
2 minute read
SPEAKERS
from #AOT23 Programme
Mr Neil Bateman
Mr Bateman is a Paediatric ENT Surgeon at the Royal Manchester Children's Hospital. He is also the President Elect for British Association for Paediatric Otorhinolaryngology (BAPO).
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His clinical practice includes the common ENT problems in children. He also has particular specialist interests in airway reconstruction, head and neck and salivary gland surgery, and ear reconstruction.
He is co-director of the Paediatric Emergency Skills Course for Consultants, chairs the ENT Coblation Training Courses for Consultants and is on the faculty for the British Paediatric Otolaryngology Course.
9.15-9.30 The EXIT Procedure
Prof
Prof Quraishi is a Consultant Otolaryngologist at Doncaster and Bassetlaw Teaching Hospitals. He is also an Honorary Senior Lecturer at Sheffield University and a Visiting Professor at Capital Medical University, Beijing. He was trained in Dublin, Toronto and Nottingham.

He is the Founding Director of ENT Masterclass®, has been the Training Programme Director in ENT and an FRCS examiner. He was the President of the Royal Society of Medicine (Laryngology and Rhinology section) in 2018.
In June 2017, Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II appointed him as an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) for his services to the NHS and medical training. In 2020, he was the first European surgeon to be awarded the International Public Service award by the American Academy of Otolaryngology. Most recently in 2021, he was awarded the FRCS ad Hominem by the Royal College of Surgeons’ Edinburgh for his services to surgical training.
11.40-12.10 History of ENT Masterclass
Dr Hannah Cappleman is a Consultant Psychiatrist working in an Early Intervention in Psychosis service in Bolton. She has a particular interest in medical education and trainee well-being.

She is the LTFT and Supported Return to Training Champion for the North West School of Psychiatry and the Trainee Welfare Lead at Greater Manchester Mental Health NHS Trust. She has spoken widely in the North West on how understanding systemic trauma in the NHS can help us understand how staff relate to each other. Her work includes training trainers in a range of specialties on how we can be more trauma-informed in the way we educate and supervise. She is piloting a reflective practice group for Emergency Medicine trainees to investigate if taking time out to talk about the feelings evoked in the patient-doctor relationship can improve well-being and compassion.
She was shortlisted for the Royal College of Psychiatrists’ Psychiatric Educator of the Year in 2022.
Zahra is training as a General Adult Psychiatrist (ST5) and alongside this, is in her fourth year of training as a psychotherapist in Integrative Transactional Analysis in Manchester.

She has a growing appreciation of how much the quality of our relationship with ourself and with others determines our mental, emotional and physical wellbeing- and with this, the significance of meaningfully addressing unhealthy relational patterns which cause dis-ease within us. She thinks that when we go through difficult personal experiences, compassionately listening to 'what happened to me/us' is more human and meaningful than focusing on 'what is wrong with me/us'.
Zahra is delighted to serendipitously be here at today's conference.