respiratory failure Determine if the application of noninvasive ventilation is effective in treating patients with secondary respiratory failure, i.e, post-operative, post-trauma, congestive heart failure
Plenary Session
Four Centuries of Biomedical Research in the US Army Medical Corps: Benefits and Challenges
Basil A. PRUITT Jr., MD, FACS, MCCM
Clinical Professor of Surgery Betty and Bob Kelso Distinguished Chair in Burn and Trauma Surgery University of Texas Health Science Center San Antonio, Texas, USA
LEARNING OBJECTIVES Review the requirements for effective integration of clinical and laboratory research Identify improvements in burn and trauma patient care resulting from integrated research Discuss the reiterative nature of the integrated clinical/ laboratory research process
>> Noninvasive Ventilation for Primary Respiratory Failure >> Noninvasive Ventilation for Secondary Respiratory
Failure Sean KEENAN
3:45 p.m. - 5:45 p.m. >> Training the Whole Team to Enhance Family Communication in the ICU Judy E. DAVIDSON 3:45 p.m. - 5:45 p.m. >> Transforming Care: Developing a Patient-Centered ICU TBD 3:45 p.m. - 5:45 p.m. >> Summary and Next Steps to Promoting Patient and Family Centered Care as a Standard of Care in the ICU Tim BUCHMAN
Break
14
October/November 2013
9/30/13 7:02 PM
This schedule is subject to change. Visit www.sccm.org/congress for the most up-to-date schedule.
= Ticketed session
Schedule of Events
10:00 A.m. - 11:00 A.m. 10:00 A.m. - 12:00 P.m.
Breakfast Symposia
8:15 A.m. - 9:00 A.m.
Plenary Session
>> Disease Management and Scenario Design >> Difcult Conversations >> Procedures and Tasks >> Teamwork
TBD Michael DeVITA
Break
10:00 A.m. - 11:00 A.m.
>> Update on Extracorporeal Respiratory Assist Device >> Anticoagulant Considerations with VADs and
Extracorporeal Respiratory Assist Devices Christopher PACIULLO Srinivas MURALI
SAtURDAY, JANUARY 11
>> Hypovolemic Shock in the VAD Patient >> Mechanical Support in Pediatrics
Paul CHECCHIA
Dharmapuri VIDYASAGAR
>> The Dark Side of Checklists >> Process of Care: Checklists and Outcomes
Jaclyn LeBLANC
Choosing Wisely: The Critical >> President, 2004-2005 Care Societies Collaborative Top Margaret PARKER 5 List >> President, 2011-2012
Moderator: Scott HALPERN
LEARNING OBJECTIVES Discuss the background on Choosing Wisely campaign in critical care Identify the top 5 priorities in critical care Describe future strategies for success
Pamela LIPSETT
>> The Top 5 List in Critical Care Medicine >> What Is Next? Promoting Adherence to the List >> Panel Discussion
Carol THOMPSON, Curtis Sessler, Patricia FINN, Kathryn ROBERTS
>> NSTI: What Is New in Diagnosis and Therapy? >> Complex Wound Management with a Multiprofessional >> Hyperbaric Oxygen as a Wound Care Adjunct
Allan PHILP
October/November 2013
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9/30/13 7:02 PM
This schedule is subject to change. Visit www.sccm.org/congress for the most up-to-date schedule.
Schedule of Events
10:00 A.m. - 12:00 P.m. 12:15 P.M. - 1:15 P.M.
= Ticketed session
Non CE luncheon
12:15 PM 1:30 PM >> Welcome TBD 12:15 PM 1:30 PM >> Panel Discussion: Assessment of Core Competencies Procedural Competency Professionalism A Fellows Perspective on Training Expectations and Needs Stephen Pastores, Neal Cohen, Addison May, Laura Watkins
12:15 PM 1:30 PM
Plenary Session
SAtURDAY, JANUARY 11
Brian KAVANAGH
>> Volume-Based and Compensatory Delivery of Enteral >> Fasting, Delayed Enteral Feeding, NPO Status: How
Necessary, How Long? Pamela LIPSETT
Break
3:15 P.m. - 4:15 P.m.
>> Twitter ICU with a Friend? Using Social Media as a Learning Tool, Coach and Mentor Janine Elizabeth ZEE-CHENG >> Twitter-Do and Twitter-Dont: Hazards of Social Media
in the ICU Setting Alice ACKERMAN
>> Does Dialysis Dose Matter? >> Dosing Failure: Dialysis and Supporting Medications
Tyree KISER
>> Human Embryonic Stem Cells in Polymicrobial Sepsis >> Mesenchymal Stem Cells in Hemorrhagic Shock
16
October/November 2013
9/30/13 7:02 PM
This schedule is subject to change. Visit www.sccm.org/congress for the most up-to-date schedule.
= Ticketed session
Schedule of Events
4:30 P.m. - 5:30 P.m. 4:30 P.m. - 5:30 P.m.
Sepsis Immunosuppression
Moderator: Jorge HIDALGO
LEARNING OBJECTIVES Examine the common immunologic features of the sepsis syndrome Discuss immune deciencies to the pathophysiology of complications in septic patients Summarize immunopathogenesis in sepsis
Laerdal Award
Richard HOTCHKISS
>> Strategies to End Healthcare Disparities >> Using Telemedicine: Where There Are No Intensivists
4:30 P.m. - 5:30 P.m.
SAtURDAY, JANUARY 11
Malnutrition: New International When the Patient Lacks Capacity Etiology-Based Diagnosis
Moderator: Christine TOEVS Moderator: Marion WINKLER
LEARNING OBJECTIVES Integrate cutting edge, international, etiology-based malnutrition diagnosis in the ICU Examine the inuence of inammation in the etiology of malnutrition and in nutrition response Examine the impact of malnutrition on clinical and functional outcomes Select accurate tools to measure body composition in critically ill children Outline characteristics of malnutrition in the critically ill patient LEARNING OBJECTIVES Describe how to determine a patients level of capacity Explain what is required in obtaining informed consent Dene the roles of healthcare proxy, family members and friends when making decisions for a patient
>> Who Can Decide When the Patient Cant Consent? Dan THOMPSON >> From Assent to Consent: The Pediatric Dilemma Alexander KON
3:15 P.m. - 4:15 P.m.
Terence OKEEFFE
>> Bleeding Patients Benet from Liberal Transfusion >> Questions and Answers
6:30 p.m. - 8:00 p.m.
Douglas NAYLOR
ACCM Convocation and SCCM Awards Ceremony (see page 8 for details)
October/November 2013
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9/30/13 7:02 PM
This schedule is subject to change. Visit www.sccm.org/congress for the most up-to-date schedule.
Schedule of Events
SUNDAY, JANUARY 12, 2014
8:15 A.m. - 9:00 A.m. 10:00 A.m. - 11:00 A.m.
= Ticketed session
Pulmonary Hypertension
Moderator: Jeffrey WILT
LEARNING OBJECTIVES Describe basic management principles in patients with pulmonary hypertension Explain the role of inhaled therapies for pulmonary hypertension Develop a medication treatment plan for pulmonary hypertension
PLENARY SESSION
>> Management Strategies: Its Not Just Drugs >> Medications and Novel Therapies
Amy DZIERBA
Break
10:00 A.m. - 11:00 A.m.
>> Acute Kidney Injury in Cirrhosis >> Hematologic Derangements in Cirrhosis >> Infectious Complications in Cirrhosis
Rahul NANCHAL
>> What If Your Pediatric ICU Refused to Follow Donation >> What If Your Pediatric ICU Abandoned the Concept of
Maintenance IV Fluids? Stuart GOLDSTEIN
SUNDAY, JANUARY 12
>> Antibiotics Resistance: The Bacteria Strike Back >> Biomarker-Guided De-escalation
10:00 A.m. - 11:00 A.m.
>> Palliative Care Through Teamwork >> Little People and Their Families
Christine ZAWISTOWSKI
Susanne MUEHLSCHLEGEL
18
October/November 2013
9/30/13 7:03 PM
This schedule is subject to change. Visit www.sccm.org/congress for the most up-to-date schedule.
= Ticketed session
Schedule of Events
11:00 A.M. - 12:30 P.M. 3:00 P.m. - 4:00 P.m.
Infection Control: How Are We Doing? (See page 8 for all ACCM activities)
Moderator: Michael MURRAY
LEARNING OBJECTIVES *Provide evidence to improve patient outcomes regarding health-associated infections *Identify implementation strategies to change practice
>> Endothelial Innate Immune Pathways in Sepsis >> Endothelial Modication in Infection
11:00 A.m. - 12:00 P.m.
Children Are Not Small Adults and Adults Are Not Big Kids: Congenital Heart Disease
Moderator: Lara SHEKERDEMIAN
LEARNING OBJECTIVES Discuss the prevalence of adults with congenital heart disease and the complications from lifelong congenital heart disease Evaluate the relationship of adult congenital heart disease (ACHD) patients with critical heart failure, pulmonary hypertension and postoperative care Identify critical complications in ACHD
PLENARY SESSION
SUNDAY, JANUARY 12
>> The Ethics of Triage: Should We Leave You Behind? Christine TOEVS >> Lessons Learned from Developing Countries
Andrew PATTERSON Lisa FLYNN
Update on Encephalitis
Moderator: Mark WAINWRIGHT
LEARNING OBJECTIVES Describe the molecular changes in the blood-brain barrier during encephalitis Review the epidemiology of viral encephalitis in the United States Examine potential therapies utilized in viral encephalitis
Christopher BONAFIDE
>> Best Research: Pediatric Academic Society >> Best Research: American Thoracic Society
October/November 2013
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9/30/13 7:03 PM
This schedule is subject to change. Visit www.sccm.org/congress for the most up-to-date schedule.
Schedule of Events
3:00 P.m. - 4:00 P.m. 3:00 P.m. - 4:00 P.m.
= Ticketed session
>> The Nursing Perspective on Subspecializing an ICU >> What Are the Financial Impacts to a Hospital That
Subspecializes ICUs? Andrew PATTERSON
>> What Are the National Trends on the Use of NPs and
PAs in the ICU? Ruth KLEINPELL
SUNDAY, JANUARY 12
>> Delirium in the Pediatric ICU: Use of the P-CAM? >> Early Mobilization in the Pediatric ICU
4:15 P.m. - 5:15 P.m.
>> ECMO, Here We Go! Extravascular Support >> The Monitor I Use
Michael OCONNOR
>> Beta-Lactams: Its Not Just Minimum Inhibitory >> Antifungals: I Need to Get a Level?
>> Toxicology
20
October/November 2013
9/30/13 7:04 PM
This schedule is subject to change. Visit www.sccm.org/congress for the most up-to-date schedule.
= Ticketed session
Schedule of Events
9:30 A.m. - 10:30 A.m. 9:30 A.m. - 11:30 A.m.
PLENARY SESSION
>> Saline Boluses and Increased Mortality in Pediatric >> Saline and the Risk of Acute Kidney Injury
Rinaldo BELLOMO
>> Panel Discussion: Implementation Strategies and >> Questions and Answers
Heidi ENGEL, Mary Ann DALY, Patricia POSA
Break
9:30 A.m. - 10:30 A.m.
Concentrate, Factor Concentrates, Recombinant von Willebrand Factor, Recombinant Antithrombin III Aryeh SHANDER Midst William DAGER
>> Use of Bedside Procedures: Clinical Cases >> Incorporating Ultrasound into an Educational
>> 2014 ICU Design Winner >> Virtual Reality Techniques for Adapting Hospitals
Gregory SMITH
>> ICU Data Overload: Solutions for Data Aggregation >> Putting It All Together: Big Data and Advanced
Decision Analysis Kristan STAUDENMAYER
October/November 2013
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MONDAY, JANUARY 13
This schedule is subject to change. Visit www.sccm.org/congress for the most up-to-date schedule.
Schedule of Events
10:30 A.m. - 11:30 A.m. 10:30 A.m. - 11:30 A.m.
= Ticketed session
Children and Parents After Intensive Care Admission Wynne MORRISON During and After Pediatric ICU Stay Gillian COLVILLE
>> Hydrogen Sulde in Acute Lung Injury >> Hydrogen Sulde in Sepsis
10:30 A.m. - 11:30 A.m.
>> Family-Centered Approaches to Decreasing Distress >> Preventing Post-Traumatic Stress: Web-Based
Approaches for Parents and Children? Nancy KASSAM -ADAMS
>> Pre- and Probiotic Use in the ICU >> Clinical Trials in Nutrition Support
Thomas ZIEGLER
>> Telepharmacy: Getting Drugs Online >> Telemedicine: Outreach to the Community
MONDAY, JANUARY 13
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Preliminary faculty list subject to change. Visit www.sccm.org/congress for the most recent program. Alice D. ACKERMAN, MBA, MD, FCCM Carilion Roanoke Memorial Hospital Roanoke, Virginia, USA Derek C. ANGUS, MD, MPH, MCCM University of Pittsburgh Critical Care Medicine - CRISMA Laboratory Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA John H. ARNOLD, MD Harvard Medical School Boston, Massachusetts, USA Rebecca A. ASLAKSON, MD The Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions Baltimore, Maryland, USA Andrew D. AUERBACH, MD, MPH UCSF Medical Center San Francisco, California, USA Ahmed E. BADR, MD, FCCM, FACS Texas Tech University Health Science Center El Paso, Texas, USA Farooq A. BANDALI, BCPS, PharmD Monmouth Junction, New Jersey, USA Michael P. BANNON, MD Mayo Clinic Rochester Rochester, Minnesota, USA Philip S. BARIE, MD, MBA, FCCM Weill Cornell Medical College New York, New York, USA Jeffrey BARLETTA, PharmD, FCCM Midwestern University College of Pharmacy Glendale, Arizona, USA Rafael BARRERA, MD, FCCM Long Island Jewish Medical Center New Hyde Park, New York, USA Cassie A. BARTON, PharmD Fletcher Allen Health Care Portland, Oregon, USA Raquel R. BARTZ, MD Duke University Medical Center Durham, North Carolina, USA Rinaldo BELLOMO, MD Austin Hospital Melbourne, Victoria, Australia Katherine V. BIAGAS, MD, FCCM Columbia University, College of Physicians and Surgeons New York, New York, USA Azra BIHORAC, MD, MS, FCCM University of Florida School of Medicine Gainesville, Florida, USA Edward A. BITTNER, MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Boston, Massachusetts, USA Thomas P. BLECK, MD, FCCM Rush Medical College Chicago, Illinois, USA James M. BLUM, MD, FCCM University of Michigan Health System Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA George BO-LINN Moore Foundation Palo Alto, California, USA Manuel BOLLER, DVM, MTR, DACVECC University of Melbourne Veterinary Hospital Werribee, Victoria, Australia Christopher BONAFIDE, MD, MS The Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA Benjamin Brainard, DVM, VMD University of Georgia Athens, Georgia, USA Daniel BRODIE, MD New York Presbyterian Hospital-Columbia Campus New York, New York, USA Gretchen M. BROPHY, BCPS, PharmD, FCCM Virginia Commonwealth University Richmond, Virginia, USA Ann-Marie BROWN, MSN, FCCM Akron Childrens Hospital Akron, Ohio, USA Jeffrey J. BRUNO, BCPS, PharmD MD Anderson Cancer Care Center Houston, Texas, USA Timothy G. BUCHMAN, MD, PhD, MCCM Emory University School of Medicine Atlanta, Georgia, USA Mitchell S. BUCKLEY, PharmD, BCPS, FCCM Banner Good Samaritan Medical Center Phoenix, Arizona, USA Timothy E. BUNCHMAN, MD VCU School of Medicine - Childrens Hospital of Richmond Richmond, Virginia, USA Diane BYRUM, RN, MSN, CCRN, FCCM Presbyterian Hospital Huntersville Huntersville, North Carolina, USA Carolyn CALFEE, MD University of California San Francisco, California, USA Clifton W. CALLAWAY, MD University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA Christopher L. CARROLL, MD, FCCM Connecticut Childrens Medical Center Hartford, Connecticut, USA Cherylee W. CHANG, MD, FCCM The Queens Medical Center Honolulu, Hawaii, USA Paul A. CHECCHIA, MD, FCCM Texas Childrens Hospital Houston, Texas, USA Ira M. CHEIFETZ, MD, FCCM Duke University Medical Center Durham, North Carolina, USA David H. CHONG, MD, FCCM, FCCP, FACP Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons New York, New York, USA John C. CHRISTENSON, MD Indiana University School of Medicine Indianapolis, Indiana, USA
October/November 2013
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Preliminary faculty list subject to change. Visit www.sccm.org/congress for the most recent program. Steven M. HOLLENBERG, MD, FCCM Cooper Medical School of Rowan University Cooper University Hospital Camden, New Jersey, USA Ramona O. HOPKINS, PhD Intermountain Medical Center Murray, Utah, USA Richard S. HOTCHKISS, MD Washington University School of Medicine St. Louis, Missouri, USA Michael D. HOWELL, MD Silverman Institute for Health Care Quality and Safety Boston, Massachusetts, USA Marilyn HRAVNAK, RN, PhD, FCCM University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA Robert C. HYZY, MD, FCCM University of Michigan Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA Fumito ICHINOSE, MD Massachusetts General Hospital Boston, Massachusetts, USA Natalia S. IVASCU, MD Weill Medical College and Graduate School New York, New York, USA Theodore J. IWASHYNA, MD, PhD University of Michigan Health System Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA Judith JACOBI, BCPS, PharmD, FCCM Indiana University Health Methodist Hospital Indianapolis, Indiana, USA Brian R. JACOBS, MD, FCCM Childrens National Medical Center Washington, DC, USA Aaron M. JOFFE, DO University of Washington Harborview Medical Center Seattle, Washington, USA Daniel W. JOHNSON, MD University of Nebraska Medical Center Omaha, Nebraska, USA Philippe JOUVET, PhD Groupe Hospitalier Necker Enfants Malades Montreal, Quebec, Canada Robert M. KACMAREK, RRT, PhD, FCCM Massachusetts General Hospital Boston, Massachusetts, USA Jeremy M. KAHN, MS, MD University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA Sandra L. KANE-GILL, PharmD, MS, FCCM University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA Jennifer Melissa KAPLAN, MD Cincinnati Childrens Hospital Cincinnati, Ohio, USA Lewis J. KAPLAN, MD, FCCM Yale University School of Medicine New Haven, Connecticut, USA Nancy KASSAM-ADAMS, PhD Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA David C. KAUFMAN, MD, FCCM University of Rochester Strong Memorial Hospital Rochester, New York, USA Brian P. KAVANAGH, MD Hospital for Sick Children Toronto, Ontario, Canada Mark T. KEEGAN, MD Mayo Clinic Department of Anesthesiology Rochester, Minnesota, USA Sean P. KEENAN, FRCPC Royal Columbian Hospital New Westminster, British Columbia, Canada Michael D. KELLEHER, MD Ann and Robert H. Lurie Childrens Hospital Chicago, Illinois, USA John A. KELLUM, MD, MCCM University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA Lynn A. KELSO, RN, ACNP, FCCM University of Kentucky Lexington, Kentucky, USA Gregory E. KERR, MD, MBA, FCCM New York Presbyterian Hospital New York, New York, USA Todd J. KILBAUGH, MD Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA Sean P. KILEY, MD University of Florida College of Medicine Gainesville, Florida, USA Lesley KING, BVM, DACVECC, DACVIM University of Pennsylvania Hospital University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA John P. KIRBY, MD, MS Washington University St. Louis, Missouri, USA Tyree H. KISER, PharmD, BCPS, FCCM University of Colorado at Denver and Health Sciences Center Aurora, Colorado, USA Ruth M. KLEINPELL, PhD, RN-CS, FCCM Rush University Medical Center Chicago, Illinois, USA Michael KLOMPAS, MD Department of Population Medicine Boston, Massachusetts, USA Nerissa KO UCSF Neurology San Francisco, California, USA Patrick M. KOCHANEK, MD, MCCM University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA Matthew A. KOENIG, MD Johns Hopkins University Hospital - The Queens Medical Center Honolulu, Hawaii, USA Alexander A. KON, MD, FCCM Naval Medical Center San Diego San Diego, California, USA Isabelle C. KOPEC, MD Advanced ICU Care Medical Group St. Louis, Missouri, USA
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October/November 2013
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Preliminary faculty list subject to change. Visit www.sccm.org/congress for the most recent program. Wolf Benjamin KRATZERT, MD, PhD University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA Kenneth E. KRELL, MD Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center Idaho Falls, Idaho, USA John P. KRESS, MD University of Chicago Chicago, Illinois, USA Simon W. LAM, PharmD Cleveland Clinic Cleveland, Ohio, USA Jennifer A. LaROSA, MD, FCCM Newark Beth Israel Medical Center Newark, New Jersey, USA Jaclyn Marie LeBLANC, PharmD Quispamsis, New Brunswick, Canada Laurance L. LEQUIER, MD Walter Mackenzie Center Edmonton, Alberta, Canada Mitchell M. LEVY, MD, FCCM Brown University School of Medicine Providence, Rhode Island, USA Richard J. LEVY, MD Childrens National Medical Center Washington, DC, USA John J. LEWIN III, MBA, PharmD The Johns Hopkins Hospital Baltimore, Maryland, USA Geoffrey LIGHTHALL, MD Veterans Affairs Medical Center Palo Alto Palo Alto, California, USA Craig M. LILLY, MD, FCCM University of Massachusetts Memorial Medical Center/EICU Support Center Worcester, Massachusetts, USA Geoffrey S.F. LING, MD, PhD Walter Reed Army Medical Center Washington, DC, USA Pamela A. LIPSETT, MD, MHPE, FCCM Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions Baltimore, Maryland, USA Kristine A.K. LOMBARDOZZI, MD, FCCM Regional Surgical Specialists Spartanburg, South Carolina, USA Neil R. MacINTYRE, MD Duke University Medical Center Durham, North Carolina, USA Asrar B. MALIK University of Illinois Chicago, Illinois, USA Stephanie MALLOW CORBETT, PharmD, FCCM University of Virginia Health System Charlottesville, Virginia, USA Ainsley MALONE, RD Mount Carmel West Columbus, Ohio, USA Geoffrey T. MANLEY, MD San Francisco General Hospital San Francisco, California, USA Edward M. MANNO, MD, FCCM Cleveland Clinic Cleveland, Ohio, USA John J. MARINI, MD Regions Hospital St. Paul, Minnesota, USA John C. MARSHALL, MD Saint Michaels Hospital Toronto, Ontario, Canada Greg S. MARTIN, MD, MS, FCCM Grady Memorial Hospital Atlanta, Georgia, USA Robert G. MARTINDALE, MD, PhD Oregon Health and Science University Portland, Oregon, USA Michael A. MATTHAY, MD University of California Cardiovascular Research Institute San Francisco, California, USA Addison K. MAY, MD, FCCM Vanderbilt University Medical Center Nashville, Tennessee, USA John K. McILWAINE, DO Geisinger Health System Danville, Pennsylvania, USA Wesley D. McMILLIAN, PharmD, BCPS Fletcher Allen Health Care Burlington, Vermont, USA David Michael McMULLAN, MD Seattle Childrens Hospital Seattle, Washington, USA David K. MENON, MD Addenbrookes Hospital Cambridge, United Kingdom Scott MICEK, PharmD, BCPS Barnes-Jewish Hospital St. Louis, Missouri, USA William S. MILES, MD, FCCM Carolinas Medical Center Charlotte, North Carolina, USA Jessica G. MORELAND, MD University of Iowa Hospital and Clinics Iowa City, Iowa, USA Linda L. MORRIS, CNS, PhD, FCCM Northwestern Memorial Hospital Chicago, Illinois, USA Wynne E. MORRISON, MD, FCCM The Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA James MOWRY, PharmD, DABAT FAACT Clarian Health Partners Indianapolis, Indiana, USA Susanne MUEHLSCHLEGEL, MD, MPH Massachusetts General Hospital Worcester, Massachusetts, USA Srinivas MURALI, MD Temple University Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA David J. MURPHY, MD, PhD Johns Hopkins University Hospital Atlanta, Georgia, USA
October/November 2013
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Preliminary faculty list subject to change. Visit www.sccm.org/congress for the most recent program. Neal J. THOMAS, MD, FCCM Penn State Childrens Hospital Hershey, Pennsylvania, USA Ann E. THOMPSON, MD, MCCM Childrens Hospital of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA Carol L. THOMPSON, PhD, ACNP, CCRN University of Tennessee Health Science Center Memphis, Tennessee, USA Dan R. THOMPSON, MD, MA, FCCM Albany Medical College Albany, New York, USA John THORNTON, MD, MPH MetroHealth Medical Center Cleveland, Ohio, USA Samuel A. TISHERMAN, MD, FCCM University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA Joseph D. TOBIAS, MD Nationwide Childrens Hospital Columbus, Ohio, USA Christine C. TOEVS, MD, FCCM West Penn Allegheny Health System Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA Michel TORBEY, MD, MPH, FCCM, FAHA Ohio State University Columbus, Ohio, USA Sean R. TOWNSEND, MD California Pacic Medical Center San Francisco, California, USA Jonathon D. TRUWIT, MD University of Virginia Health Systems Charlottesville, Virginia, USA Avery TUNG, MD, FCCM University of Chicago Chicago, Illinois, USA David A. TURNER, MD Duke University Durham, North Carolina, USA Jeffery S. VENDER, MD, FCCM Northshore University Health System Evanston, Illinois, USA Paul M. VESPA, MD, FCCM UCLA Health Sciences Center Los Angeles, California, USA Dharmapuri VIDYASAGAR, MD, FCCM University of Illinois at Chicago Medical Center Chicago, Illinois, USA Jean-Louis VINCENT, MD, PhD, FCCM Erasme University Hospital Brussels, Belgium Mark WAINWRIGHT, MD, PhD Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine Chicago, Illinois, USA Michael H. WALL, MD, FCCM Barnes-Jewish Hospital - Washington University School of Medicine St. Louis, Missouri, USA Paula L. WATSON, MD Vanderbilt University Medical Center Nashville, Tennessee, USA Brian WESSMAN, MD Washington University in St. Louis School of Medicine St. Louis, Missouri, USA Derek S. WHEELER, MD, FCCM Cincinnati Childrens Hospital Medical Center Cincinnati, Ohio, USA Glenn J.R. WHITMAN, MD The Johns Hopkins Hospital Baltimore, Maryland, USA Jeffrey L. WILT, MD Borgess Medical Center Kalamazoo, Michigan, USA Marion F. WINKLER, RD, PhD Rhode Island Hospital Providence, Rhode Island, USA Bradford D. WINTERS, MD, PhD, FCCM Johns Hopkins Hospital Baltimore, Maryland, USA Paul WISCHMEYER, MD University of Colorado at Denver School of Medicine Aurora, Colorado, USA Hector R. WONG, MD Cincinnati Childrens Hospital Medical Center Cincinnati, Ohio, USA Hannah WUNSCH, MD, MSc Columbia University Medical Center New York, New York, USA Timothy S. YEH, MD, FCCM Saint Barnabas Medical Center Livingston, New Jersey, USA Paul C. YODICE, MD, FCCM, FCCP Saint Barnabas Medical Center Livingston, New Jersey, USA Warren M. ZAPOL, MD Massachusetts General Hospital Boston, Massachusetts, USA Christine A. ZAWISTOWSKI, MD NYU Langone Medical Center New York, New York, USA Janine Elizabeth ZEE-CHENG, MD Indiana University, Riley Hospital for Children Indianapolis, Indiana, USA Thomas R. ZIEGLER, MD Emory University Hospital Atlanta, Georgia, USA Basilia ZINGARELLI, MD, PhD Cincinnati Childrens Hospital Cincinnati, Ohio, USA Marc T. ZUBROW, MD, FCCM University of Maryland School of Medicine Baltimore, Maryland, USA
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Obtaining Credit
To obtain credit, please complete the evaluation by accessing the website www.MySCCM.org. Once logged in with your SCCM customer ID (found on your badge) and password (your last name unless you have changed it), select the MY LEARNING tab on the orange bar, and choose the link labeled 43rd Critical Care Congress.
Maintenance of Certication Part II SCCM is offering Maintenance of Certication (MOC) Part II in addition to Continuing Medical Education for BoardCertied Physicians of the Boards: ABIM, ABA, ABS, and ABP. For the attendees claiming the MOC credits, the program consists of a pre-test, targeted MOC lectures, and a post-test. The pre-test will close at 7:00 a.m. on Monday, January 13, so please log in prior to this time. To access the pre-test, log in to www.MySCCM.org with your Customer ID (found on your badge) and password. Next, choose the MY LEARNING tab on the orange bar, scroll down and click on the link labeled 43rd Critical Care Congress. The MOC pre-test button will be active until Congress ends. You will be asked to supply your Board ID number and date of birth so that we may report your passing score to your board. After the course, you will access this link to complete the MOC post-test. American Board of Surgery: This course meets the requirements for Maintenance of Certication (MOC) Part II. To claim MOC Part II, you must pass the post-test, select the option for Surgery MOC II, and print the score report to submit to the board. American Board of Anesthesia: This course meets the requirements for Maintenance of Certication (MOC) Part II. To claim MOC Part II, you must pass the post-test, select the option for Anesthesia MOC II, and enter your ABA number with your date of birth. Your score report will be reported directly to the board. American Board of Internal Medicine: This course meets the requirements for Maintenance of Certication (MOC) Part II. To claim MOC Part II, you must pass the post-test, select the option for Internal Medicine MOC II, and enter your ABIM number. Your score report will be reported directly to the board. American Board of Pediatrics: This course meets the requirements for Maintenance of Certication (MOC) Part II. To claim MOC Part II, you must pass the post-test, select the option for Pediatric MOC II, and enter your ABP number with your date of birth. Your score report will be reported directly to the board Computer stations will be available on site, near Registration. If you have questions, please email congress@sccm.org or call +1 847 827-6888. Physicians SCCM is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education to provide continuing medical education for physicians. Designation Statement SCCM designates this live educational activity for the maximum AMA PRA Category 1 Credits, as listed below. Physicians should only claim credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity. Overall Congress (Concurrent Sessions) 21.5 AMA PRA Category 1 Credits Current Concepts in Adult Critical Care Course 15 AMA PRA Category 1 Credits Current Concepts in Pediatric Critical Care Course 15 AMA PRA Category 1 Credits Postgraduate Courses up to 7.5 AMA PRA Category 1 Credits Nurses This program has been approved by the California Board of Registered Nursing, Provider No. 8181, for a maximum number of hours, as listed below: Overall Congress (Concurrent Sessions) 21.5 Contact Hours Current Concepts in Adult Critical Care Course 15 Contact Hours Current Concepts in Pediatric Critical Care Course 15 Contact Hours Postgraduate Courses up to 7.55 Contact Hours Pharmacists SCCM is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE) as a provider of continuing pharmaceutical education. This course provides contact hours of continuing education. SCCM reports to a continuing pharmacy education (CPE) tracking service using your NABP member number and date of birth. You are responsible for providing accurate information to SCCM. The CPE Monitor will authenticate and store data for completed CPE units received by pharmacists and pharmacy technicians. The tracking system will make CPE data for each participant available to the state boards of pharmacy with which the participant is licensed or registered. After CPE units are processed by ACPE and NABP, pharmacists and pharmacy technicians will be able to log into a comprehensive electronic prole to access information about their completed CPE. Respiratory Therapists Application has been submitted to the American Association for Respiratory Care for CRCE credit. Registered Dietitians and Dietetic Technicians SCCM has submitted this program for approval from the Commission on Dietetic Registration (CDR).
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Registration Policies
Cancellation/Refund Policy Cancellations must be submitted in writing. All cancellations are subject to a $75 nonrefundable processing fee, and must be postmarked prior to December 4, 2013 , to be eligible for a refund. Any cancellation postmarked after this date will not be refunded. Exchanges and substitutions are not allowed at any time. Dates for the 43rd Critical Care Congress are subject to change and/or cancellation. In the event of a cancellation, only individual registration fees will be reimbursed. Please allow four weeks to process refunds.
rd CRITICAL CARE CONGRESS: REGISTRATION FORM 43rd43 CRITICAL CARE CONGRESS: REGISTRATION FORM
January 9-13, 2014 San Francisco, California, USA Moscone Center South January 9-13, 2014 San Francisco, California, USA Moscone Center South
1. Online at www.sccm.org/store 2. Call SCCM Customer Service at +1 847 827-6888 3. Fax the completed form to +1 847 493-6444 CHOOSE FROM FOUR 1. Online at www.sccm.org/store 2. Call SCCM Customer Service at +1 847 827-6888 3. Fax the completed form to +1 847 493-6444 CHOOSE FROM FOUR 4. Mail the completed form to: 35083 Eagle Way, Chicago, IL 60678-1350 USA EASY WAYS TO REGISTER: 4. Mail the completed form to: 35083 Eagle Way, Chicago, IL 60678-1350 USA EASY WAYS TO REGISTER: Please use this form to register for the 43rd Critical Care Congress. Please type or print clearly and keep a copy of this form for your records. Please use this form to register for the 43rd Critical Care Congress. Please type or print clearly and keep a copy of this form for your records.
REGISTRANT INFORMATION REGISTRANT INFORMATION Last Name (Surname) _________________________________ First ___________________________ Middle Initial__________ Customer/Member # ___________ Last Name (Surname) _________________________________ First ___________________________ Middle Initial__________ Customer/Member # ___________ Degrees/Credentials (ex.: ACNP, MD, PharmD, RN, RRT, etc.) ___________________________________________________________ Gender: Male Female Degrees/Credentials (ex.: ACNP, MD, PharmD, RN, RRT, etc.) ___________________________________________________________ Gender: Male Female Organization _____________________________________________________________ Address_______________________________________________________ Organization _____________________________________________________________ Address_______________________________________________________ City _______________________________________________________________________ State_________________________ Zip/Postal Code _______________ City _______________________________________________________________________ State_________________________ Zip/Postal Code _______________ Country __________________________________________________ Home Ofce Phone_______________________________________________________ Country __________________________________________________ Home Ofce Phone_______________________________________________________ Fax _______________________________________________________ Email ______________________________________________________________________ Fax _______________________________________________________ Email ______________________________________________________________________ 2014 CONGRESS REGISTRATION RATES ADDITIONAL TICKETED SESSIONS/EVENTS You do not need to be SESSIONS/EVENTS registered for Congress to attend these courses. 2014 CONGRESS REGISTRATION ADDITIONAL TICKETED Early Rate RATES Advance Rate On-Site Daily *Ifnot youneed are not registered for Congress, a $50 chargethese per course will be You do to be registered for Congress to attend courses. by 11/6/2013 by 12/4/2013 Early Rate Advance Rate On-SiteRate Daily Rate applied to your registration fee. *If you are not registered for Congress, a $50 charge per course will be by 11/6/2013 by 12/4/2013 Rate Rate MEMBER applied to your registration fee. Physician $730 $830 $900 $450 MEMBER WEDNESDAY, JAN. 8 AND THURSDAY, JAN. 9 Healthcare Prof. * $530 $630 $700 $350 Physician $730 $830 $900 $450 Current JAN. Concepts in Adult Critical Care $_________ WEDNESDAY, 8 AND THURSDAY, JAN. 9 Student* Healthcare Prof.* $530 $275 $630 $325 $700 $350 $350 $175 Physician $395 ($445*) Current Concepts in Adult Critical Care $_________ Student* $275 $325 $350 $175 NONMEMBER Healthcare Professional/Student $320 ($370*) Physician $395 ($445*) Physician $930 $1,030 $1,100 $550 NONMEMBER Current Concepts in Pediatric$320 Critical Care $_________ Healthcare Professional/Student ($370*) Healthcare Prof. * $670 $770 $1,100 $840 Physician $930 $1,030 $550 $420 Physician $395 ($445*) Current Concepts in Pediatric Critical Care $_________ Student* Healthcare Prof.* $670 $355 $770 $405 $840 $430 $420 $215 Healthcare Professional/Student $320 ($370*) Physician $395 ($445*) Student* $430Professional $215 *Fellows and $355 residents register$405 at the Healthcare Veterinary $_________ Respiratory Diagnostics and Therapeutics Healthcare Professional/Student $320 ($370*) rate. Training verification accompany registration form $320 ($370) *Fellows and residents register letter at themust Healthcare Professional Veterinary $_________ Respiratory Diagnostics and Therapeutics for fellows, residents and students. rate. Training verification letter must accompany registration form $320 ($370) JAN. 9 THURSDAY, FOR residents DAILY RATES, INDICATE WHICH DAY BELOW: for fellows, and PLEASE students. Case-Based Pearls in Neurocritical Care $295 ($345) $_________ With daily registration, you may attend educational sessions, access THURSDAY, JAN. 9 FOR DAILY RATES, PLEASE INDICATE WHICH DAY BELOW: Fundamentals of Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation the Exhibit Hall and register for ticketed events only on the day for Case-Based $_________ $_________ Pearls in Neurocritical Care $295 ($345) With daily registration, you may attend educational sessions, access which your registration was purchased. (ECMO) $295 ($345) Fundamentals of Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation the Exhibit Hall and register for ticketed events only on the day for $_________ Friday, Jan. 10 Saturday, Jan. 11 Sunday, Jan. 12 ICU Management Paradigms for the 21st Century $295 ($345) $_________ which your registration was purchased. (ECMO) $295 ($345) Less Invasive Hemodynamic Monitoring $295 ($345) $_________ Friday, Jan. 10 Saturday, Jan. 11 Sunday, Jan. 12 ICU Management Paradigms for the 21st Century $295 ($345) $_________ CONGRESS TUITION $_________________ $_________ Optimizing Mechanical Ventilation: Sharing Data Between Less Invasive $_________ Hemodynamic Monitoring $295 ($345) Adult and Pediatric Patients $295 ($345) Tuition TUITION includes online access to Congress On Demand post CONGRESS $_________________ $_________ Optimizing Mechanical Ventilation: Sharing Data Between Congress and admission to all general Congress sessions, Adult and Pediatric Patients $295 ($345) SATURDAY, JAN. 11 Tuition Exhibit includes online access to Congress On Demand post Hall and Exhibit Hall refreshment breaks, Poster Hall, and Fellowship Directors Luncheon $75 ($125*) Congress and admission to all general Congress sessions, $_________ Professor Walk Rounds. SATURDAY, JAN. 11 Exhibit Hall and Exhibit Hall refreshment breaks, Poster Hall, and Fellowship Directors Luncheon $75 ($125*) $_________ Professor Walk Rounds.
Membership Options/Dues
Physician - $375 Healthcare Professionals - $162 Advanced practice nurses, registered nurses, pharmacists, physician assistants, respiratory therapists, scientists, and other healthcare professionals and industry personnel, excluding physicians International Physicians* - $258 Physicians who reside outside the United States Young Physicians* - $200 Physicians who have completed a fellowship training program within the last three years In-Training* - $85 Current fellows, residents and students in specialty training programs or pursuing healthcare education *International physician and in-training memberships do not include the right to make motions, vote or hold ofce. Consider full physician or healthcare professional membership. Intraining and young physician registrants must include a verication letter with the registration form.
Pre-registration will be accepted until December 4, 2013. Thereafter, registrations will be accepted on site only.
Pre-registration will be accepted until December 4, 2013. Thereafter, registrations will be accepted on site only.
PAYMENT INFORMATION (Please send payment with registration form.)
MEMBERSHIP DUES $ ______________ Check (must be U.S.(Please funds drawn a U.S. bank) International Money Order PAYMENT INFORMATION sendon payment with or registration form.) REGISTRATION FEES $ ______________ TOTAL DUE $ ______________ Wire Transfer (Please contact SCCM Customer Service for wire transfer information.) Check (must be U.S. funds drawn on a U.S. bank) or International Money Order MEMBERSHIP DUES $ ______________ Credit Card: American Express Discover MasterCard Visa TOTAL DUE $ ______________ Wire Transfer (Please contact SCCM Customer Service for wire transfer information.) Card Number _________________________________________________________________________ Expiration Date ____________________________________ Credit Card: American Express Discover MasterCard Visa Cardholder Name _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Card Number _________________________________________________________________________ Expiration Date ____________________________________ Cardholder Signature ___________________________________________________________________________ Date ____________________________________ Cardholder Name _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Check here or email registration@sccm.org if you have special needs related to a disability and an SCCM staff member will contact you to determine Cardholder Signature ___________________________________________________________________________ Date ____________________________________ specific requirements.
Check here or email registration@sccm.org if you have special needs related to a disability and an SCCM staff member will contact you to determine specific requirements. CANCELLATION/REFUND POLICY Cancellations must be submitted in writing. All cancellations are subject to a $75 non-refundable processing fee and
must be postmarked prior to December 4, 2013, to be eligible for a refund. Any cancellation postmarked after this date will not be refunded. Exchanges and substitutions are not allowed at any time. Dates for the 43 rd Critical Care Congress are subject to change and/or cancellation. In the event of a change/cancellation,
CANCELLATION/REFUND Cancellations must be submitted in writing. All cancellations are subject to a $75 non-refundable processing fee and only individual registration POLICY fees will be reimbursed. Please allow four weeks to process refunds.
must be postmarked prior to December 4, 2013, to be eligible for a refund. Any cancellation postmarked after this date will not be refunded. Exchanges and substitutions are not allowed at any time. Dates for the 43 rd Critical Care Congress are subject to change and/or cancellation. In the event of a change/cancellation, 28 October/November 2013 Register today at www.sccm.org/congress only individual registration fees will be reimbursed. Please allow four weeks to process refunds.
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Air Travel
SCCM has arranged for discounted airfare with United Airlines for travel to San Francisco, California, for the 43rd Critical Care Congress. Please visit www.sccm.org/Congress for details. All travelers may also contact SCCMs travel agency, Association Travel Concepts (ATC) during normal business hours Monday through Friday, 9:00 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Eastern Time. Phone: +1 800 458-9383. Note: A $35 booking fee will apply. Calls placed after normal business hours will incur an additional $25 service fee.
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Sightseeing Activities
SCCM is offering the following organized tours for attendees who want to experience some of the San Francisco areas main attractions.
The City and the Bay This tour offers the perfect overview of the many landmarks that make San Francisco Everybodys Favorite City. You will see the Golden Gate Bridge and a breathtaking view from Vista Point; the mystical wonders of Chinatown; the famous Victorian homes, known as Painted Ladies; and of course, glimpses of San Franciscos unique neighborhoods. Magical Marin: Muir Woods and Sausalito Cross the Golden Gate Bridge for a wonderful morning in stunning Marin County! You will begin the tour in Muir Woods, named for the conservationist, John Muir. Here, you will see the magnicent Redwoods, many of them thousands of years old. Next, you will visit the charming and eclectic town of Sausalito, with beautiful streets, unique shops and one-of-a-kind art galleries. You will have time to shop and browse in Sausalito. The Best of the California Wine Country Enjoy two very different wineries on this all-day wine country experience. This tour begins in the heart of Sonomas wine country at Ravenswood. Journey through this renowned winerys vineyards and cellars with a private tasting and tour. Stop in the delightful town of Yountville for time to stroll and shop, and enjoy lunch on your own. A nal stop at Clos du Val, a small boutique winery, will allow you to sample another of Californias wine country gems before heading back to San Francisco. Chinatown Discovery: A Walking Excursion (with Dim Sum Lunch) Once you enter the historic Lion Gates, you will be transported to San Franciscos renowned Chinatown. You will walk down Grant Avenue, the main street of exotic Chinatown, where shops abound with jade, ivory and silk, as well as novelty and gift items. Your tour may include a visit to an authentic fortune cookie factory or a Chinese temple. Since the aromas of the neighboring restaurants will certainly stimulate your appetite, the tour will conclude with dim sum lunch. Emphasis on Art: Legion of Honor and de Young Museum On this tour, docents will lead you through the California Palace of the Legion of Honor, one of San Franciscos most prestigious landmarks. Next is the de Young Museum, located in Golden Gate Park. Congress Advance Program
CRITICAL CARE CONGRESS:GUEST/TOUR GUEST/TOUR REGISTRATION REGISTRATION FORM 43rd43 CRITICAL CARE CONGRESS: FORM
rd
January 9-13, 2014 San Francisco, California,USA USA Moscone Moscone Center January 9-13, 2014 San Francisco, California, CenterSouth South
1. Online at www.sccm.org/store 2. Call SCCM Customer Service at +1 847 827-6888 3. Fax the completed form to +1 847 493-6444 CHOOSE FROM FOUR 1. Online at www.sccm.org/store 2. CallEagle SCCM Customer Service at +1 847 827-6888 3. Fax the completed form to +1 847 493-6444 CHOOSE FROM FOUR 4. Mail the completed form to: 35083 Way, Chicago, IL 60678-1350 USA EASY WAYS TO REGISTER: 4. Mail the completed form to: 35083 Eagle Way, Chicago, IL 60678-1350 USA EASY WAYS TO REGISTER:
rd Please type or print clearly. Please keep a copy of this form for your records. tickets for tours. Please use this form to register guests for the 43 Critical Care Congress and/or to purchase Please type or print clearly. Please keep a copy of this form for your records.
Please use this form to register guests for the 43rd Critical Care Congress and/or to purchase tickets for tours.
REGISTRANT INFORMATION
Organization __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Address ______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Address ______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ City_____________________________________ State____________ Zip/Postal Code_____________ Country ________________________________ City_____________________________________ State____________ Zip/Postal Code_____________ Country ________________________________
SPOUSE/GUEST REGISTRATION (If you need more space, please make a copy of this form.)
Spouse/guest registration is required for anyone over 18 years of age who will be participating in SCCM activities. Registration includes admission to the SPOUSE/GUEST REGISTRATION (If you need more space, please make a copy of this form.) Exhibit Hall and an SCCM gift. Spouses/guests must be registered for Congress in order to purchase tickets for tours. Spouse/guest registration is $25 per Spouse/guest registration is required for anyone over 18 years of agesession. who will be participating in SCCM activities. Registration includes admission to the guest over 18 and does not include admission to any educational
Exhibit Hall and an SCCM gift. Spouses/guests must be registered for Congress in order to purchase tickets for tours. Spouse/guest registration is $25 per QTY:____________ TOTAL $___________ guest over 18 and does not include admission to any educational session. Gender: Male Female over 18 Last Name (Surname) First Middle Initial QTY:____________ TOTAL $___________
Last Name (Surname)
First
First
Middle Initial
Middle Initial
Gender:
Gender:
Male Male
Male
Female Female
Female
over 18 over 18
over 18
Last Name (Surname) Last Name (Surname) Last Name (Surname) Last Name (Surname) Last Name (Surname) TOURS
(Please indicate ticket quantity.)
Middle Initial Middle Initial Middle Initial Middle Initial Middle Initial
Male
Female
over 18
Tours will depart from Moscone Center South. Anyone under 18 must be accompanied by an adult. Tours may be canceled due to low enrollment.
TOURS QTY TOTAL Friday, January 10, 2014 Tours will depart from Moscone Center South. Anyone under 18 must be accompanied by an adult. Tours may be canceled due to low enrollment. The City and the Bay 8:00 a.m. 12:30 p.m. $60 _____ $_________ (Please indicate ticket quantity.) The City and the Bay 12:30 p.m. 5:00 p.m. $60 _____ $_________ QTY TOTAL
Friday, January 10, 2014 Saturday, January The City and the Bay 11, 2014 The Best of the California Wine Country The City and the Bay
8:00 a.m. 12:30 p.m. 8:30 a.m. 4:00p.m. p.m. 12:30 p.m. 5:00
9:00 a.m. 1:00 p.m.
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$_________
Saturday, January 11, 2014 Sunday, January 12, 2014 The Best of the California Wine Country Chinatown Discovery with Dim Sum Lunch Magical Marin: Muir Woods and Sausalito
Emphasis on Art: Legion of Honor and de Young Museum
8:30 a.m. 4:00 p.m. 8:30 a.m. 12:30 p.m. 9:00 a.m. 1:00 p.m.
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$_________
Sunday, January 12, 2014 Chinatown Discovery with Dim Sum Lunch 8:30 a.m. 12:30 p.m. Emphasis on Art: Legion of Honor and p.m. form.) 5:30 p.m. PAYMENT INFORMATION (Please send payment with12:30 registration de Young Museum
(includes private docent tour of deYoung Check payable to SCCM (must be U.S. funds drawn on a U.S. bank) or International Money Order Museum. Please eat prior to departure.) Wire Transfer (Please contact SCCM Customer Service for wire transfer information.) Credit Card: American Express Discover MasterCard Visa PAYMENT INFORMATION (Please send payment with registration form.) TOTAL DUE $ __________________ Card Number ____________________________________________________ Expiration Date ____________________________________________________ Check payable to SCCM (must be U.S. funds drawn on a U.S. bank) or International Money Order Cardholder Name __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Wire Transfer (Please contact SCCM Customer Service for wire transfer information.) Cardholder Signature________________________________________________________ Date __________________________________________________
Credit Card:
Card Number ____________________________________________________ Expiration Date ____________________________________________________ specific requirements. Cardholder Name __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Cardholder Signature________________________________________________________ Date __________________________________________________
Check here or email registration@sccm.org if you have special needs related to a disability and an SCCM staff member will contact you to determine
American Express
Discover
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Visa
Check here or email registration@sccm.org if you have special needs related to a disability and an SCCM staff member will contact you to determine 30 requirements. October/November 2013 Register today at www.sccm.org/congress specific
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Prepare healthcare professionals to treat critical care and disaster management cases.
Acquire the latest information and necessary skills for teaching healthcare professionals to manage critically ill or injured patients, as well as plan for a disaster, at the Society of Critical Care Medicines (SCCM) upcoming instructor courses.
Clinical Pharmacy and Pharmacology Section The 43rd Critical Care Congress in San Francisco, January 9 to 13, 2014, is fast approaching. This years schedule is unique, with a Thursday through Tuesday schedule. The Clinical Pharmacy and Pharmacology (CPP) Sections annual pre-meeting symposium, Tools for Today, Visions for Tomorrow: Advancing Clinical Pharmacy, and networking activities will be held Thursday, January 9. Please plan to attend and kick off Congress with our section events, a detailed schedule of which will be sent to section members via email and archived in the iRoom. The CPP Section has a high priority for patient safety and primum non nocere. The Patient Safety Committee is engaged in patient safety-oriented projects, such as developing patient education brochures, offering awards, and coordinating research initiatives. You can find related materials in the iRoom, under Committee Documents. Open the Patient Safety Committee folder and review the activities and information. Patient safety-related questions may be directed to Eric Mueller, PharmD, BCPS, at Eric. Mueller@uchealth.com. The CPP Journal Club webcast occurs on the third Friday of each month. If you miss the live discussion, you may access the archived sessions in the Archived Presentation section of the Pharmacology Knowledge Line at LearnICU.org. Those interested in becoming either a mentor or mentee for any aspect of his or her practice may contact Jenni Morris, PharmD, BCPS, at jmorris@iuhealth.org. You do not have to be a senior member to be a mentor, and you do not have to be right out of training to be a mentee. You just need to want a professional relationship to give or receive support! Contact Lance Oyen at Oyen.Lance@Mayo.edu or any Steering Committee member if you are interested in becoming involved within the section.
The next section webinar, Coagulopathy in Trauma and Critical Illness, will be held November 14, 2013, at 5:00 p.m. EST. We look forward to seeing you at the annual Emergency Medicine Section Business Meeting during the 43rd Critical Care Congress in San Francisco, January 9 to 13, 2014.
Fundamental Disaster Management (FDM) Instructor Course January 9, 2014 San Francisco Marriott Marquis
This course will provide training on how to teach the Fundamental Disaster Management (FDM) course so that you can prepare healthcare professionals to treat victims of mass casualty events. The FDM program provides the latest information on disaster response, communications, natural disasters, and man-made disasters (biological, chemical and radiation) through comprehensive skill stations. This instructor curriculum incorporates a structured and formal approach to adult learning concepts with a focus on teaching strategies. Visit www.sccm.org/FDM for instructor criteria. The registration fee includes a copy of the FDM textbook, as well as breakfast and lunch. This course is intended for aspiring instructors only. Course content is not suitable for those desiring FDM provider status.
Emergency Medicine Section Update We are pleased to announce that the American Board of Medical Specialties approved the proposed pathway to formal critical care medicine certification co-sponsored by the American Board of Anesthesiology (ABA) and the American Board of Emergency Medicine (ABEM). The June announcement presented both a formal training pathway as well as a limited grandfathering pathway (expiring 2018). The new pathway requires that the emergency medicine/critical care medicine (EM/CCM) candidate complete two years critical care fellowship training at an approved anesthesiology/critical care medicine site. (Anesthesiology/ CCM programs will have to apply and be approved for an EM/CCM two-year track.) The fellowship curriculum allows latitude for multidisciplinary clinical exposure but requires the completion of specific surgical critical care time (both during the first year and by completion of the training cycle). Further details, including frequently asked questions, have been posted on the ABA and ABEM websites. This pathway joins the existing critical care medicine certification pathway co-sponsored by the ABEM and American Board of Internal Medicine as well as the pathway to surgical critical care through the American Board of Surgery. The landscape for EM/CCM has radically changed over the past two years with multiple opportunities for training and formal certification. An archived presentation detailing the three pathways is available in the Professional Development Knowledge Line at LearnICU.org.
Internal Medicine Section Update The Internal Medicine Section continues to have a productive year. The Intensivists in Practice Subcommittee, led by Drs. Leo Rotello and Paul Yodice, participates on regularly scheduled conference calls to advance the interests of practicing intensivists and intensivists in-training who intend to practice in the community. The section also is seeking to revitalize the SCCM program related to fulfilling American Board of Internal Medicine Maintenance of Certification requirements. We encourage members interested in participating in such an endeavor to contact a member of the Section Steering Committee. Dont forget to vote in the upcoming SCCM Council elections! Your participation is vital to represent the interests of SCCM members. As always, we encourage you to share your ideas and suggestions to better serve the section and to advance our collective interests. We hope to see you at the 43rd Critical Care Congress in San Francisco! Laura E. Evans, MD, MS, Section Chair: laura.evans@nyumc.org Jonathan E. Sevransky, MD, FCCM, Chair-Elect: jonathan.sevransky@emoryhealthcare.org Mark E. Mikkelsen, MD, MSCE, Secretary/Treasurer: mark.mikkelsen@uphs.upenn.edu Nicholas S. Ward, MD, FCCM, Past Chair: Nicholas_Ward@brown.edu Antoinette Spevetz, MD, FCCM, Consultant Advisor: spevetz-antoinette@cooperhealth.edu Elliott D. Crouser, MD, Member At-Large: crouser.1@osu.edu Bob Hyzy, MD, FCCM, Member At-Large: rhyzy@med.umich.edu Greg Martin, MD, MSc, FCCM, Member At-Large: greg.martin@emory.edu Fred Rincon, MD, MSc, MBE, FACP, Member At-Large: fred.rincon@jefferson.edu Colette Punda, Staff Partner: cpunda@sccm.org
Pediatric Fundamental Critical Care Support (PFCCS) Instructor Course January 9, 2014 San Francisco Marriott Marquis
During this one-day instructor training, you will learn to teach Pediatric Fundamental Critical Care Support (PFCCS) with the content from the new, second edition textbook. The PFCCS program has been updated to reect the latest skills and techniques practitioners need to address pediatric-specic topics, such as shock, respiratory failure and transport of the critically ill child. This instructor curriculum incorporates a structured and formal approach to adult learning concepts with a focus on teaching strategies. It is recommended that participants be currently practicing in pediatric critical care. Visit www.sccm.org/PFCCS for instructor criteria. The registration fee includes a copy of the second edition PFCCS textbook, as well as breakfast and lunch. This course is intended for aspiring instructors only. Course content is not suitable for those desiring PFCCS provider status.
Fundamental Critical Care Support (FCCS) Instructor Course January 9, 2014 San Francisco Marriott Marquis
Learn to teach Fundamental Critical Care Support (FCCS) based on content from the fth edition textbook during this one-day instructor course training. The FCCS program has been updated, enhanced and expanded to reect the latest skills and techniques practitioners need to treat critically ill and injured patients in the absence of an intensivist. This instructor curriculum incorporates a structured and formal approach to adult learning concepts with a focus on teaching strategies. It is recommended that participants be currently practicing in critical care, as the traditional two-day FCCS course is condensed into a one-day program. Visit www.sccm.org/FCCS for instructor criteria. The registration fee includes a copy of the current FCCS textbook, as well as breakfast and lunch. This course is intended for aspiring instructors only. Course content is not suitable for those desiring FCCS provider status.
Nursing Section Update A few reminders as you plan for the upcoming year. Please join us at 43rd Critical Care Congress in San Francisco, January 9 to 13, 2014. The Nursing Section Business Meeting/Expert Nurse Panel and Member Breakfast Reception will be held on Saturday, January 11. You will receive an email with the time and location as well as the dates and times of the section subcommittee meetings. Remember, all Nursing Section members are welcome to attend the section committee meetings. During the Nursing Section Business meeting, we hold the elections for open leadership positions within the Steering Committee. We will be voting for the chair-elect and one member-at-large positions. If you are interested in either position or would like more information, please contact Section Chair Barbara Birriel, ACNP-BC, FCCM, at bab44@psu.edu.
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For more information, contact your Hospira representative at 1-877-9HOSPIRA (1-877-946-7747) or visit www.hospira.com. Hospira, Inc. 275 North Field Drive, Lake Forest, IL 60045 P13-4006/R1-10x12.90625-Aug., 13
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