CCC2013 Final Programme

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11th Congress of the World Federation of Societies of Intensive & Critical Care Medicine

28 August to 1 September 2013 Durban, South Africa www.criticalcare2013.com Annual Congress of the World Federation of Critical Care Nurses International Meeting of the World Federation of Pediatric Intensive and Critical Care Societies



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Contents 4-6 7 9 - 16 17 18 - 21 23 - 42 43 - 50 52 52 54 55 56 - 75 76 - 80 76 76 76 77 77 77 77 77 77 77 77 77 78 78 78 78 78 78 78 78 78 78 78 78 78 78 79 80 - 85 86

Welcome Messages Organising Committees Workshop Programme Invited Congress Faculty Programme at a Glance Academic Programme Poster Rounds Speaker Preparation Centre Social Programme Exhibitor Floorplan Key Exhibitor Floorplan Exhibitor Information Congress Information South Africa Durban CPD Accreditation Registration Desk Accommodation Banks & Currency Price Guidelines VAT / Tax Refunds on Departure Dress Code Electricity & Power Health & Insurance Important Telephone Numbers Indemnity Language Lunch Venues Lost and Found Parking Restaurants Safety Shopping Telecommunication Time Difference Tipping / Gratuity Venue Transport Airport Transfers City Map Transport Schedules Congress Sponsors

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o

WELCOME MESSAGES Welcome CCSSA 11th WFSICCM Congress Durban. On behalf of the Critical Care Society of Southern Africa, it is a delight to have you join us for the 11th World Federation of Societies of Intensive and Critical Care Medicine Congress. The CCSSA is honoured to have been selected by the WFSICCM to be the hosts of this prestigious meeting. The Society extends an extremely warm welcome to all delegates and invited guests. In keeping with our own membership, we are also thrilled to have involved in this meeting, the World Federation of Critical Care Nursing and the World Federation of Pediatric and Critical Care Societies.

Dear Colleagues Sanbonani, Dumelang… A very warm welcome to the continent of Africa. It is fitting that the first World Critical Care meeting in Africa is being hosted in South Africa, home to a leading democracy, land of the Rainbow Nation and Cradle of Humankind.

The CCSSA has a proud record of organizing meetings of outstanding academic excellence, enhanced by a wonderful social programme and ambience. It is our sincere wish that this meeting will be marvelously memorable, meaningful and inspirational in every respect, and that you will indulge yourself in traditional South African hospitality.

The challenges for appropriate health care provision on the African continent epitomise the needs of low and middle income countries. Equally, health care expenditure in better resourced countries has reached a tipping point. Hence, in exploring the theme of our congress “Critical Care for All”, we pose the challenge in achieving “… more for less.”

A huge thank you is extended to everyone who has so graciously contributed to the success of this conference. In the spirit of “ubunthu” we invite you to enjoy this meeting to the maximum!

Critical care has made impressive advances in the last few decades, but we still face our age-old challenge of reducing high mortality among the critically ill. During this meeting, we will attempt to highlight the problems, at the same time, promoting discussion about solutions; solutions that must target human capacity and optimization of infrastructure as key drivers for improved health care provision for all.

Warmest regards and best wishes Mervyn Mer President: Critical Care Society of Southern Africa (CCSSA)

Our exciting scientific programme of local and international experts, spanning the spectrum from low to high resourced environments, offers you the opportunity to explore critical care issues in different contexts. Our impressive trade exhibition will keep you busy with innovations in the market place. Our traditionally warm hospitality will ensure a fitting evening social accompaniment to your full days. We hope you enjoy all our offerings. Satish Bhagwanjee and Dean Gopalan Co-Chairs: South African Organising Committee

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o Dear Professional Colleagues and Industry Supporters.

Dear Colleagues It is my distinct pleasure, on behalf of the World Federation of Critical Care Nurses (WFCCN), to welcome you to the 11th Congress of the World Federation of Societies of Intensive and Critical Care Medicine. We are extremely pleased that you could join us to celebrate and partake in the many offerings of the Critical Care Congress here in Durban South Africa.

On behalf of the WFSICCM it is my great pleasure to extend a warm welcome to our 11th World Congress and to the city of Durban. This is the first occasion in our history that the Congress has been hosted on the continent of Africa. I congratulate the Organizing Committees for developing a comprehensive and stimulating scientific program. I also welcome and thank those representatives from industry who are supporting this Congress.

As you join in all of the learning opportunities and festivities of the 2013 Congress, “Critical Care for All,” we hope you will enjoy this most important meeting for critical care practitioners. The WFCCN, with 40 international country members representing over 400,000 critical care nurses worldwide, is proud to co-host the Congress.

At this World Congress we restate our commitment to the promotion of the highest standards of intensive and critical care medicine for mankind, without discrimination. It provides us with a unique opportunity to share experience, knowledge and technologies and to discuss how we might utilize these in resourcelimited settings.

We wish you an enjoyable time as you network, share, learn, and strategize with us to promote best patient outcomes and further advance critical care throughout the world.

I know that the organisation and planning has been a great team effort. However I particularly want to extend my great appreciation to Professor Satish Bhagwanjee. His leadership and inspiration have been the key factors in the development of this Congress. Now it’s time for us to join together and celebrate “Critical Care for All”.

Ruth Kleinpell PhD RN FCCM President of World Federation of Critical Care Nurses (WFCCN) Welcome to the 2013 WFSICCM World Congress!

Edgar Jimenez President: World Federation of Societies of Intensive and Critical Care Medicine (WFSICCM)

I look forward to being together with so many colleagues and friends here in Durban, South Africa. This is a great opportunity to share friendship and exchange ideas on ways to improve the care of critically ill children world-wide.

Dear Colleagues On behalf of the International Scientific Programme Committee a warm welcome to Durban, South Africa. The programme has been designed to focus on key issues in critical care in a format that will provide the opportunity to promote discourse, debate and scholarly collaboration. The current global challenge of providing more for less will constitute a pervasive theme in discussions pertaining to the various components of critical care such as diagnostics, therapies, administration and research.

Enjoy the conference and all that Durban and South Africa has to offer. The opportunity to work together in such a beautiful city is a gift we can all appreciate. The scientific program is extensive and inclusive and should provide the stimulus and energize us to pursue the goals of the World Federation of Paediatric Intensive and Critical Care Societies. Thank you all for making time to attend this important conference. I look forward to meeting many of you.

On a personal note, a special thanks to the international faculty who have travelled to the tip of Africa to participate in this event. Thank you to the South African Speaker Faculty and the Scientific Programme Committee for rising to the challenge of welcoming the world to South Africa and providing a South African perspective of Critical Care.

Warmest regards, Niranjan Kissoon President of World Federation of Paediatric Intensive and Critical Care Societies (WFPICCS)

I look forward to your participation in the meeting, and I hope that you will have an enriching scientific experience at the congress as well as a memorable stay. Fathima Paruk Chair, International Scientific Programme Committee

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o The burden of sepsis—a call to action in support of World Sepsis Day 2013.

Dear Colleagues Welcome to Durban!

Worldwide, sepsis is one of the most common deadly diseases. Globally, 20 to 30 million patients are estimated to be afflicted every year. Every hour, approximately 1000 people die from sepsis worldwide. Sepsis mortality can be reduced considerably through the adoption of early recognition and standardized emergency treatment. However, these interventions are currently delivered to less than 1 in 7 patients in a timely fashion.

We humans evolved in Africa, migrating out around the globe to become a creative, clever and compassionate, yet often frustrating, fractious, and short-sighted species. We have returned to Africa this week to share science and to advance the care of the most gravely ill of our fellow humans. “Critical Care for All- Providing More for Less” is the theme of this congress. It is also the guiding principle for a growing number of intensivists who have joined together to improve patient care through investigator-initiated clinical research.

To address these gaps in insight and encourage vigorous advocacy and efforts to decrease the burden of sepsis worldwide, the Global Sepsis Alliance (GSA) and its founding members took the initiative to create the World Sepsis Day (WSD) as a launch platform for the World Sepsis Declaration. The intent of WSD was 2-fold: first, to raise awareness of sepsis among all stakeholders including members of the public and policymakers and, second, to encourage capacity building and quality improvement initiatives for sepsis recognition and management by hospitals and health care providers toward delivering the goals set out in the World Sepsis Declaration.

The International Forum for Acute Care Trialists (InFACT) is an umbrella organization that represents some 20 research consortia from around the world whose focus is the optimal care of critically ill patients. Our model is built upon that of highly effective groups in Canada and Australia that have been replicated on virtually every continent of the planet. Our focus is not so much the development of new therapies, but rather the study of those we have, with a view to maximizing patient benefit and reducing patient risk. We have been effective: our members boast several hundred peer reviewed publications, and our work includes landmark studies in such areas as mechanical ventilation, transfusion, fluid resuscitation, glycemic control, nutrition, and long term outcomes following ICU discharge. The InFACT collaboration was galvanized by the 2009 H1N1 pandemic during which we launched global collaborative studies to characterize the epidemiology of the first large pandemic threat of the 21st century. Through these activities, we have begun to interact with public health decision-makers, and have sensitized non-intensivists to the role that critical care plays in global public health. Our current activities focus on building global critical care research collaboration, and on strengthening the science of critical care through activities that range from planning global clinical trials and sentinel surveillance strategies to improving and harmonizing the research metrics to accomplish these goals.

These goals are: 1. Reducing sepsis incidence through prevention by at least 20%, 2. Improving survival for children and adults in all countries, 3. Raising public and professional awareness and understanding of sepsis, 4. Ensuring improved access to adequate rehabilitation services, and 5. Creating and maintaining sepsis incidence and outcomes databases. On behalf of the GSA I would like to ask all participants of the WFSICCM congress to get your hospital or department to add to the number of more than 1200 hospitals that so far have committed to the targets of the WSD. Join us to get more information on World Sepsis Day at our GSA informational meeting during this congress on Wednesday.

We are particularly delighted to see the model of investigator-led critical care research extend beyond the borders of the developed world, and are thrilled to play a role in supporting emerging groups in Latin America, Asia, and sub-Saharan Africa. We are proud to join with the World Federation of Societies of Intensive and Critical Care Medicine to advance the care of the most vulnerable patients in the health care system. Please join us for InFACT sessions during the Congress, and visit our website – www.InFACTglobal.org. Together we can create the knowledge that will allow us as clinicians to bring effective critical care for all.

You may easily register at: www.world-sepsis-day.org Stop sepsis and save lives, support WSD on 13 September 2013. Konrad Reinhart Chairman Global Sepsis Alliance

Sincerely, John C. Marshall MD Chairman, InFACT

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ORGANISING COMMITTEES Steering Committee Co-Chairs Sats Bhagwanjee (Washington) Mervyn Mer (Johannesburg) Brian Levy (Johannesburg) Fathima Paruk (Johannesburg)

Dean Gopalan (Durban) Juan Scribante (Johannesburg)

South African Organising Committee Sam Mokgokong (Johannesburg) Ivan Joubert (Cape Town) Lance Michell (Cape Town) Des Cox (Port Elizabeth) Gary Katzman (Johannesburg) Lliam Brannigan (Johannesburg) Marlice van Dyk (Pretoria) Theroshnie Kisten (Durban) Shahed Omar (Johannesburg)

Eric Hodgson (Durban) Jan Pretorius (Pretoria) Bronwen Espen (Cape Town) Jenna Piercy (Cape Town) Malcolm Miller (Cape Town) Nicky Kalafatis (Durban) Andrew Argent (Cape Town) Sooraj Mothilall (Johannesburg)

Guy Richards (Johannesburg) Maryke Spruyt (Bloemfontein) Rudo Mathivha (Johannesburg) Ahmad Alli (Johannesburg) Sean Chetty (Johannesburg) Ismail Kalla (Johannesburg) Carolyn Lee (Pietermaritzburg) Oliver Smith (Johannesburg)

Jean-Louis Vincent (Belgium) John Marshall (Canada) Younsuk Koh (Korea) Dean Gopalan (South Africa) Luciano Gattinoni (Italy) Janice Zimmerman (USA) Ahmad Alli (South Africa) Oliver Smith (Cape Town) Shahed Omar (Johannesburg)

Edgar Jimenez (USA) Konrad Reinhart (Germany) Edgar Celis (Columbia) Mervyn Mer (South Africa) Arthur Slutsky (Canada) Jeff Lipman (Australia) Ismail Kalla (South Africa) Jenna Piercy (Cape Town)

International Scientific Committee Chairperson Fathima Paruk (South Africa) Members Sats Bhagwanjee (USA) Phil Dellinger (USA) Monty Mythen (United Kingdom) Pravin Amin (India) Flavio Maciel (Brazil) Perren Cobb (USA) Daniel De Backer (Belgium) Sean Chetty (Johannesburg) Charlie Sprung (Israel)

Paediatric - International Scientific Committee Andrew Argent (South Africa) Niranjan Kissoon (Canada) Fenella Gill (Australia) Minette Coetzee (South Africa)

Sunit Singhi (India) Eduardo Troster (Brazil)

Nursing - International Scientific Committee Co-Chairpersons Ruth Kleinpell (USA) Juan Scribante (South Africa) Members: Ged Williams (Australia) Gordon Speed (New Zealand)

Maria Isabelita Rogado (Philippines) Busi Bhengu (South Africa)

Vedran Dumbovic (Croatia) Janet Bell (South Africa)

WFSICCM Council President Edgar Jimenez (USA) Secretary-General Jean-Louis Vincent (Belgium) Treasurer Edgar Celis (Columbia) Members Pravin Amin (India) Bin Du (China) Raffaelede Gaudio (Italy) Younsuk Koh (Korea) Flavio Maciel (Brazil) Ana Maria Montanez Mendoza (Peru) Georges Offenstadt (France) Konrad Reinhart (Germany) Sebastian Ugarte (Chile) Khalid Shukri (Saudi-Arabia)

Guillermo Castorena (Mexico) Javier Hurtado (Uruguay) John Marshall (Canada) Mercedes Palomar (Spain) Satish Bhagwanjee (South Africa)

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WORKSHOP PROGRAMME Basic Assessment and Support in Intensive Care Tuesday, 27 August 2013 08h00 – 18h00 ICC Durban – Meeting Room 22 Course Director: Ross Freebairn (New Zealand) Time Lecture Candidates 08h00-08h10 Introduction R. Freebairn & M.Miller 08h10-08h45 Guide to ‘The BASIC course’ R. Freebairn 08h45-09h20 Lecturing M. Miller 09h20-09h45 Skill stations C. Gomersall 09h45-10h00 Tea break 10h00-10h30 10h30-11h00 11h00-11h15

Candidates 1,14,27 Candidate 2,15,28 Candidate 3,16,29

Basic Haemodynamic monitoring Shock

Candidate 4,17,30 Candidate 5,18

Break

15h05-15h35 15h35-16h05 16h05-16h35 16h35-16h55

Airway Management Mechanical Ventilation settings Mechanical Ventilation Troubleshooting

Lunch break

13h40-14h25 14h25-14h55 14h44-15h05

M. Miller R. Freebairn

Break

11h15-11h50 11h50-12h20 12h20-12h50 12h50-13h40

Mechanical Ventilation BASIC Mechanical Ventilation Modes

Skill Station Session 1 Skill Station Session 2 Skill Station Session 3

Break

16h55-17h25 17h25-17h55

Skill Station Session 4 Skill Station Session 5

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WORKSHOP PROGRAMME Basic Assessment and Support in Intensive Care Wednesday, 28 August 2013 08h00 – 17h00 ICC Durban – Meeting Room 22 Course Director: Ross Freebairn (New Zealand) Time Lecture Candidates 08h00-08h30 Severe Sepsis & Septic shock Candidate 6,19 08h30-09h00 Neurological Emergencies Candidate 7,20 09h00-09h25 CPR Candidate 8,21 09h25-09h55 Arrhythmias Candidate 9,22 09h55-10h10

Tea break

10h10-10h35 Oliguria and acute renal failure Candidate 10,23 10h35-11h00 Transport of the Critically lll Candidate 11,24 11h00-11h25 Nutrition & Thromboprophylaxis Candidate 12,25 11h25-11h55 Trauma Candidate 13,26 11h55-12h30

Lunch break

12h30-13h00 13h00-13h30 13h30-14h00 14h00-14h15

Skill Station Session 6 Skill Station Session 7 Skill Station Session 8

Break

14h15-14h45 14h45-15h15 15h15-15h45 15h45-16h45

Skill Station Session 9 Skill Station Session 10 Q&A Session Exam & Evaluation

16h45 Closure Thank you to our Sponsors: Covidien Medhold Medical (Pty) Ltd The Scientific Group

Drägerwerk AG & Co. KGaA Intersurgical RCA Teleflex Medical

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WORKSHOP PROGRAMME Beyond BASIC Mechanical Ventilation Course Tuesday, 27 August 2013 12h30 – 17h35 ICC Durban – Hall 2D Course Director: Gavin Joynt (China) Time Lecture Lecturer 12h30-12h50 Registration and welcome Gavin Joynt 12h50-13h20 Applied respiratory physiology Ivan Joubert 13h20-13h50 Acute respiratory failure Susanne Schroeder 13h50-14h15 Heart-lung interactions Gavin Joynt 14h15-14h40 Tracheostomy John Botha 14h40 -14h55 Tea Break 14h55-15h30 Humidification Gavin Joynt 15h30-15h55 Mechanical ventilation basics John Botha 15h55-16h20 Assist-control modes Susanne Schroeder 16h20-16h45 SIMV & assist modes Ivan Joubert 16h45-17h10 Bi-level Ventilation John Botha 17h10-17h35 Adaptive Support Ventilation Gavin Joynt Beyond BASIC Mechanical Ventilation Course Wednesday, 28 August 2013 08h00 – 17h15 ICC Durban – Hall 2D Time Lecture Lecturer 08h00-08h50 Weaning Gavin Joynt 08h50-09h20 Respiratory Monitoring Charles Gomersall 09h20-09h50 Trouble-shooting Ivan Joubert 09h50-10h05 Tea Break 10h05-10h45 ARDS John Botha 10h45-11h15 Obstructive Airway Disease Susanne Schroeder 11h15-11h45 Non-invasive Ventilation Ivan Joubert 11h45-12h30 Lunch 12h30-14h45

Skills stations (45mins each) 1. Waveforms Gavin Joynt 2. Weaning John Botha 3. Asthma Charles Gomersall

14h45-15h00 Tea Break 15h00-16h30 Skill stations (45 mins each) 4. ARDS 5. Case discussion 16h30-17h30 MCQ and evaluation 17h15 Course closes

Ivan Joubert Susanne Schroeder

Thank you to our Sponsors: Covidien Intersurgical Smiths Medical Teleflex Medical The Scientific Group

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WORKSHOP PROGRAMME Non Cardiac Ultrasound in the Critically III Patient Tuesday, 27 August 2013 09h00 – 17h00 ICC Durban – Meeting Room 21 Course Director: Daniel De Backer (Belgium) 09h00-10h30 10h30-11h00

Hands on session: Skills to acquire/practice: small group practice 1. Machine introduction • Knobology-basics • 2-D imaging; M-Mode; Doppler • Introduction to machinery: saving images and videos; gain; depth • Image acquisition: planes of the body • Troubleshooting your image Lecture: Abdominal Ultrasound Applications (Daniel de Backer) • FAST: Focused Assessment with Sonography in Trauma • Bladder / hydronephrosis • Peritoneal examination and Ultrasound-guided paracentesis

11h00-11h15 Tea Break 11h15-11h45 11h45-12h15 12H15-13h15

Lecture: Lung and Pleural Ultrasound Applications (Paolo Pelosi) • Imaging the thoracic cavity • Pneumothorax • Pleural effusion • Lung condensation / A and B lines • Ultrasound-guided Thoracentesis Clinical case discussions (Daniel de Backer) Hands on session: Skills to acquire/practice: small group practice 1. Thorax Imaging • Lung sliding; lung pulse; diaphragm imaging • Normal lung/pleura anatomy; pneumothorax assessment 2. Vascular imaging: Central vein anatomy; compressibility; measure depth, CSA; Doppler; short- and long axis views 3. Abdominal imaging (live model) • FAST; bladder / kidneys

13h15-14h30 Lunch break 14h30-15h15 15h15-16h00 16H00-17h00 17h00

Lecture: Vascular Ultrasound and Image-guided Access (Paolo Pelosi) • Central vessel and local anatomy assessment (SVC) • Can this vessel be cannulated? (Vessel assessment bycompression, Doppler / detection of clots in the vessel) • Ultrasound-guided vascular access Clinical cases discussions (Justiaan Swanevelder) Hands on session: Skills to acquire/practice: small group practice 1. Thorax Imaging • Lung sliding; lung pulse; diaphragm imaging • Normal lung/pleura anatomy; pneumothorax assessment 2. Vascular imaging: Central vein anatomy; compressibility; measure depth, CSA; Doppler; short- and long axis views 3. Abdominal imaging (live model) • FAST; bladder / kidneys 4. Vascular Access Training • Internal jugular veins (short/long axis) • Subclavian veins (short/long axis) • Vascular access (if available) Workshop closes

Thank you to our Sponsors: GE Healthcare SSEM Mthembu Medical Teleflex Medical

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WORKSHOP PROGRAMME Basic Airway Workshop Wednesday, 28 August 2013 07h30 – 10h00 ICC Durban – Hall 2A Course Director: Eric Hodgson (South Africa) 07h30-0800 08h00-10h00

Introductory lecture (Eric Hodgson) Hands On Skills Stations

1. Bag-valve mask ventilation Ambu – SSEM 2. Direct Laryngoscopy SSEM Glidescope Mac Storz C-Mac 3. Supraglottic Rescue LMA Classic & Supreme - LMACo Easytube - Teleflex Laryngeal tube – VBM - SSEM 4. Infraglottic Rescue Melker: Cook – Marland Medical PCK: Portex – Smith’s Medical

Thank you to our Sponsors: Karl Storz Smiths Medical Cook Critical Care LMA Company SSEM (AMBU, VBM, Parker Medical) Teleflex

Advanced Airway Workshop Wednesday, 28 August 2013 10h30 – 13h00 ICC Durban – Hall 2A Course Director: Eric Hodgson (South Africa) 10h30-10h45 10h45-13h00

Introductory lecture (Eric Hodgson) Skills Stations 1. LMA Proseal/ Supreme/ Fast/ C Trach 2. The Video laryngoscope GlideScope / ET Tubes Airtraq McGrath 3. Combitube / Laryngeal tube/ EasyTube Alternative Supraglottic airways I-Gel / Ambu / LMA 4. Paediatric intubation 5. Stab / SeldingerCricothyrotomy 6. Fibreoptic dexterity training

Thank you to our Sponsors: Karl Storz Smiths Medical Cook Critical Care LMA Company SSEM (AMBU, VBM, Parker Medical) Covidien Intersurgical R Moloney Teleflex Aircraft Medical

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WORKSHOP PROGRAMME Cardiac Ultrasound in the Critically III Patient Wednesday, 28 August 2013 09h00 – 17h00 ICC Durban – Meeting Room 21 Course Director: Daniel De Backer (Belgium) 09h00-09h20 Lecture: Indications and applications ( Daniel De Backer) • Shock => FOCUSED exam • Respiratory failure) 09h20-09h40 Lecture: Planes (Daniel De Backer) • Parasternal (short/long) • Apical • Subxyphoidal 09h40-10h00 Lecture: Doppler (Xavier Monnet) • Pulse waved Doppler • Continuous Doppler • Tissue Doppler Imaging 10h00-10h15 Tea Break 10h15-11h45 Hands-on sessions: Skills to acquire/practice : small group practice 1. Knobology-basics 2. Parasternal (short and long axis) View (LV function, AoV/MV assessment) 3. Subcostal View – 4 Chamber (Pericardium, 4Chamber) 4. Subcostal View – IVC (volume assessment) 5. Apical View (4 Chamber, Right Ventricle) 11h45-12h15 Lecture: Evaluation of fluid responsiveness (Xavier Monnet) • Heart-lung interactions • Aortic flow variations • Passive leg raising test • IVC variations 12h15-12h30 Lecture: Measurement of cardiac output (Daniel De Backer) 12h30-12h45 Lecture: Evaluation of LV systolic function (JustiaanSwanevelder) • Ejection fraction • What to know of other indices? 12h45-13h40

Lunch Break

13h40-14h00 Lecture: Right ventricular disease (Antoine Vieillard-Baron) • Evaluation of RV function • Acute cor pulmonale • Measurement of pulmonary artery pressure 14h00-14h20 Lecture: Pericardial effusion and cardiac tamponade (Daniel De Backer) • Pericardial effusion • Signs of tamponade 14h20-14h40 Lecture: Echocardiography for the assessment of shock (Daniel De Backer) • How to use • Decision algorithm 14h40-15h00 Clinical cases (X.Monnet/A.Vieillard Baron)

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o 15h00-15h15 Tea Break 15h15-15h45 Lecture: Evaluation of filling pressures (Justiaan Swanevelder) • Mitral E/A waves • Tissue Doppler imaging E/Ea 15h45-16h00 Lecture: Echocardiography for the assessment of respiratory failure (Antoine Vieillard-Baron) • How to diagnose ARDS and cardiogenic pulmonary edema • A role in weaning • Ventilatory settings 16h00-17h00 Hands-on sessions: Skills to acquire/practice :Small group practice 1. Parasternal (short and long axis) View (LV function, AoV/MV assessment) 2. Subcostal View – 4 Chamber (Pericardium, 4Chamber, mitral flow) 3. Subcostal View – IVC (volume assessment) 4. Apical View (4 Chamber, Right Ventricle) 5. Cardiac output measurement 6. Mitral E/A waves 17h00

Workshop closes

Thank you to our Sponsors: GE Healthcare SSEM Mthembu Medical Teleflex Medical

PharmaDynamics

Hill-Rom Workshop Wednesday, 28 August 2013 09h00 – 10h30 ICC Durban – Meeting Room 11CDE 09h00-09h45 09h45-10h30

Early Mobility - breaking the paradigm of bed rest Practical Demo

Mariam Bennani

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WORKSHOP PROGRAMME Mobility and Mobilising in the Intensive Care Unit 28 August 2013 13h00 – 17h00 ICC Durban - MR 11CDE This half-day interactive workshop will be presented by Associate Professor Shane Patman, a Specialist Cardiorespiratory Physiotherapist from Australia and worldwide expert on Physiotherapy in Critical Care. The course will include lectures and there will be provision for interactive discussions between the audience, Prof. Patman and local experts in the field. The aim of this course is to develop knowledge and skills in terms of Mobilisation in the Intensive Care Unit, including indications, risk factors, assessment tools, and ways to ensure the safety and efficacy of this intervention. Course Format Half day course Lectures and skills sessions Personal interaction with the experts in the field Lecture Program and Topics: 13h15-13h45 Risk factors for ICU-acquired weakness and known long-term physical, cognitive, and psychiatric outcomes in survivors of critical illness 13h45-14h00 Safety aspects with early mobilization within critical care 14h00-15h00 Physical function assessment tools within critical care 15h00-15h15 Tea Break 15h15-16h15 16h15-16h45 16h45-17h00

Rehabilitation options Case study discussion Reflections and future directions

Percutaneous Tracheostomy Workshop Wednesday, 28 August 2013 14h00 – 17h00 ICC Durban – Hall 2A Course Director: Nestor Raimondi (Argentina) Lectures 1. Evolution of percutaneous tracheostomy since its origin. 2. New techniques Practical Session Technique on video Hands on Session Three different techniques: 1. Ciaglia’s technique 2. Grigg’s technique 3. Percutwist Thank you to our Sponsors: Karl StorzEndoskope PerryHill International (Pty) Ltd Teleflex Medical

Smiths Medical

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o

INVITED CONGRESS FACULTY Adam Deane, Australia Adam Singer, USA Adriano Friganovic, Croatia Ahmad Alli, South Africa Akhter Goolam Mahomed, South Africa Alexis Turgeon, Canada Ana Crawford, USA Ana Maria Montanez Mendoza, Peru Anand Kumar, Canada Anders Perner, Denmark Andrew Argent, South Africa Anthony Figaji, South Africa Antoine Vieillard-Baron, France Arjen Dondorp, Thailand Bala Venkatesh, Australia Belle Rogado, Philippines Bertrand Guidet, France Beyra Rossouw, South Africa Bhiken Naik, USA Bin Du, China Brenda Morrow, South Africa Brian Kavanagh, Canada Bruce Biccard, South Africa Bruce Cairns, USA Busi Bhengu, South Africa Busi Mrara, South Africa Can Ince, The Netherlands Carlos Brun, USA Cate Fourie, South Africa Charles Feldman, South Africa Charles Gomersall, China Charlie Sprung, Israel Cheryl Carter, South Africa Chris Farmer, USA Chris Lundgren, South Africa Daniel Ceraso, Argentina Daniel De Backer, Belgium David Grolman, Australia David Kloeck, South Africa David Linton, Israel David Muckart, South Africa David Nicolau, USA Didier Pittet, Switzerland Djillali Annane, France Edgar Celis, Colombia Edgar Jimenez, USA Eduardo Troster, Brazil Elizabeth Mayne, South Africa Eric Hodgson, South Africa Esther Wong, China Eunok Kwon, Korea Fathima Docrat, South Africa Fathima Paruk, South Africa Fenella Gill, Australia Flavio Maciel, Brazil Francesco Menicetti, Italy Gavin Joynt, China Ged Williams, Australia Gene Sung, USA Georges Offenstadt, France Gordon Speed, New Zealand Guillermo Castorena, Mexico

Gunter Schleicher, South Africa Guy Richards, South Africa Halima Kabara, Nigeria Harshad Ranchod, South Africa Herwig Gerlach, Germany Hiroyuki Hirasawa, Japan Hussain Al Rahma, Dubai Ismail Kalla, South Africa Ivan Joubert, South Africa Ivor Douglas, USA Jacques Goosen, South Africa Jan Pretorius, South Africa Janet Bell, South Africa Janice Zimmerman, USA Janicke Visser, South Africa Jason Phua, Singapore Javier Hurtado, Uruguay Jean Botha, South Africa Jean-Damien Ricard, France Jean-Daniel Chiche, France Jean-Louis Teboul, France Jean-Louis Vincent, Belgium Jeffrey Lipman, Australia Jenna Piercy, South Africa John Marshall, Canada John Myburgh, Australia Jonathan Sevransky, USA Jos Latour, The Netherlands Jose Antonio Rojas Suarez, Colombia Juan Scribante, South Africa Jukka Takala, Switzerland Justiaan Swanevelder, South Africa Kathleen Vollman, USA Kay Mitchell, United Kingdom Keertan Dheda, South Africa Kees Polderman, USA Ken Baillie, Scotland Khalid Shukri, Saudi Arabia Kim De Vasconcellos, South Africa Konrad Reinhart, Germany Krubin Naidoo, South Africa Kuban Naidoo, South Africa Lance Michell, South Africa Lara Goldstein, South Africa Leanne Aitken, Australia Linda Doedens, South Africa Lizl Veldsman, South Africa Lliam Brannigan, South Africa Lluis Blanch, Spain Luciano Gattinoni, Italy Malcolm Miller, South Africa Manu Malbrain, Belgium Marion Mitchell, Australia Mark Eagar, South Africa Marlice Van Dyk, South Africa Mary Morgan, South Africa Mary Pinder, Australia Maryke Spruyt, South Africa Mercedes Palomar, Spain Mervyn Mer, South Africa Michael Bauer, Germany Minette Coetzee, South Africa

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Mitchell Levy, USA Monty Mythen, United Kingdom Mpoki Mwasumbi Ulisubisya, Tanzania Murimisi Mukansi, South Africa Natascha Plani, South Africa Neill Adhikari, Canada Neils Riedemann, Germany Nestor Raimondi, Argentina Niall Ferguson, Canada Niels Riedemann, Germany Nilesh Govender, South Africa Nor’Azim Yunos, Malaysia Oliver Smith, South Africa Paolo Pelosi, Italy Paul Fulbrook, Australia Paul Marsden, South Africa Petra Brysiewicz, South Africa Phil Dellinger, USA Prakash Jeena, South Africa Pravin Amin, India Pravin Manga, South Africa Rashmi Kumar, Kenya Ravi Thiagarajan, USA Renee Blaauw, South Africa Richard Beale, United Kingdom Richard Firmin, United Kingdom Rita Okeoghene Oladele, Nigeria Rob Fowler, Canada Rob Wise, South Africa Robin Green, South Africa Roger Dickerson, South Africa Ron Daniels, Belgium Ross Freebairn, New Zealand Rudo Mathivha, South Africa Ruth Kleinpell, USA Ryan Zarychanski, Canada Sam Mokgokong, South Africa Sandra Goldsworthy, Canada Sats Bhagwanjee, USA Sean Chetty, South Africa Sebastian Ugarte Ubiergo, Chile Shahed Omar, South Africa Shay McGuiness, New Zealand Shelley Schmollgruber, South Africa Shivani Singh, South Africa Sooraj Motilall, South Africa Stefan Bolon, South Africa Stephen Lapinsky, Canada Stephens Moeng, South Africa Subhash Todi, India Sunit Singhi, India Tex Kissoon, Canada Tim Girard, USA Timothy Hardcastle, South Africa Tobias Welte, Germany Umesh Lalloo, South Africa Vedran Dumbovic, Croatia Vinay Nadkarni, USA Wondwossen Amogne Degu, Ethiopia Xavier Monnet, France Younsuck Koh, Korea Zsolt Molnar, Hungary


deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o

PROGRAMME AT A GLANCE

3ABC

Resuscitation targets: What are the goals

Opening Plenary Session

1A

Haemodynamic monitoring: Passionate about perfusion InFACT: Investigator-led research: How to do it Renal: More than micturition Monitoring: What’s new? CNS: Consternation with conduction Nutrition: Where are we? Ethics: The challenges we face

2A 2BH 2C 2D 4AB 4CD

1315

13

1245

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Reducing operative risk: Can we do it better? GSA: Sepsis prevention, early recognition and diagnosis Tutorial: How to assess fluid responsiveness?

GSA: Stop sepsis, save lives

1B

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THURSDAY, 29 AUGUST 2013

GSA: Paediatric considerations Delirium: Negating the horror! Debate Debate Debate Debate Administration: Striving to improve outcomes Debate Sepsis: Will we ever get it right?

11A 11C 12

Ventilation: Gasping for air? InFACT Workshop

InFACT Workshop

21ABC 21DEF

Life in PICU

ICON Investigators Meet Youth Sepsis Workshop Eliminating VAP: A Respiratory support – what dream or a real should we be doing for our possibility? What patients? we need?

Critical care in Africa: Meeting the challenges

22

InFACT Workshop

1AB 2A 2BH 2C 2D 3A 3BC 11A 11C 12 21ABC 21DEF 22

Plenary

MTE: Intravascular volume resuscitation

GSA: Treating the cause of sepsis

InFACT Workshop InFACT: Clinical trial groups Haematology: Respiratory: Debate Debate Specific considerations in the ICU What issues influence management? Renal: Specific issues Nutrition: Food 4 thought Tutorial: Acid base Metabolic/Endocrine: Achieve Disaster management: Transplants: hormonal harmony Not just 911 Refining management ECMO: Is it time for prime time? Sepsis: Micro mayhem Sepsis: Antibiotics: Cardiovascular: The first 24 hours Delivering the optimal dose Working under pressure WFCCN Business Meeting Session 2 Ethics Round Table Meet (Closed Forum) Ethics: Quality of life and Obstetrics: What really makes the difference Decisions on resource needs for What to do when pathology to outcomes of severe sepsis? resource ventilator dependent intervenes? allocation children Sepsis training programme for LMIC Nursing: Free Communication Infections: The African Advancing nursing education & Ambassador clinical session perspective training: country perspectives

Poster Rounds: Exhibition Hall, 1400 – 1600

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FRIDAY, 30 AUGUST 2013


Fluid therapy: Drowning in evidence

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o

Plenary

Ventilation Lunch Symposium: Thermofisher

Perspectives on heart failure Airway: Mishaps and manipulations Haematology: Intensivist issues Burns: What’s hot and happening Round Table Discussion Session

Critical Care Nursing Forum Social

Lunch Symposium: MSD Awesome administration or mundane meddling? WFCCN Business Meeting Session I Ethics Round Table Meeting (Closed Forum) World Sepsis Day World Sepsis Day (Closed Meeting) (Open Meeting)

WFSICCM General Assembly (ending 2115)

Plenary: Jun Takizawa Memorial Lecture Mini Symposium – GE Healthcare

Mini Symposium - BARD CCSSA AGM

Mini Symposium – Smiths Medical

WFSICCM General Assembly

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Critical care for children: The brain and metabolic challenges


deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o

PROGRAMME AT A GLANCE

3A

Targeted temperature management I: Practical considerations Surgery InFACT Session: Investigator-led research in critical care: What is in the works?

1B 2A

Debate

Surgery

Lu

Infections: Therapeutic strategies for specific infections

InFACT: Understanding discordant results in clinical trials Medical agents in Debate critical care

Traumatic brain injury: An update

Fungal infections: What do we need to know?

Surgery

Administration: The influence of technology

3BC

Tutorial: ECMO

GSA Session: Challenges for the future

12

Water water everywhere

Infection in the PICU / NICU

Debate

GSA Session: Management of sepsis Promoting palliative care in the ICU: Implications for nurses: Country perspective

21ABC Critical care a global perspective

22

Safety and risk management

Plenary Session

2ABFH

Life as an intensivist is an awesome journey

Plenary: What has happened since Florence? Closing Ceremony

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SUNDAY, 1 SEPTEMBER 2013

1AB

1315

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1145 Respiratory

Transfusions: Minimising risk and getting it right

2D

1130

HIV and TB: What is new?

ARDS: Where are we in 2013?

2BH 2C

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Haemodynamic monitoring: Important considerations in 2013

Plenary

1A

0945

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SATURDAY, 31 AUGUST 2013


Lunch Symposium: Fresenius Kabi

MTE: Haemodynamic monitoring

Plenary

Targeted temperature management II: Beyond cardiac arrest Trauma Delirium: The South American perspective Obesity: Minimising harm GSA Session: Adjunctive therapy

Nutrition: How to measure? InFACT Session: Haemodynamic resuscitation: What have we learned and what are the next questions? Ethics Nurse Leaders Forum Meeting

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o



deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o

ACADEMIC PROGRAMME: THURSDAY, 29 AUGUST 2013 HALL 3ABC Time

Lecture

Speaker Plenary Session Co-Chairs: John Myburgh & Fathima Paruk

0745-0930 0800-0810

Congress Co-Chairs

0810-0815 0815-0820 0820-0825 0825-0830 0830-0900

WFSICCM President WFCCN President WFPICCS President CCSSA President Max Weill Lecture: Critical Care - Where to next?

0900-0930

Ministerial Address

0930-1000 1000-1145 1000-1015 1015-1030 1030-1045 1045-1100 1100-1115 1115-1145 1200-1315 1200-1215 1215-1245 1245-1300 1300-1315 1330-1515 1515-1645 1515-1530 1530-1550 1550-1605 1605-1620 1620-1645 1645-1700 1700-1830 1700-1730 1730-1800 1800-1830 HALL 1A Time 1000-1145 1000-1015 1015-1030 1030-1045 1045-1100 1100-1115 1115-1130 1130-1145 1200-1315 1200-1215 1215-1230 1230-1245 1245-1300 1300-1315 1330-1515 1515-1630 1515-1530 1530-1545 1545-1600 1600-1615 1615-1630 1630-1700

Arterial pressure Lactate clearance ScVO2 Delta PCO2 Take home message Discussion

TEA AND COFFEE BREAK - Exhibition Hall Resuscitation Targets: What are the goals? Co-Chairs: Mitchell Levy & Guy Richards

Reducing operative risk: Can we do it better? Co-Chairs: Brian Levy & Jan Pretorius Supranormal ICU optimisation prior to major surgery: Current role The cardiac patient presenting for major non-cardiac surgery High risk surgery: Can we improve outcome? Discussion LUNCH - Exhibition Hall Fluid therapy: Drowning in evidence Co-Chairs: John Myburgh & Shahed Omar Crystalloids or colloids: Critical appraisal of the literature New generation plasma expanders The consequences of too much chloride A renal safe colloid: A pipe dream? Discussion TEA AND COFFEE BREAK - Exhibition Hall Plenary session Co-Chairs: Edgar Jimenez & Sats Bhagwanjee Jose Besso Memorial Lecture: Sedation, analgesia and delirium: Pan American guidelines Haemodynamic monitoring of the critically ill patient State of the art: The root cause of critical Illness Lecture

Sats Bhagwanjee, USA Dean Gopalan, South Africa Edgar Jimenez, USA Ruth Kleinpell, USA Tex Kissoon, Canada Mervyn Mer, South Africa Jean-Louis Vincent, Belgium Honourable Minister of Health: Dr Aaron Motsoaledi, South Africa

Ivan Joubert, South Africa Mitchell Levy, USA Anders Perner, Denmark Zsolt Molnar, Hungary Monty Mythen, United Kingdom

Monty Mythen, United Kingdom Bruce Biccard, South Africa Zsolt Molnar, Hungary

Monty Mythen, United Kingdom Bertrand Guidet, France Nor'Azim Yunos, Malaysia John Myburgh, Australia

Edgar Celis, Colombia Monty Mythen, United Kingdom John Marshall, Canada

Speaker GSA Session: Stop sepsis, Save lives Co-Chairs: Konrad Reinhart & Tobias Welte The burden of sepsis: A call for action and support of world sepsis day Konrad Reinhart, Germany Clean care is safer sare: priority for the WHO and worldwide perspectives Didier Pittet, Switzerland Update on the Surviving Sepsis Campaign Guidelines Phil Dellinger, USA General strategies to fight sepsis in resource poor settings Sats Bhagwanjee, USA Central line-associated infection prevention: State-of-the art and innovative approaches Didier Pittet, Switzerland Prevention of sepsis in the ICU Herwig Gerlach, Germany Discussion GSA Session: Prevention and early recognition and diagnosis of sepsis Co-Chairs: Michael Bauer & Sats Bhagwanjee Role of vaccination in patients at risk Tobias Welte, Germany Early clinical and laboratory signs of sepsis Konrad Reinhart, Germany Role of blood cultures and PCR microbiology Michael Bauer, Germany Diagnosis of sepsis in neonates and children Tex Kissoon, Canada Discussion LUNCH - Exhibition Hall Ventilation Co-Chairs: Gavin Joynt & Javier Hurtado Improving ventilation through automation Charles Gomersall, China Issues in ventilation of polytrauma patients in the ICU David Grolman, Australia Recruitment and PEEP titration using the PV tool Ross Freebairn, New Zealand NAVA ventilation: an answer to dyssynchrony Gavin Joynt, China Discussion TEA AND COFFEE BREAK - Exhibition Hall

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o HALL 1B Time

Lecture

Speaker

1530-1600 1600-1630 1630-1645 1645-1700

Haemodynamic Monitoring: Passionate about perfusion? Co-Chairs: Can Ince & David Muckart The response of subcellular compartments to critical illness: the glycocalyx and the mitochondria Assessment of intravascular volume: An update Assessment of the microcirculation: Lactate/ScvO2 Is the PAC truly a relic? Role of new surrogates for microcirculatory assessment Discussion Tutorial: How to assess fluid responsiveness? Chair: Xavier Monnet Fluid Responsiveness Discussion LUNCH - Exhibition Hall Lunch Symposium (Thermofisher): Clinical use of procalcitonin Perspectives on heart failure Co-Chairs: Paolo Pelosi and Ismail Kalla Diastolic heart failure MINS (myocardial injury after non-cardiac surgery) Clinical application of cardiac biomarkers Discussion

HALL 2A Time

Lecture

1000-1130 1000-1015 1015-1030 1030-1045 1045-1100 1100-1115 1115-1130 1145-1245 1145-1230 1230-1245 1330-1515 1335-1505 1530-1700

Can Ince, The Netherlands Jean-Louis Teboul, France Eric Hodgson, South Africa Xavier Monnet, France Daniel De Backer, Belgium

Jean-Louis Teboul, France

Pravin Manga, South Africa Bruce Biccard, South Africa Antoine Vieillard-Baron, France

Speaker InFACT Session: Investigator-led research: How to do it Co-Chairs: Ken Baillie & Niall Ferguson

1000-1115 1000-1015

Framing the question

Ryan Zarychanski, Canada

1015-1030 1030-1045 1045-1100 1100-1115

Large scale biologic studies From question to research protocol Can we overcome the barriers to translational research Discussion GSA Session: Paediatric considerations Co-Chairs: Vinay Nadkarni & Harshad Ranchod Special issues in paediatric research PALISI Pathophysiology and treatment of severe malaria: What's new? Studies in Southeast Asia Discussion LUNCH - Exhibition Hall Airway: Mishaps and Manipulations Co-Chairs: Christina Lundgren & Eric Hodgson Pitfalls of airway management in the critically ill patient Introduction to percutaneous tracheostomy in the ICU Discussion TEA AND COFFEE BREAK - Exhibition Hall

Ken Baillie, Scotland Rob Fowler, Canada Jean-Daniel Chiche, France

1130-1245 1130-1145 1145-1200 1200-1215 1215-1230 1230-1245 1330-1515 1515-1630 1515-1545 1545-1615 1615-1630 1630-1700

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Tex Kissoon, Canada Vinay Nadkarni, USA Arjen Dondorp, Thailand Arjen Dondorp, Thailand

Carlos Brun, USA Ana Crawford, USA


deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o HALL 2BH Time

Lecture

1000-1115 1000-1015 1015-1030 1030-1045 1045-1100 1100-1115 1130-1245 1130-1200 1200-1215 1215-1230 1230-1245 1245-1330

Speaker Renal: More than just micturition Co-Chairs: Shahed Omar & Marlice Van Dyk

Predicting AKI in the ICU At risk for AKI: What do we do? Towards an accurate assessment of GFR Colloids and renal function: Non septic and septic patients are different Discussion Delirium: Negating the nightmare! Co-Chairs: Sebastian Ugarte Ubiergo & Eric Hodgson Delirium: Much ado about nothing Delirium recognition: How I do it? Complications of delirium Discussion Debate Chair: Eric Hodgson

1250-1325

Sedation: A safe and valuable treatment in the ICU

1330-1515 1515-1530 1530-1545 1545-1600 1600-1615 1615-1630 1630-1700

LUNCH - Exhibition Hall Haematology: Issues relevant to the intensivist Co-Chairs: Mary Pinder & Nicky Kalafatis Management of acute anaemia in special populations What intensivists need to know about the new anticoagulants in ICU Tranexamic acid: Applications beyond trauma Hemoglobinopathies in the ICU Discussion TEA AND COFFEE BREAK - Exhibition Hall

HALL 2C Time

Lecture

1515-1630

0945-1100 0945-1015 1015-1045 1045-1100 1115-1200 1115-1150 1200-1245 1200-1235 1245-1330 1245-1320 1330-1515 1515-1700 1515-1530 1530-1545 1545-1600 1600-1615 1615-1630 1630-1645 1645-1700

Monitoring: What's new? Co-Chairs: Georges Offenstadt & Mercedes Palomar

The impact of POCT on patient care Transoesophageal manometry: Current status and future directions Discussion Debate Chair: Pravin Manga

Should we move away from God's only inotrope? Adrenaline vs. Noradrenaline Debate Chair: Umesh Lalloo The future lies in the creation of specialist centres to optimise care of the critically ill patient Debate Chair: David Muckart Should ICU admission be dictated by numbers (prediction tools)? LUNCH - Exhibition Hall Burns: What's hot and happening Co-Chairs: Bruce Cairns & Oliver Smith

Thermal burns: Early management Role of early surgical interventions Non-thermal burns: Important considerations Adjunctive therapies for burns The challenges of rehabilitation post burns Caring for the child with severe burns: What are the essentials? Discussion

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Rob Wise, South Africa Shahed Omar, South Africa Jeffrey Lipman, Australia Paolo Pelosi, Italy

Tim Girard, USA Gordon Speed, New Zealand Nestor Raimondi, Argentina

Tim Girard(PRO), USA Guy Richards(CON), South Africa

Janice Zimmerman, USA Ahmad Alli, South Africa Mark Eagar, South Africa Mary Pinder, Australia

Speaker Adam Singer, USA Edgar Jimenez, USA

John Myburgh (PRO Adrenaline), Australia Jason Phua (CON), Singapore Mitchell Levy (PRO), USA Neill Adhikari (CON), Canada John Marshall (PRO), Canada Phill Dellinger(CON), USA

Busi Mrara, South Africa Bruce Cairns, USA Roger Dickerson, South Africa Bruce Cairns, USA Natascha Plani, South Africa David Kloeck, South Africa


deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o HALL 2D Time 1030-1130 1030-1045 1045-1100 1100-1115 1115-1130 1215-1330 1215-1230 1230-1245 1245-1300 1300-1315 1315-1330 1330-1515 1500-1630

1500-1630

Lecture

Critical Care Nursing: Worldwide Perspectives

1630-1745 HALL 4AB Time 1000-1130 1000-1015 1015-1030 1030-1045 1045-1100 1100-1130 1200-1245

Speaker

CNS: Consternation with conduction Co-Chairs: Flavio Maciel & Mervyn Mer Approach to the diagnosis of weakness in the ICU Spinal cord injury: An update Advances in stroke management Discussion Administration: Striving to improve outcomes Co-Chairs: Richard Beale & Pravin Amin Promotion of patient safety in the ICU Design of vitals signs readouts: Does it save lives? Safe transport of the critically ill patient The ICU as a business unit Discussion LUNCH - Exhibition Hall Round Table Discussion Session Co-Chairs: Shelley Schmollgruber & Paul Fulbrook

Critical Care Nursing Forum Social Lecture

Gene Sung, USA Jenna Piercy, South Africa Marion Mitchell, Australia

Belle Rogado, Philippines Richard Beale, United Kingdom Chris Farmer, USA Ivan Joubert, South Africa

Leanne Aitken, Australia Petra Brysiewicz, South Africa Adriano Friganovic, Croatia Belle Rogado, Philippines Esther Wong, China Kathleen Vollman, USA

Speaker Nutrition: Where are we? Co-Chairs: Richard Beale & Adam Deane

Immunomodulation: Current concepts Supplemental parenteral nutrition: What is its role? Role of glutamine supplementation Optimal nutritional therapy in ICU Discussion

Debate Chair: Ross Freebairn

Renee Blaauw, South Africa Richard Beale, United Kingdom Renee Blaauw, South Africa Lizl Veldsman, South Africa

Jeffrey Lipman (PRO), Australia Anand Kumar (CON), Canada

1200-1235

Combination antimicrobial therapy is not warranted for bacterial nosocomial sepsis

1330-1515 1335-1505

LUNCH Lunch Symposium (MSD): Antimicrobial stewardship: Optimising management of infections in the hospital Sepsis: Is there evidence or just enthusiasm? Co-Chairs: Phil Dellinger & Ivor Douglas Oxygenation: Get the balance right Ivor Douglas, USA Vasopressor therapy in septic shock Phil Dellinger, USA Role of lactate Anders Perner, Denmark Steroids: Who, when and how? Djillali Annane, France Resource limitations: What is the game plan? Charles Gomersall, China Discussion

1530-1700 1530-1545 1545-1600 1600-1615 1615-1630 1630-1645 1645-1700

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o HALL 4CD Time 1000-1115 1000-1015 1015-1030 1030-1045 1045-1100 1100-1115 1215-1330 1215-1230 1230-1245 1245-1300 1300-1315 1315-1330 1330-1515 1515-1615 1515- 1530 1530-1545 1545-1600 1600-1615

Lecture

Speaker

Ethics: The challenges we face Co-Chairs: Charlie Sprung & Janice Zimmerman Triage in critical care: Integrating ethics and evidence Ethical considerations in healthcare resource allocation Dying in the ICU: Perceptions of ICU staff End of Life Care in Eastern Asia Discussion Sepsis: Will we ever get it right? Co-Chairs: Ivor Douglas & Mervyn Mer Immune failure in sepsis Adrenocortical dysfunction in septic shock Role of statins in sepsis Role of steroids Discussion LUNCH - Exhibition Hall Awesome administration or mundane meddling? Co-Chairs: Jeff Lipman & Bin Du Designing ICUs to improve outcomes Comparing critical care units around the world Maintaining competency in the ICU The Baragwanath ICU experience

MR 11A Time 1330-1630

WFCCN Business Meeting Session I

MR 11C Time 1400-1700

Ethics Round Table Meeting (Closed Meeting)

MR 12 Time 0945-1045

Lecture

0945-1045

Building research collaborations

InFACT Workshop

1100-1200 1100-1115 1115-1130 1130-1145 1145-1200 1230-1330

Non-conventional ventilatory modalities High flow oxygen Intelligent ventilation Discussion

1230-1330

Giving an effective talk

1415-1515 1530-1630 1630-1700 1815-2115

WORLD SEPSIS DAY - CLOSED MEETING WORLD SEPSIS DAY - OPEN MEETING

MR 21ABC Time

WFSICCM GENERAL ASSEMBLY MEETING

Ventilation: Gasping for air? Co-Chairs: Roger Dickerson & Khalid Shukri

InFACT Workshop

Lecture

1115-1215

Writing a paper

1030-1040

Lliam Brannigan, South Africa Mitchell Levy, USA Shelley Schmollgruber, South Africa Rudo Mathivha, South Africa

Speaker Shay McGuiness, New Zealand Alexis Turgeon, Canada Roger Dickerson, South Africa Jean-Damien Ricard, France David Linton, Israel Jean-Daniel Chiche, France Niall Ferguson, Canada

Speaker

1040-1055 1115-1215

0945-0955 0955-1010 1010-1020 1020-1030

Ivor Douglas, USA Bala Venkatesh, Australia Bala Venkatesh, Australia Charlie Sprung, Israel

TEA AND COFFEE BREAK - Exhibition Hall

Life in the PICU Co-Chairs: Jos Latour & Kuban Naidoo The needs of the patient always trump those of the staff (or do they?) Care of the dying patient and the family Families in the ICU: what is optimal care for parents in the PICU / NICU? What is competency? The Pathways to Care Research Project - A longitudinal patient centred investigation of critically ill and injured children in Cape Town, South Africa (free communication) Discussion InFACT Workshop

0945-1100

Charlie Sprung, Israel Gavin Joynt, China Petra Brysiewicz, South Africa Younsuck Koh, Korea

1230-1330

ICON Investigator Meeting

MR 21DEF Time 1000-1500

Youth Sepsis Workshop

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Tex Kissoon, Canada Linda Doedens, South Africa Jos Latour, The Netherlands Fenella Gill, Australia Peter Hodkinson, South Africa Jean-Louis Vincent, Belgium John Marshall, Canada


deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o MR 22 Time

Lecture

0945-1100 0945-1000 1000-1015 1015-1030 1030-1045 1045-1100 1115-1215 1115-1130 1130-1145 1145-1155 1155-1215 1215-1300 1215-1230 1230-1245 1245-1300 1330-1515 1515-1645 1515-1530 1530-1545 1545-1615 1615-1630 1630-1645 1645-1700

Voices of Africa More voices of Africa Voices from South Africa Voices from Africa within WFCCN Discussion

Speaker Critical Care in Africa: Meeting the challenges Co-Chairs: Leanne Aitken & Bronwyn Espen

Shelley Schmollgruber, South Africa Janet Bell, South Africa Cheryl Carter, South Africa Halima Kabara, Nigeria

Respiratory support - what should we be doing for our patients? Co-Chairs: Brian Kavanagh & Brenda Morrow Actually oxygen is bad... Shivani Singh, South Africa ...and CO2 is OK Brian Kavanagh, Canada The distribution of ventilation in mechanically ventilated infants and children Alison Lupton Smith, South Africa (free communication) Discussion Elimination of VAP: A dream or a real possibility? What do we need? Co-Chairs: Brian Kavanagh & Brenda Morrow Bundles are NOT what we need Brian Kavanagh, Canada Bundles are OK: If they're implemented Eduardo Troster, Brazil Brian Kavanagh, Canada Discussion: Making sense of it all Eduardo Troster, Brazil Brenda Morrow, South Africa LUNCH - Exhibition Hall Critical care for children: The brain and metabolic challenges Co-Chairs: Anthony Figaji & Shivani Singh Cooling is where it's all at - or is it? Vinay Nadkarni, USA What monitoring I would like on my child's brain Anthony Figaji, South Africa Glucose control: Is that the real goal, or have we missed the point? Brian Kavanagh, Canada Metabolic challenges in the PICU Eduardo Troster, Brazil Discussion TEA AND COFFEE BREAK - Exhibition Hall

SOCIETY MEETING ROOMS MR 11A WFCCN Council MR 11B WFSICCM Council MR 11C Ethics Round Table Meeting MR 11D WFPICCS Council MR 21G Media

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Thermo Fisherr Scientificc Symposium

Clin nical use e of Proocalciton nin Thu ursday, August A 29, 2 2013. 13:35 – 15:05 ICC C Durban n, Hall 1B B Proggram:

Chairman: Prof. Zsolt Molnár, Szeged, Huungary

nin assisted d antibiotic ttherapies Procalciton Prof. Dr. Zso olt Molnár, Szeged, S Hunggary ormal septic and Kinetics off procalcitonin in no immune-co ompromised patients Prof. Dr. Ján nos Fazakas, Budapest, H Hungary

nin Cost-effecttiveness of procalciton Dr. Zsolt Beccze, Budapest, Hungary Discussion

Clinica al Diagnostics

Thermo Fisheer Scientific GmbH B·R·A·H·M·S G Neuendorfstr. 25 16761 Henninngsdorf Germany

+49 + (0)3302 883 0 +49 + (0)3302 883 100 fax in nfo.brahms@thermof ofisher.com www.thermoscientific w c.com/brahms www.thermoscientific w c.com/procalcitonin


1 1 t h W o r l d F e d e r at i o n o F S o c i e t i e S o F i n t e n S i v e a n d c r i t i c a l c a r e M e d i c i n e c o n g r e S S 2 0 1 3 ( WFSiccM 2013) • 28 auguSt – 1 SepteMber 2013 • durban, South aFrica

antiMicrobial SteWardShip:

optiMizing ManageMent oF inFectionS in the hoSpital Satellite Symposium Sponsored by MSD

CHAIRMAN: Adrian Brink Department of Clinical Microbiology Ampath National Laboratory Services Milpark Hospital Parktown, Johannesburg, South Africa

FA C U LT Y: David P. Nicolau Center for Anti-Infective Research & Development Hartford Hospital Hartford, Connecticut, USA

Maria Virginia Villegas Director of the Bacterial Resistance and Nosocomial Infection Research Area at the International Center for Medical Research and Training (CIDEIM) Cali, Colombia

Copyright © 2013 Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp., a subsidiary of Merck & Co., Inc., Whitehouse Station, NJ, USA. All rights reserved. IVZ-178678-AB

Thursday, 29 August 2013 13:35 – 15:05

Durban International Convention Centre Room 4AB Durban, South Africa Chairman: Adrian Brink (South Africa) AGENDA 13:35 – 13:40

Welcome and Opening Remarks

Adrian Brink

13:40 – 14:00

Antibiotic Use and the Trends of the Gram-Negative Resistance Around the World

Adrian Brink

14:00 – 14:20

Role of Antimicrobial Stewardship & Strategies for Appropriate Therapy

14:20 – 14:40

Practical Considerations for Implementing Antimicrobial Stewardship

14:40 – 15:00

Panel Discussion

15:00 – 15:05

Closing Remarks

David Nicolau

Maria Virginia Villegas

Adrian Brink


deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o

ACADEMIC PROGRAMME: FRIDAY, 30 AUGUST 2013 HALL 1AB Time 0800-0900 0800-0830 0830-0900 0900-0930 0930-1100 0930-0945 0945-1000 1000-1015 1015-1030 1030-1100

Lecture

Speaker

Plenary Session Co-Chairs: Vinay Nadkarni & Ruth Kleinpell Have we really made significant advances in paediatric critical care in the last decade? Systems thinking in critical care TEA AND COFFEE BREAK - Exhibition Hall MTE: Intravascular volume resuscitation Co-Chairs: Monty Mythen & Ismail Kalla I use crystalloid I restrict chloride I use colloid Why I use albumin Discussion Debate Chair: Charles Feldman

Tex Kissoon, Canada Juan Scribante, South Africa

Anders Perner, Denmark Nor'Azim Yunos, Malaysia Bertrand Guidet, France Luciano Gattinoni, Italy

Zsolt Molnar (PRO), Hungary Jean-Louis Vincent(CON), Belgium

1115-1150

Duration of antibiotic therapy has to be guided by biomarkers

1315-1400 1400-1600 1600-1630 1630-1700

LUNCH - Exhibition Hall POSTERS - Exhibition Hall TEA AND COFFEE BREAK - Exhibition Hall Plenary: Jun Takezawa Memorial lecture Chair: Sats Bhagwanjee Japanese Society of Intensive Care Medicine Guidelines for the management of sepsis

Hiroyuki Hirasawa, Japan

HALL 2A Time

Lecture

Speaker

1630-1700

0800-0930

GSA Session: Treating the cause of sepsis Co-Chairs: John Marshall & Rob Fowler

0800-0815 0815-0830 0830-0845 0845-0900 0900-0915 0915-0930 0930-0945 0945-1045

Antibiotic therapy Treating tropical sepsis Surgical source control Management of viral sepsis Achieving reliable implementation of guidelines Discussion TEA AND COFFEE BREAK - Exhibition Hall InFACT Workshop

0945-1045

Framing a research question, writing a protocol and applying for a grant

1100-1200 1100-1110 1110-1120 1120-1130 1130-1140 1140-1150 1150-1200 1300-1400 1400-1600

Tobias Welte, Germany Subhash Todi, India John Marshall, Canada Rob Fowler, Canada Ron Daniels, Belgium

Shay McGuiness, New Zealand Rob Fowler, Canada

InFACT Session: Clinical trial groups Co-Chairs: Ken Baillie & Jason Phua InFACT and the impact of investigator-led research John Marshall, Canada The Latin American Clinical Trials Investigator Network (LACTIN) Sebastian Ugarte Ubiergo, Chile The Chinese Critical Care Trials Group Bin Du, China Building African research capacity Sats Bhagwanjee, USA Asian Critical Care Clinical Trials (ACCCT) Group Jason Phua, Singapore Discussion LUNCH - Exhibition Hall POSTERS - Exhibition Hall Mini Symposium (GE Healthcare): The physical and physiological basis of ventilation induced lung injury

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o HALL 2BH Time

Lecture

Speaker Debate Chair: Neill Adhikari

0800-0845 0800-0835

Resources should dictate ICU admission

0845-0900

TEA AND COFFEE BREAK - Exhibition Hall Haematology: Specific considerations in the ICU Co-Chairs: Mervyn Mer & Ana Maria Montanez Mendoza Plasmapheresis: the role of plasma and FFP exchange Management of the neutropenic patient Role of GCSF in the critically ill patient Pulmonary Embolism: Recent reports and practical pearls Discussion Debate Chair: David Muckart

0900-1030 0900-0915 0915-0930 0930-0945 0945-1010 1010-1030 1045-1130 1045-1120 1130-1315 1130-1145

ICUs should always function on a closed basis Respiratory: What issues influence management? Co-Chairs: Lluis Blanch & Ana Maria Montanez Mendoza Non ventilatory management of the severe asthmatic

1145-1200

Managing the patient with severe COPD

1200-1215 1215-1230 1230-1245 1245-1300 1300-1315 1315-1400 1400-1600

Pulmonary hypertension: an update Mechanical ventilation and intra-abdominal hypertension Lung-brain cross talk in the critically ill Cardiopulmonary interactions Discussion LUNCH - Exhibition Hall POSTERS - Exhibition Hall

HALL 2C Time

Lecture

0830-0945 0830-0845 0845-0900 0900-0915 0915-0930 0930-0945 1000-1015 1015-1115 1015-1030 1030-1045 1045-1100 1100-1115 1145-1300 1145-1215 1215-1230 1230-1245 1245-1300 1300-1400 1400-1600

Charles Gomersall (PRO), China Monty Mythen (CON), United Kingdom

Bertrand Guidet, France Cate Fourie, South Africa Ivor Douglas, USA Mervyn Mer, South Africa

Chris Farmer(PRO), USA Ivan Joubert(CON), South Africa Ismail Kalla, South Africa Akhter Goolam Mahomed, South Africa Ismail Kalla, South Africa Paolo Pelosi, Italy Lluis Blanch, Spain Justiaan Swanevelder, South Africa

Speaker Renal: Dealing with specific issues Co-Chairs: Gary Katzman & Bhiken Naik

RRT: When and how much CRRT: How to dose antibiotics Renal support therapy in resource limited countries My patient has HITT: How do I anticoagulate Discussion TEA AND COFFEE BREAK - Exhibition Hall Nutrition: Food for thought Co-Chairs: Renee Blaauw & Guy Richards When to initiate PN/EN: Who, when and how long? Is there still a role for postpyloric feeding in the critically ill? Protein: the unsung hero? Discussion Tutorial: Acid-Base Co-Chairs: Shahed Omar & Janice Zimmerman Acid base: A practical approach Approach to metabolic alkalosis When to use bicarbonate? Discussion LUNCH - Exhibition Hall POSTERS - Exhibition Hall

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Ross Freebairn, New Zealand Gavin Joynt, Canada Guillermo Castorena, Mexico Stefan Bolon, South Africa

Maryke Spruyt, South Africa Adam Deane, Australia Lizl Veldsman, South Africa

Nor'Azim Yunos, Malaysia Janice Zimmerman, USA Bhiken Naik, USA


deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o HALL 2D Time 0800-0915 0800-0815 0815-0830 0830-0845 0845-0900 0900-0915 0915-0930 0930-1045 0930-0945 0945-1000 1000-1015 1015-1030 1030-1045 1100-1245 1100-1115 1115-1130 1130-1200 1200-1215 1215-1230 1230-1245 1300-1400 1400-1600 1430-1600 HALL 3A Time

Lecture

Speaker Metabolic/Endocrine: How to achieve hormonal harmony Co-Chairs: Bala Venkatesh & Malcolm Miller Targeting Blood Glucose in the critically ill: Does pre-existing diabetes matter? Adam Deane, Australia Akhter Goolam Mahomed, South Hypophosphatemia in the critically ill patient: important considerations Africa Sick euthyroid syndrome Paul Marsden, South Africa Vitamin D Deficiency in the ICU: an update Bala Venkatesh, Australia Discussion TEA AND COFFEE BREAK - Exhibition Hall Disaster Management: Not just 911 Co-Chairs: Edgar Jimenez & Pravin Amin Epidemics: H1N1, lessons learned Anand Kumar, Canada Disaster preparedness Bruce Cairns, USA Proactive rapid responsive systems: the Air Traffic Controller has arrived Edgar Jimenez, USA Social responsibility to natural disasters Fathima Docrat, South Africa Discussion Transplants: Refining management Co-Chairs: Lliam Brannigan & Guillermo Castorena ICU management of acute liver failure Gunter Schleicher, South Africa ICU care of the liver transplant recipient Jean Botha, South Africa Management of the potential organ donor Marlice Van Dyk, South Africa Management of transplant rejection Elizabeth Mayne, South Africa Pharmacological immunosuppression of the critically ill patient Elizabeth Mayne, South Africa Discussion LUNCH - Exhibition Hall POSTERS - Exhibition Hall Mini Symposium (BARD): Therapeutic hypothermia and controlled normothermia: side effects, protocols, and patient management & Starting a temperature management protocol in your unit: Implementation issues Lecture

Speaker

0800-0930 0800-0830 0830-0845 0845-0900

ECMO: Who gets it and how do you do it? ECMO: Pitfalls ECMO: Monitoring and weaning

0900-0930

Discussion Panel

0930-1015 1015-1115

ECMO: Is it time for prime time? Co-Chairs: Guy Richards & Ivan Joubert

TEA AND COFFEE BREAK - Exhibition Hall Sepsis: Micro mayhem Co-Chairs: Daniel De Backer & Javier Hurtado

1015-1030 1030-1045 1045-1100 1100-1115

The microcirculation in sepsis Mitochondrial dysfunction Quantitative resuscitation of sepsis induced tissue hypoperfusion Discussion Debate Chair: Antoine Vieillard-Baron

1130-1205

Systematic Ultrasound guidance for CVC placement is necessary

1300-1400 1515-1615

LUNCH - Exhibition Hall CCSSA AGM

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33

Richard Firmin, United Kingdom Luciano Gattinoni, Italy Richard Beale, United Kingdom Ravi Thiagarajan, USA Justiaan Swanevelder, South Africa Speakers

Daniel De Backer, Belgium Jukka Takala, Switzerland Phil Dellinger, USA

Daniel De Backer(PRO), Belgium David Muckart (CON), South Africa


deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o HALL 3BC Time

Lecture

Speaker

0800-0915 0800-0815 0815-0830 0830-0845 0845-0900 0900-0915 0915-0945

Avoiding ventilator induced lung injury Antibiotics: An update Targets of haemodynamic resuscitation Role of bundled care Discussion

0945-1100 0945-1000 1000-1015 1015-1030 1030-1045 1045-1100 1130-1245 1130-1200 1200-1215 1215-1230 1230-1245 1300-1400 1400-1600

Sepsis: The first 24 hours Co-Chairs: Jukka Takala & Mercedes Palomar

TEA AND COFFEE BREAK - Exhibition Hall Antibiotics: Delivering the optimal dose Co-Chairs: Gavin Joynt & Flavio Maciel

Dosing the critically ill patient Dosing with an extracorporeal circuit Therapeutic Drug Monitoring of Beta Lactams Combination therapy for GNI: a better outcome? Discussion Cardiovascular: Working under pressure Co-Chairs: Jukka Takala & Can Ince Adrenaline / Noradrenaline and the heart Vasopressin analogues: an update Failure of conventional haemodynamic support: What are the options? Discussion LUNCH - Exhibition Hall POSTERS - Exhibition Hall

MR 11A Time 0900-1300

WFCCN Business Meeting Session II

MR 11C Time 0800-1000

Ethics Round Table Meeting (Closed Meeting)

MR 12 Time 0800-0930 0800-0815 0815-0830 0830-0845 0845-0900 0900-0915 0915-0930 0930-0945 0945-1115 0945-1000 1000-1015 1015-1030 1030-1045 1045-1100 1100-1115 1130-1300 1130-1150 1150-1200 1200-1215 1215-1227 1227-1239 1239-1300 1300-1400 1400-1600 1430-1600

Lecture

Antoine Vieillard-Baron, France Anand Kumar, Canada Jukka Takala, Switzerland Paul Fulbrook, Australia

Jeffrey Lipman, Australia Charles Gomersall, China Jeffrey Lipman, Australia Anand Kumar, Canada

John Myburgh, Australia Djillali Annane, France Jukka Takala, Switzerland

Speaker Obstetrics: What to do when pathology intervenes? Co-Chairs: Sean Chetty & Khalid Shukri Liver dysfunction in the critically ill obstetric patient Stephen Lapinsky, Canada Ethical challenges in managing the critically ill pregnant patient Jose Antonio Suarez, Colombia Management of HIV in pregnancy Sean Chetty, South Africa Foetal protection in the critically ill obstetric patient Stephen Lapinsky, Canada Obstetric critical care: The Colombian experience Jose Antonio Suarez, Colombia Discussion TEA AND COFFEE BREAK - Exhibition Hall What really makes the difference to outcomes of severe sepsis? Co-Chairs: Eduardo Troster & Tex Kissoon It's in the implementation of the guidelines Beyra Rossouw, South Africa The focus should be in the ER: Well before the PICU Vinay Nadkarni, USA Is it respiratory failure that needs to be addressed? Tex Kissoon, Canada What are the goals of cardiovascular support for sepsis in the PICU? Beyra Rossouw, South Africa Blood Transfusions in the intensive care unit following paediatric cardiac surgery: a North Amine Mazine, Canada American multicenter prospective study (free communication) Discussion Ethics: Decisions about resource allocation (at multiple levels) Co-Chairs: Sunit Singhi & Andrew Argent Deciding about admission: Who gets the bed Sunit Singhi, India Long-stay patients: What is "long stay" and how much resource do they use? (free Tracy Nupen, South Africa communication) Quality of life & resource needs for ventilator dependent children What are the issues in meeting the needs of the fully awake, ventilator dependent child in the Brenda Morrow, South Africa PICU Our experience of long-term ventilation / care of children who are technologically dependent Eduardo Troster, Brazil Latin America Our experience of long-term ventilation / care of children who are technologically dependent Sunit Singhi, India Discussion LUNCH - Exhibition Hall POSTERS - Exhibition Hall Mini Symposium (Smiths Medical): Recent advances in patient controlled analgesia - maximizing efficacy and safety

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o MR 22 Time

Lecture

Speaker

0800-0815

Infections: The African perspective Co-Chairs: Maryke Spruyt & Rashmi Kumar Critical care in rural areas: A Sub-Saharan Africa perspective

0815-0830

The role of intensive care unit equipment in the transmission of nosocomial infection

0800-0915

0830-0845 0845-0900 0900-0915 0930-1015 1015-1130 1015-1035 1035-1055 1055-1115 1115-1130 1145-1300 1145-1200 1200-1215 1215-1230 1230-1245 1245-1300 1300-1400 1300-1400 1715-1815

Anti-tuberculosis therapy-induced hepatotoxicity among Ethiopian HIV-positive and negative patients Trends of microbial occurrence, susceptibility and resistance: LUTH case study. Discussion TEA AND COFFEE BREAK - Exhibition Hall Ambassador clinical sessions Co-Chairs: Ged Williams & Janet Bell Nursing Care: Back to Basics Kathleen Vollman, USA Optimising sedation practice Leanne Aitken, Australia Going to extemes to understand critical illness Kay Mitchell, United Kingdom Discussion Advancing nursing education and training: country perspective Co-Chairs: Petra Brysiewicz & Belle Rogado Advancing Nursing Education and Training: Country Perspective South Africa Busi Bhengu, South Africa Australia Ged Williams, Australia Canada Sandra Goldsworthy, Canada Hong Kong Esther Wong, China Discussion LUNCH - Exhibition Hall POSTERS - Exhibition Hall WFSICCM GENERAL ASSEMBLY MEETING

MR 21ABC Time 0900-1500 MR 21DEF Time 1145-1300 1145-1200 1200-1215 1215-1230 1230-1245 1245-1300

Rashmi Kumar, Kenya Mpoki Mwasumbi Ulisubisya, Tanzania Wondwossen Amogne Degu, Ethiopia Rita Okeoghene Oladele, Nigeria

Sepsis training program for LMIC Lecture

Speaker

Scientific abstracts- oral communications(Nursing) Co-Chairs: Kay Mitchell & Leanne Aitkin The effects of simulation training based on mastery learning model on advanced cardiac life support acquisition (free communication) The Effect of an Education on Attitudes toward, Coping with death, Perception of and Performance in End of Life Care among Critical Care Nurses (free communication) A model to facilitate constructive patterns of behaviour and interaction in critical care units (free communication) Pilot exploration of the association between lymphocyte counts, apoptotic markers and anxiety symptoms in critical care nurses (free communication) Lymphocyte expression of apoptotic markers associates with pain ratings in critically ill patients (free communication)

SOCIETY MEETING ROOMS MR 11A WFCCN Council MR 11B WFSICCM Council MR 11C Ethics Round Table Meeting MR 11D WFPICCS Council MR 21G Media

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Eunok Kwon, Korea JungYeon Kim, Korea Suegnet Scholtz, South Africa Elizabeth Papathanassoglou, Cyprus Elizabeth Papathanassoglou, Cyprus


deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o

ACADEMIC PROGRAMME: SATURDAY, 31 AUGUST 2013 Hall 3A Time

1630-1700 1700-1730

Speaker Plenary Co-Chairs: Ged Williams & Ivan Joubert Antibiotic pan-resistant era: Strategies and solutions Guy Richards, South Africa Improving practice in critical care Ruth Kleinpell, USA Award Ceremony: WFSICCM, CCSSA, WFCCN TEA AND COFFEE BREAK-Exhibition Hall Haemodynamic monitoring: Important considerations in 2013 Co-Chairs: Antoine Vieillard-Baron & Xavier Monnet Ultrasound variables to guide resuscitation Paolo Pelosi, Italy Assessment of right heart function Daniel De Backer, Belgium Discussion Debate Chair: Daniel De Backer Manu Malbrain (PRO), Belgium Cardiac output monitors make a difference to outcome David Muckart (CON), South Africa HIV and TB: What is new? Co-Chairs: Charles Feldman & Akther Goolam Mahomed Diagnosis of TB in the ICU: A 21st century approach Keertan Dheda, South Africa Different face of an old enemy: Outcomes and management of TB in the ICU Keertan Dheda, South Africa New antituberculous drugs Umesh Lalloo, South Africa The role of antiretrovirals in the ICU Charles Feldman, South Africa HIV and TB: timing of therapy-an update Umesh Lalloo, South Africa Discussion LUNCH-Exhibition Hall Meet the Experts Session: Haemodynamic Monitoring Co-Chairs: Jean-Louis Teboul & Monty Mythen Comprehensive haemodynamic assessment in critically ill patients: What do you need to Daniel De Backer, Belgium measure? Intravascular volume assessment Xavier Monnet, France Monitors: What's out there? Manu Malbrain, Belgium Take home message: This monitor does not have a brain, please use your own Jean-Louis Vincent, Belgium Discussion TEA AND COFFEE BREAK-Exhibition Hall Plenary Co-Chairs: David Muckart & Mervyn Mer Disaster preparedness: Where are we and where should we be? Edgar Jimenez, USA Intra-abdominal hypertension: Cardiopulmonary considerations during resuscitation Manu Malbrain, Belgium

HALL 1A Time

Lecture

0800-0915 0800-0830 0830-0900 0900-0915 0900-0930 0930-1015 0930-0945 0945-1000 1000-1015 1015-1100 1015-1050 1115-1300 1115- 1130 1130-1145 1145-1200 1200-1215 1215-1230 1230-1300 1300-1500 1500-1615 1500-1515 1515-1530 1530-1545 1545-1600 1600-1615 1615-1630 1630-1730

0800-0900 0800-0815 0815-0830 0830-0845 0845-0900 0900-0930 0930-1100 0930-0945 0945-1000 1000-1015 1015-1030 1030-1100 1115-1230 1115-1130 1130-1145 1145-1200 1200-1215 1215-1230 1300-1500 1500-1600 1500-1515 1515-1530 1530-1545 1545-1600 1600-1630

Lecture

Speaker Targeted temperature management l: Practical considerations Co-Chairs: Janice Zimmerman & Ahmad Alli How to cool Kees Polderman, USA Cooling in cardiac arrest: What temperature to target Murimisi Mukansi, South Africa Cooling in cardiac arrest: Prognosticating outcome Lara Goldstein, South Africa Discussion TEA AND COFFEE BREAK-Exhibition Hall ARDS: Where are we in 2013? Co-Chairs: Lluis Blanch & Umesh Lalloo When and who to prone? Guy Richards, South Africa Steroids: How much and how long? Ivan Joubert, South Africa HFOV in ARDS: Is there still a role? Niall Ferguson, Canada Oesophageal pressure monitoring? Lluis Blanch Discussion Respiratory Co-Chairs: Niall Ferguson & Ivan Joubert Strategies to improve hypoxaemia in the ventilated patient Luciano Gattinoni, Italy Is there a role for permissive hypercapnia in 2013? Lluis Blanch, Spain Airway Pressure Release Ventilation: Friend or foe? Niall Ferguson, Canada Assisted ventilation minimises lung injury Paolo Pelosi, Italy Discussion LUNCH-Exhibition Hall Targeted temperature management II: Beyond cardiac arrest Co-Chairs: Kees Polderman & Ahmad Alli Cooling in myocardial infarction Kees Polderman, USA Fever control in sepsis Younsuck Koh, Korea Pitfalls of rewarming Janice Zimmerman, USA Discussion TEA AND COFFEE BREAK-Exhibition Hall

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o Hall 1B Time

Lecture

0800-0930 0800-0815 0815-0830 0830-0845 0845-0900 0900-0915 0915-0930 0930-1000

Speaker Surgery Co-Chairs: Jacques Goosen & Lance Michell

1500-1515 1515-1530 1530-1545 1545-1600 1600-1615

Intra-abdominal sepsis Lance Michell, South Africa Abdominal Compartment Syndrome: Practical issues Kim De Vasconcellos, South Africa Pancreatitis: An update Pravin Amin, India Management of the open abdomen Jan Pretorius, South Africa Early mobilisation of the critically ill patient Natascha Plani, South Africa Discussion TEA AND COFFEE BREAK-Exhibition Hall Surgery Co-Chairs: Jan Pretorius & Ivor Douglas Management of a massive upper GIT bleed Sooraj Motilall, South Africa Management of the patient with acute liver failure Ivor Douglas, USA Preoperative optimisation of the liver transplant recipient Jean Botha, South Africa Hepatorenal syndrome Oliver Smith, South Africa Discussion LUNCH-Exhibition Hall LUNCH SYMPOSIUM (FRESENIUS KABI): Update in volume resuscitation Trauma Co-Chairs: Sooraj Motilall & David Muckart Management of massive chest trauma Sooraj Motilall, South Africa Management of the crushed pelvis Stephens Moeng, South Africa The polytrauma patient in ICU: What's unique? Jacques Goosen, South Africa Goal directed trauma resuscitation Stephens Moeng, South Africa Discussion

HALL 2A Time

Lecture

1000-1115 1000-1015 1015-1030 1030-1045 1045-1100 1100-1115 1300-1500 1315-1445 1515-1630

0800-0900 0800-0810 0810-0820 0820-0830 0830-0840 0840-0900 0900-0945 0945-1100 0945-1000 1000-1015 1015-1030 1030-1045 1045-1100 1200-1310 1300-1500 1500-1630 1500-1515 1515-1535 1535-1550 1550-1610 1610-1630

Speaker InFACT Session: Investigator-led Research in Critical Care: What is in the works? Co-Chairs: Rob Fowler & Ken Baillie ANZICS CTG Shay McGuiness, New Zealand Canadian Critical Care Trials Group Rob Fowler, Canada ISARIC Ken Baillie, Scotland Scandinavian CTG Anders Perner, Denmark Discussion TEA AND COFFEE BREAK-Exhibition Hall Infections: Therapeutic strategies for specific infections Co-Chairs: Rashmi Kumar & David Nicolau Treatment of gram positive sepsis: An update David Nicolau, USA Malaria Cate Fourie, South Africa A practical approach to infection control Ged Williams, Australia MRSA,GISA,VISA endocarditis: Therapeutic options David Nicolau, USA Discussion DRAEGER Educational Workshop: How EIT helps to guide lung protective ventilation therapy LUNCH-Exhibition Hall Delirium: The South American perspective Co-Chairs: Edgar Celis & Sebastian Ugarte Ubiergo Sedation and analgesia guidelines Edgar Celis, Colombia Sedation and analgesia in mechanical ventilation and weaning Nestor Raimondi, Argentina Delirium epidemiology Sebastian Ugarte Ubiergo, Chile Delirium recognition and Iberian and Latin American survey about delirium Daniel Ceraso, Argentina Discussion

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o HALL 2BH Time 0930-0945

Lecture

1515-1530 1530-1545 1545-1600 1600-1615 1615-1630 1615-1630

TEA AND COFFEE BREAK-Exhibition Hall Transfusions: Minimising risk and getting it right Co-Chairs: Jenna Piercy & Can Ince Transfusion triggers need to be individualised Immunological complications of transfusions Update on the role of oxygen carriers Discussion Traumatic brain injury: An update Co-Chairs: Gene Sung & Maryke Spruyt Cooling in TBI: Eurotherm trial Goal directed neuroresuscitation Review of advances in resuscitation: A neurosurgeon's perspective What is promising in TBI? Raised intracranial pressure: When to operate? Discussion LUNCH-Exhibition Hall Obesity: Minimising harm Co-Chairs: Mary Pinder & Nicky Kalafatis Management of the bariatric surgery patient Challenges of managing the obese patient in the ICU Obesity: A diagnostic challenge Ventilation strategies for the morbidly obese patient Discussion TEA AND COFFEE BREAK-Exhibition Hall

HALL 2C Time

Lecture

0930-1030 0930-0945 0945-1000 1000-1015 1015-1030 1100-1230 1100-1115 1115-1130 1130-1145 1145-1200 1200-1215 1215-1230 1300-1500 1500-1615

0930-1130 0930-1000 1000-1015 1015-1030 1030-1100 1100-1130 1145-1300 1145-1200 1200-1215 1215-1230 1230-1245 1245-1300 1300-1500 1500-1615 1500-1515 1515-1530 1530-1545 1545-1600 1600-1615 1615-1630

Can Ince, The Netherlands Elizabeth Mayne, South Africa Anders Perner, Denmark

Kees Polderman, USA Bhiken Naik, USA Sam Mokgokong, South Africa Gene Sung, USA Sam Mokgokong, South Africa

Malcolm Miller, South Africa Kathleen Vollman, USA Mary Pinder, Australia Lluis Blanch, Spain

Speaker

0800-0915 0800-0815 0815-0830 0830-0845 0845-0900 0900-0915

Speaker

OSCILLATE and HFO Corticosteroids after Corticus VISEP and synthetic starches NICE/SUGAR and glycaemic control Discussion

InFACT: Understanding discordant results in clinical trials Co-Chairs: Ivor Douglas & Djillali Annane

Fungal Infections: What do we need to know? Co-Chairs: Mervyn Mer & Mercedes Palomar Demystifying the diagnosis and dealing with dilemmas Changing epidemiology of fungal infections in the ICU- Candida and Aspergillus Tracking resistance to antifungal drugs for Candida species in South Africa Early treatment strategies for management of suspected fungal infections in the ICU Discussion Surgery Co-Chairs: David Muckart & Jacques Goosen Injury by the big five: Welcome to Africa Timing of definitive surgery Damage control resuscitation Massive solid organ trauma Discussion GSA Session: Adjunctive therapy Co-Chairs: Michael Bauer & Neils Riedemann

Role for corticosteroids Role for antioxidants and selenium What is in clinical evaluation and in the pipeline? Extracorporeal blood detoxification Discussion TEA AND COFFEE BREAK-Exhibition Hall

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Niall Ferguson, Canada Djillali Annane, France Konrad Reinhart, Germany Shay McGuiness, New Zealand

Mervyn Mer, South Africa Francesco Menicetti, Italy Nilesh Govender, South Africa Francesco Menicetti, Italy

Jacques Goosen, South Africa Stephens Moeng, South Africa Timothy Hardcastle, South Africa Timothy Hardcastle, South Africa

Herwig Gerlach, Germany Konrad Reinhart, Germany Neils Riedemann, Germany Phil Dellinger, USA


deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o Hall 2D Time

Lecture

Speaker Medical agents in critical care Chair: Keertan Dheda

0800-0830 0800-0825 0825-0830

Steroids: The objective evidence in 2013 Discussion

0830-0905

I routinely use neuromuscular blockers in ARDS

Debate Chair: Keertan Dheda

0915-0930

TEA AND COFFEE BREAK-Exhibition Hall Administration: The influence of technology Co-Chairs: Neill Adhikari & Ged Willliams

0930-1100 0930-0945 0945-1000 1000-1015 1015-1030 1030-1045 1045-1100

Role of e-learning in training Role of telemedicine in critical care Information systems in the ICU Maintaining competency in the ICU Quality assurance in ICU Discussion

Debate Chairs: Charles Gomersall

1215-1300 1215-1250

Admission of the elderly should be restricted

1300-1500

LUNCH-Exhibition Hall Nutrition: How to measure? Co-Chairs: Janicke Visser & Lizl Veldsman

1500-1615

Mervyn Mer, South Africa

Lluis Blanch (PRO), Spain Ross Freebairn (CON), New Zealand

Charles Gomersall, China Neill Adhikari, Canada Ross Freebairn, New Zealand Shelley Schmollgruber, South Africa Jonathan Sevransky, USA

Bertrand Guidet (PRO), France David Muckart (CON), South Africa

1500-1520 1520-1540 1540-1555 1555-1615 1615-1630

The value of meeting energy requirements Targets: One size fits all Change discussion to Considering additional measures in critically ill children Discussion TEA AND COFFEE BREAK-Exhibition Hall

Renee Blaauw, South Africa Janicke Visser, South Africa Minette Coetzee, South Africa

HALL 3BC Time

Lecture

Speaker Tutorial: ECMO Co-Chairs: Ravi Thiagarajan & Richard Firman

0800-0915 0800-0900

ECMO: Practical points related to ECMO

0900-0915 0915-0945

Discussion

0945-1045 0945-1000 1000-1015 1015-1030 1030-1045 1115-1215 1115-1130 1130-1145 1145-1200 1200-1215 1300-1500 1500-1600 1500-1515 1515-1530 1530-1600 1600-1630

Ravi Thiagarajan, USA Krubin Naidoo, South Africa

TEA AND COFFEE BREAK-Exhibition Hall GSA Session: Challenges for the future Co-Chairs: Michael Bauer & Sats Bhagwanjee Theragnostics and monitoring of immune function Michael Bauer, Germany Of mice and men: The flaws of animal models Niels Riedemann, Germany Lessons learned from failed sepsis trials John Marshall, Canada Discussion GSA Session: Management of Sepsis Co-Chairs: Konrad Reinhart & Phil Dellinger Choice of Fluids Anders Perner, Denmark The role of bundled care Phil Dellinger, USA The role of nursing in the management of sepsis: Setting goals of care Ruth Kleinpell, Canada Discussion LUNCH-Exhibition Hall InFACT Session: Haemodynamic resuscitation: What have we learned and what are the next questions? Co-Chairs: Luciano Gattinoni & Anders Perner CHEST John Myburgh, Australia 6S Anders Perner, Denmark Discussion TEA AND COFFEE BREAK-Exhibition Hall

www.criticalcare2013.com

39


deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o MR 12 Time

Lecture

Speaker

0800-0815 0815-0830

Water water everywhere Co-Chairs: Prakash Jeena & Tex Kissoon Making sense of fluid and electrolyte therapy in the critically ill child The critically ill post-surgical neonate and appropriate management of fluids in this setting

0830-0845

Discussion: How do we rehydrate critically ill children with dehydration?

0845-0900

Appropriate renal replacement therapy for critically ill children in poorer countries Discussion: Renal support therapy – simpler is often better (or at least equivalent). Applying the therapy in practice TEA AND COFFEE BREAK-Exhibition Hall Infection in the PICU / NICU Co-Chairs: Vinay Nadkarni & Andrew Argent HIV in the PICU: Perspective from South Africa Viral infections: Relatively ignored (at our peril) Tuberculosis and the PICU Malaria: what changes have we made to the outcomes of severe malaria? It’s actually all in the micro-circulation isn’t it?

0800-0915

0900-0915 0915-0930 0930-1100 0930-0945 0945-1000 1000-1015 1015-1030 1030-1045 1045-1100 1130-1245 1130-1145 1145-1200 1200-1215 1215-1230 1230-1245 1300-1500 1500-1630

Nurse Leaders forum meeting Lecture

0800-0900 0800-0810 0810-0820 0820-0830 0830-0840 0840-0900 0900-0930 1115-1230 1115-1130 1130-1145 1145-1200 1200-1215 1215-1230 1300-1500 1615-1630

All the speakers

Robin Green, South Africa Sunit Singhi, India Prakash Jeena, South Africa Kuban Naidoo, South Africa Vinay Nadkarni, USA Sunit Singhi, India Prakash Jeena, South Africa Discussion: Focus on infection control in the PICU – the old and the new-panel discussion Vinay Nadkarni, USA Robin Green, South Africa Promoting palliative care in the ICU: implications for nurses: Country perspective Co-Chairs: Gordon Speed & Des Cox Korea Eunok Kwon, Korea Australia Paul Fulbrook, Australia United Kingdom Kay Mitchell, United Kingdom Croatia Vedran Dumbovic, Croatia Discussion LUNCH-Exhibition Hall Ethics Co-Chairs: Prakash Jeena & Eduardo Troster David Kloeck, South Africa Clinical ward round: Who deserves this bed? Harshad Ranchod, South Africa

MR 21ABC Time 1430-1600 MR 22 Time

Andrew Argent, South Africa Mary Morgan, South Africa Robin Green, South Africa Prakash Jeena, South Africa David Kloeck, South Africa Mary Morgan, South Africa

Speaker Critical Care a global perspective Co-Chairs: Khalid Shukri & Sebastian Ugarte Ubiergo

Care in the Sub-continent Critical Care in the Sub-continent Epidemiology: lessons from South America Europe: what have we learnt about Antimicrobials Discussion TEA AND COFFEE BREAK - Exhibition Hall Safety and Risk management Co-Chairs: Fenella Gill & Brian Kavanagh What is appropriate monitoring for the really sick child in PICU Drift to disaster: Ideas about how organizations drift into situations which may be dangerous Education for PIC nurses: What's different? Safety and Quality: Simple measures make an impact Discussion: How do you balance: safety and quality; need for increased efficiency and throughput; coming within budget? The real challenge LUNCH-Exhibition Hall TEA AND COFFEE BREAK-Exhibition Hall

Society Meeting Rooms MR 11A WFCCN Council MR 11B WFSICCM Council MR 11D WFPICCS Council MR 21G Media

www.criticalcare2013.com

40

Pravin Amin, India Khalid Shukri, Saudi Arabia Sebastian Ugarte Ubiergo, Chile Mercedes Palomar, Spain

Rudo Mathivha, South Africa Andrew Argent, South Africa Fenella Gill, Australia Sunit Singhi, India Fenella Gill, Australia, Brian Kavanagh, Canada


“How EIT helps to guide lung protective ventilation therapy” Join us for the Dräger Educational Workshop at the WFSICCM 2013: Date: Time: Location:

ICC Main Entrance

Saturday, 31st August 12:00 to 13:10h ICC Durban, 45 Bram Fischer Rd 1st floor, Room 2A

1B

2B

2H

1A

2A

2F

Registration desk

Diederik Gommers, Rotterdam, Netherlands “Use of EIT for individualized PEEP titration”

2C 2E

Expert Faculty: Eckhard Teschner, Lübeck, Germany “Imaging the regional lung function at the bedside”

2D

Tommaso Mauri, Monza, Italy “EIT in the clinical routine to adjust ventilation settings”


deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o

ACADEMIC PROGRAMME: SUNDAY, 1 SEPTEMBER 2013 HALL 1AB Time

Lecture

Speaker

1000-1015 1015-1030 1030-1040 1040-1055 1055-1110 1110-1125

Plenary Session Co-Chairs: Bronwen Espen and Linda Doedens Meeting challenges to critical care nursing in South Africa Palliative care in the PICU – how do we make the experience bearable TEA AND COFFEE BREAK - Exhibition Hall Plenary: What has happened since Florence Co-Chairs: Mitchell Levy & Guy Richards Tampering with evidence: What has gone wrong in our profession? Xtreme-Everest 2: Preliminary data Ethics Round Table report ECMO: Where to from here Protecting the right heart in the mechanically ventilated patient Enter the new era of hemodynamic monitoring: The Microcirculation

Jean-Louis Vincent, Belgium Monty Mythen, United Kingdom Fathima Paruk, South Africa Luciano Gattinoni, Italy Antoine Vieillard-Baron, France Can Ince, The Netherlands

Hall 2ABFH Time

Lecture

Speaker

Life as an intensivist is an awesome journey Co-Chairs: David Muckart and Ivan Joubert How I made it to being a doctor in apartheid SA ICU misadventures: At times it's a roller coaster ride The lighter side of ICU: Laughter is the best medicine Discussion TEA AND COFFEE BREAK - Exhibition Hall Closing Ceremony

Rudo Mathivha, South Africa David Muckart, South Africa Eric Hodgson, South Africa

0830-0930 0830-0900 0900-0930 0930-1000 1000-1130

0830-0930 0830-0845 0845-0900 0900-0915 0915-0930 0930-1000 1130-1230

Busi Bhengu, South Africa Andrew Argent, South Africa

MARK THE DATE!

3rd

s

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NOV 29TH-30TH 2013 / HILTON - ANTWERP BELGIUM

A CONCISE BUT COMPLETE 2 DAY SYMPOSIUM ON FLUID MANAGEMENT AND MONITORING IN THE CRITICALLY ILL

INTERACTIVE VOTING SYSTEM / POSTER SESSIONS / WORKSHOPS / ACADEMY PRIZE AWARD / NURSING SESSION / CASE DISCUSSIONS / STATE OF THE ART LECTURES / FLUID MANAGEMENT / HEMODYNAMIC MONITORING / ORGAN SUPPORT AND MONITORING / ROUND TABLE DISCUSSIONS /

ANN.BOGAERTS@ZNA.BE

WWW.FLUID-ACADEMY.ORG

ORGANIZED BY THE INTERNATIONAL FLUID ACADEMY

FOLLOW US ON:

www.criticalcare2013.com

42


deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o

POSTER ROUNDS Friday, 30 August 2013 14h00-16h00

Serial Presenter No. Firstname Poster Round 1 0126 Lee

Presenter Lastname

Title

Siew Kum

0153

Elizabeth

Papathanassoglou

0155

Elizabeth

Papathanassoglou

0172 Yu-Nah Poster Round 2 0020 Suegnet 0132 Irene J. 0143

John Adabie

Lee Scholtz Kearns

PATTERNS OF BEHAVIOUR AND INTERACTION IN THE CRITICAL CARE UNIT CRITICAL CARE ENVIRONMENT- PEDAGOGY OF CONNECTEDNESS CHARACTERISTICS AND OUTCOME OF CHILDREN ADMITTED TO A SOUTH AFRICAN PAEDIATRIC INTENSIVE CARE UNIT (PICU) FOLLOWING CARDIAC ARREST PATHWAYS TO CARE OF THE CRITICALLY ILL CHILD - A NURSING PERSPECTIVE IMPROVING MENTORING OF 3RD YEAR NURSING STUDENTS IN THE CRITICAL CARE UNIT

Appiah

0206 Rencia 0276 Renee Poster Round 3

Gillespie Kotze

0134

Brenda

Morrow

0177

Brenda

Morrow

0187

Gcina

Dumani

0196

Lauren

Hill

0252

Guy

Richards

INITIATION OF ENTERAL FEEDING DEVICES IN THE INTENSIVE CARE SETTING PAIN INTENSITY AND APOPTOSIS MARKERS IN INTUBATED CRITICAL CARE INDIVIDUALS WITH AND WITHOUT APPARENT TISSUE INJURY: A COMPARATIVE PILOT STUDY SERUM STRESS NEUROPEPTIDE LEVELS ASSOCIATE WITH LYMPHOCYTE EXPRESSION OF APOPTOTIC MARKERS IN CRITICAL ILLNESS DEVELOPMENT OF A PRETERM INFANT KANGAROO CARE PROTOCOL

THE EFFECTS OF COLISTIN THERAPY IN CHILDREN WITH MULTI-DRUG RESISTANT GRAM NEGATIVE BACTERIAL PATHOGENS IN A SOUTH AFRICAN PAEDIATRIC INTENSIVE CARE UNIT (PICU) FLUID OVERLOAD IN A SOUTH AFRICAN PAEDIATRIC INTENSIVE CARE UNIT (PICU) REVIEW OF CRITICALLY ILL CHILDREN WITH CONGENITAL HEART DISEASE ADMITTED IN HIGH CARE AND PAEDIATRIC ICU IN A LIMITED RESOURCE INSTITUTION IN A DEVELOPING COUNTRY:2009-2012 VITAMIN C STATUS, OXIDATIVE STRESS, HYPERGLYCAEMIA AND FLUID AND INOTROPE REQUIREMENTS IN PATIENTS WITH SEPTIC SHOCK A COMPARISON OF PHARMACOKINETICS OF ASPEN CEFTRIAXONE® AND ROCEPHIN® IN COMMUNITY ACQUIRED MENINGITIS

Poster Round 4 0079

Gunter

Schleicher

0083

Olivier

Lesur

0124

Amine

Mazine

0141

Elaine

Machado De Oliveira

0178

Lauren

Hill

0181

Susan

Hanekom

0240

Zorica

Dimitrijevic

POST-OPERATIVE ICU ADMISSION ALBUMIN, ELEVATED SERUM GLUCOSE AFTER 24HOURS, AND ANY BLOOD TRANSFUSION DURING ICU STAY PREDICT POST-OPERATIVE MORBIDITY AND MORTALITY IN PATIENTS UNDERGOING PANCREATICODUODENECTOMY. ENDOTRACHEAL TUBE (ETT) REPOSITIONING AND VENTILATOR ASSOCIATED PNEUMONIA (VAP) AT THE INTENSIVE CARE UNIT (ICU): AN UNDERRATED RISK FACTOR ROLE OF ADRENAL INSUFFICIENCY IN HEMODYNAMIC INSTABILITY FOLLOWING CARDIAC SURGERY ADVERSE EVENTS REPORTED DURING NURSING SHIFT CHANGE ARE REGISTERED IN THE PATIENTS'S MEDICAL RECORDS IN THE INTENSIVE CARE UNIT? ENDOTHELIAL DYSFUNCTION IS ASSOCIATED WITH OXIDATIVE STRESS AND ILLNESS SEVERITY IN SEPTIC SHOCK MEASURING THE FUNCTIONAL EXERCISE CAPACITY OF A SURGICAL INTENSIVE CARE POPULATION AT UNIT DISCHARGE OUTCOMES OF ACUTE KIDNEY INJURY PATIENTS HAVING RECEIVED RENAL REPLACEMENT THERAPY IN THE INTENSIVECARE UNIT

Poster Round 5 0112

Sergio

Nemer

0128

Rafidah

Atan

0166

Tomás

Regueira

0228 0248

Assem Masaji

Abdel Razek Nishimura

BRAIN TISSUE OXYGEN PRESSURE AND POSITIVE END EXPIRATORY PRESSURE IN SEVERE TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY PATIENTS WITH ACUTE RESPIRATORY DISTRESS SYNDROME. RANDOMISED CONTROLLED STUDY OF HIGH CUT-OFF POINT HAEMOFILTRATION VS. STANDARD HAEMOFILTRATION IN ACUTE RENAL FAILURE DIFFERENTIAL KIDNEY PATHOPHYSIOLOGY AND MITOCHONDRIAL FUNCTION BETWEEN ABDOMINAL SEPSIS WITH AND WITHOUT ACUTE KIDNEY INJURY ASSESSMENT OF FLUID RESPONSIVENESS DURINGCORONARY ARTERY BYPASS SURGERY BLOOD LACTATE/ATP RATIO AS AN OUTCOME PREDICTING INDEX IN THE CRITICALLY ILL.

www.criticalcare2013.com

43


deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o Serial Presenter No. Firstname Poster Round 6

Presenter Lastname

0049

Ravshan A.

Ibadov

0052

Penglin

Ma

0060

Silmara

Hanekom

0101

Andrew

Udy

0136

Achim

Jörres

0227

Kathyrine

Salazar

0234

Kyeongman

Jeon

0238

Lara

Prisco

Poster Round 7 0080 Jiyeon 0081 Jiyeon 0084

Wei Ping

0184 Hailey 0286 Vivien Poster Round 8

Title STRATEGY INTENSIVE THERAPY OF PULMONARY HYPERTENSION IN PATIENTS WITH CONGENITAL HEART DISEASE AFTER SURGICAL CORRECTION POSITIVE FLUID BALANCE INTENSIFIED THE POTENTIAL HARMFUL EFFECTS OF HYDROXYETHYL STARCH (HES) 130/0.4 OR 0.42 IN FLUID RESUSCITATION IN SEVERE SEPSIS: SYSTEMATIC REVIEW AND META-ANALYSIS NOSOCOMIAL RISK ASSESSMENT OF STERILE VERSUS TAP WATER USED IN "BLOW BOTTLES", BY SURGICAL PATIENTS, IN A HOSPITAL SETTING AUGMENTED RENAL CLEARANCE: A COMMON AND SUSTAINED FINDING IN PATIENTS WITHOUT RENAL IMPAIRMENT DURING THE FIRST SEVEN DAYS IN ICU. THE EFFECT OF CONTINUOUS VERSUS INTERMITTENT RENAL REPLACEMENT THERAPY ON OUTCOMES OF CRITICALLY ILL PATIENTS WITH ACUTE RENAL FAILURE (CONVINT): A PROSPECTIVE RANDOMISED CONTROLLED TRIAL HEMOPHAGOCYTIC LYMPHOHISTIOCYTOSIS IN PEDIATRICS: A RARE OR UNRECOGNIZED DISEASE? - A CASE REPORT INFLUENCE OF DELIRIUM ASSESSED BY THE CONFUSION ASSESSMENT METHOD FOR THE INTENSIVE CARE UNIT ON WEANING FROM MECHANICAL VENTILATION INTRACRANIAL PRESSURE MONITORING VERSUS A NON-INVASIVE RECORDING METHOD IN A NEURO INTENSIVE CARE SETTING

Kang Kang

DEVELOPMENT AND APPLICATION OF THE SLEEVE-TYPE RESTRAINTS FOR ICU PATIENTS ICU NURSES' PERCEPTION OF WORK ENVIRONMENT AND HORIZONTAL VIOLENCE INCIDENCE AND RISK FACTORS OF INVASIVE MOLD INFECTION FOLLOWING ALLOGENIEC HEMATOPOIETIC STEM CELL TRANSPLANTATION: A SINGLE CENTER STUDY OF 270 RECIPIENTS PARTICIPANT PERCEPTIONS OF THE NEPEAN ICU MULTIDISCIPLINARY TEAM MEETING OPEN VISITING: BELIEFS AND ATTITUDES OF INTENSIVE CARE CLINICIANS

Zhang Samuels Herbert

0041

Yoke Kuan

Kong

0045 0102 0215

Meral Anne Nicky

Madenoglu Kivanc Skafte Holmes

0254

Candice

Bowers

FAILURE MODE EFFECT ANALYSIS ON ADMINISTRATION OF 1:1 CONCENTRATED POTASSIUM CHLORIDE (KCL) IN CHILDREN INTENSIVE CARE UNIT (CICU) AT KANDANG KERBAU WOMEN'S AND CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL. INTENSIVE CARE UNIT NURSES’ CURRENT PROBLEMS AND EXPECTATIONS EARLY MOBILIZATION IN INTENSIV THERAPY (MIT-PROJECT) FAMILY PRESENCE DURING DAILY INTER PROFESSIONAL ROUNDS BARRIERS TO THE IMPLEMENTATION OF EVIDENCE-BASED PRACTICES IN A CRITICAL CARE UNIT

Poster Round 9 0042

Ang Noi

Lee

0053

Sofia

Hiekkanen

0069 0110 0115 0264 0279

Sun Gyoung Gülçin Gülçin Juan Maria

Na Bozkurt Bozkurt Scribante Phillips

EFFECTIVENESS OF EDUCATIONAL INTERVENTION ON INITIATION OF NURSINGLED FEEDING PROTOCOLS ON THE ADOPTION OF NURSING PREFERRED TEACHING METHODS: A QUESTIONAIRES SURVEY DEVELOPMENT OF CLINICAL LEARNING SUPERVISION IN THE NEUROINTENSIVE CARE UNIT HELSINKI, FINLAND A SURVEY ON ICU NURSE'S KNOWLEDGE OF SEPSIS SELF-HANDICAPPING IN INTENSIVE CARE NURSES THE PROFILE OF ISTANBUL UNİVERSITY INTENSIVE CARE NURSES THE PROFILE OF RECOVERY ROOM NURSES IN JOHANNESBURG HOSPITALS DOES HIGH-FIDELITY SIMULATION WORK? WHAT IS THE EVIDENCE?

www.criticalcare2013.com

44


deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o Serial Presenter No. Firstname Poster Round 10 0026 Gulbahar

Presenter Lastname

Title

Keskin

0100

Marion

Mitchell

0111

Young Hee

Yi

0185

Ronel

Pretorius

0188

Angela

Leonard

0194

Elizabeth

Papathanassoglou

0278 Maryn Poster Round 11

Reyneke

0015

Saadet

Yazici

0082

Benga Sidwell

Matlala

0133

Siv K.

Stafseth

0135

Diana

Solms

0198

Katia

Padilha

0210

Nse

Odunaiya

0217 Mokgadi Poster Round 12 0038 Annette

Matlakala Diacon

0068

Etienne

Nsereko

0078

Clare

Davis

0119

Paul

Munyiginya

0229

Geldine

Chironda

Poster Round 13 0098

Siv K.

Stafseth

0149

S. Ann

Young

0280 0281

Maria Maria

Phillips Phillips

PSYCHOLOGICAL PROBLEMS IN BURN PATIENTS LONG TERM COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT AND DELIRIUM IN AN AUSTRALIAN INTENSIVE CARE (LOGIC) CIRCADIAN TYPES, SLEEP DISTURBANCES AND MEDICATION ERRORS IN KOREAN ROTATING SHIFT ICU-NURSES UNDERSTANDING DECISIONAL CONFLICT IN ORGAN DONATION PHOTOGRAPHIC STORYBOARDS: PREPARING A MOTHER AND CHILD FOR CARDIAC SURGERY DEVELOPMENT AND PRELIMINARY VALIDATION OF A NEW QUESTIONNAIRE TO EVALUATE FACTORS INFLUENCING NURSES' DECISION-MAKING (F.I.N.DE.M) IN CRITICAL CARE UNDERSTANDING DECISIONAL CONFLICT IN ORGAN DONATION INFECTION DEVELOPMENT IN PATIENTS HOSPITALIZED IN THE INTENSIVE CARE UNIT FOLLOWING CHEST SURGERY FACTORS LEADING TO NON-DIVULGENCE BY PATIENTS WHO USE TRADITIONAL MEDICINE IN WESTRAND MINE CRITICAL CARE UNITS AUTHOR: SIDWELL MATLALA, E. NEL & M.M CHABELI UNIVERSITY OF JOHANNESBURG <I>COST ALLOCATION-A MODEL AND TOOL FOR COMPARISON OF NURSING CARE INTENSITY AND COSTS IN THREE ICUS IN NORWAY</I> PATIENT MOBILIZATION TECHNIQUES FOR ICU NURSES NURSING WORKLOAD IN THE INTENSIVE CARE UNIT: A MULTICENTRE STUDY USING THE NURSING ACTIVITIES SCORE (NAS) FACTORS AFFECTING CARDIOPULMOARY AND CRITICAL CARE PRACTICE AMONG PHYSIOTHERAPIST IN SOUTH WEST NIGERIA ADDRESSING MANAGEMENT CHALLENGES IN A LARGE INTENSIVE CARE UNIT FLUID BALANCE MONITORING IN CRITICALLY ILL PATIENTS KNOWLEDGE AND ATTITUDES OF NURSES REGARDING PAIN MANAGEMENT OF ICU PATIENTS IN THREE REFERRAL HOSPITALS IN RWANDA CHANGING THE PRACTICE OF ‘CHINESE WHISPERS': AN ACTION RESEARCH APPROACH TO OPTIMISE THE PICU NURSING SHIFT HANDOVER EXPLORING THE NEEDS OF FAMILY MEMBERS OF PATIENT'S IN THE INTENSIVE CARE UNTI OF ONE HOSPITAL IN KIGALI, RWANDAP. MUNYIGINYA, RNP. BRYSIEWICZ, PHD, FULL PROFESSOR THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN PERCEIVED PHYSICAL HEALTH AND ADHERENCE TO HAEMODIALYSIS AMONG END STAGE RENAL DISEASE PATIENTS AT A LOCAL HAEMODIALYSIS CENTER IN HARARE, ZIMBABWE TRAINING AND 24-HOUR SUPPORT FROM A MOBILE INTENSIVE CARE NURSE: NURSE-TONURSE COLLABORATION IN A UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL IN NORWAY. CRITICAL CARE NURSES OPINIONS REGARDING CONTINUOUS PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT, THE SOUTH AFRICAN PERSPECTIVE STARTING A HIGH-FIDELITY SIMULATION LABORATORY: PEARLS AND PERILS APPLICATIONS OF HIGH-FIDELITY SIMULATION IN CRITICAL CARE

www.criticalcare2013.com

45


deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o Serial Presenter No. Firstname Poster Round 14

Presenter Lastname

0009

Olugbenga

Akingbola

0021

Richard

Levin

0131

Yee Hui

Mok

0192

Yu-Nah

Lee

0249

Alison

Lupton-Smith

0250

Brenda

Morrow

Sizakele Lucia Thembekile Poster Round 15 0285

Title

Khoza

0037

Vijaydeep

Siddharth

0039

Vijaydeep

Siddharth

0055

Vijaydeep

Siddharth

0057

Vijaydeep

Siddharth

0190

Gcina

Dumani

0191

Yu-Nah

Lee

THE IMPACT OF VISUAL CUES ON HAND HYGIENE COMPLIANCE IN THE PEDIATRIC INTENSIVE CARE UNIT (PICU) A RETROSPECTIVE ANALYSIS OF READMISSIONS TO A TERTIARY PAEDIATRIC INTENSIVE CARE UNIT OVER A ONE YEAR PERIOD USE OF AIRWAY PRESSURE RELEASE VENTILATION IN HYALINE MEMBRANE DISEASE THE EFFECT OF OFFERING PACIFIER TO KEEPING RESPIRATORY FUNCTION ON PREMATURE BABIES' NCPAP THE DISTRIBUTION OF VENTILATION AND RESPIRATORY MUSCLE ACTIVITY IN A MECHANICALLY VENTILATED CHILD: A CASE STUDY.(ORAL) THE EFFECT OF PRONE TURNING ON REGIONAL LUNG VENTILATION IN PAEDIATRIC ACUTE RESPIRATORY DISTRESS SYNDROME (ARDS) - A PILOT STUDY OPEN VISITING: BELIEFS AND ATTITUDES OF INTENSIVE CARE CLINICIANS OUTCOME OF CARE PROVIDED IN PAEDIATRIC INTENSIVE CARE UNIT OF THE APEX TEACHING HOSPITAL OF INDIA OUTCOME OF CARE PROVIDED IN NEONATAL SURGERY INTENSIVE CARE UNIT OF THE APEX TEACHING HOSPITAL OF INDIA COMPARISON OF PAEDIATRIC INTENSIVE CARE UNIT (PICU) OF THE APEX TEACHING HOSPITAL OF INDIA AGAINST THE GUIDELINES PRESCRIBED BY SOCIETY OF CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE (SCCM) COMPARISON OF NEONATAL SURGERY INTENSIVE CARE UNIT OF THE APEX TEACHING HOSPITAL OF INDIA AGAINST THE RECOMMENDATIONS OF SEVENTH CONSENSUS CONFERENCE ON NEW-BORN ICU DESIGN BLOOD STREAM INFECTIONS POST PAEDIATRIC CARDIAC SURGERY DONE AT THE CHARLOTTE MAXEKE ACADEMIC HOSPITAL IN A DEVELOPING COUNTRY IN 2012 ADMISSION HYPOTHERMIA IN EXTREMELY LOW BIRTH WEIGHT INFANTS LESS THAN 24WKSNEONATAL INTENSIVE CARE UNIT, DEPARTMENT OF PEDIATRICS, SAMSUNG MEDICAL CENTER, SEOUL, KOREA

Poster Round 16 0118

Sang-Min

Lee

0174

Juan

Alva

0195

Antonio

Evaristo-Neto

0224

Kantharuben

Naidoo

0237

Subhal

Dixit

0255

Akhter

Goolam Mahomed

AUTOPHAGY IS MEDIATED BY OXIDATIVE SIGNALING IN LIPOPOLYSACCHARIDE INDUCED ACUTE LUNG INJURY MODEL INFECTIOUS DISEASES IN AN INTENSIVE CARE UNIT (ICU) OF THE EDGARDO REBAGLIATI MARTINS NATIONAL HOSPITAL, LIMA - PERÚ. SEVERE PLASMODIUM FALCIPARUM MALARIA PATIENTS IN A GENERAL ICU FROM ANGOLA: A TWO YEARS REVIEW THE CONCEPT OF MEDICAL FUTILITY - SPECIFIC ISSUES IN THE CONTEXT OF HIV/AIDS AND INTENSIVE CARE FEVER: A PANDARA BOX PREVALENCE OF ORGANISMS ISOLATED FROM THE RESPIRATORY TRACT IN INTENSIVE CARE UNIT (ICU) PATIENTS OVER A 1-YEAR PERIOD

Poster Round 17 0103

Donna

De Grass

0106

Rebecca

Zadroga

0138

Mohd Basri

Mat Nor

0216

Ivana

Zykova

0222

Kantharuben

Naidoo

0223

Kantharuben

Naidoo

THE EFFECT OF A COMMUNITY BASED PULMONARY REHABILITATION PROGRAMME ON THE QUALITY OF LIFE OF PATIENTS WITH PULMONARY TUBERCULOSIS SELECTION OF BLOOD CULTURE (BC) MEDIA MATTERS- BACTEC BC USE IN THE CRITICALLY ILL FACILITATES EARLIER ORGANISM DETECTION AND INITIATION OF ANTIBIOTICS EARLY PROCALCITONIN DYNAMICS IN CRITICALLY ILL PATIENTS WITH SEPSIS IN A TERTIARY ICU A H1/N1 INFECTION: IMMUNOLOGICAL PARAMETERS IN ICU PATIENTS FACTORS INFLUENCING THE OUTCOME OF CRITICALLY-ILL HIV-INFECTED PATIENTS REPORTED IN THE LITERATURE- A STEP CLOSER TO A TRIAGE TOOL? SURVEY OF ETHICAL DILEMMAS FACING CRITICAL CARE SPECIALISTS IN SOUTH AFRICA IN ADMISSION OF PATIENTS WITH HIV INFECTION REQUIRING INTENSIVE CARE

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o Serial Presenter No. Firstname Poster Round 18

Presenter Lastname

0050

Ravshan A.

Ibadov

0123

Busisiwe

Mrara

0160 0211

Seok Chan Volkan

Kim Inal

0263

Kiyomi

Uechi

Poster Round 19 0154 Diego

Title ANTIBIOTIC PROPHYLAXIS MEANT FOR PROLONGED MECHANICAL VENTILATION AND PREVENTION OF BRONCHOPULMONARY COMPLICATED IN CARDIAC SURGERY IMPACT OF BETA-LACTAM CONCENTRATIONS ON RESOLUTION OF INFECTION IN ICU PATIENTS WITH BACTERAEMIC SEPSIS NAFAMOSTAT MESILATE DURING ECMO TREATMENT IN SEVERE RESPIRATORY FAILURE. LEVO MAKES BETTER THAN DOBO NURSING CARE TO THE PATIENT UNDERWENT IMPLANTATION OF A VENTRICULAR ASSIST DEVICE (VAD)

Orbegozo Cortes

0197

Dragan

Cvetkovic

0236

Jacques

Goosen

Poster Round 20 0092

Oleg

Tarabrin

0094

Oleg

Tarabrin

0096

Jong Hun

Jun

0146

Raquel

Gutierrez Rodriguez

0176

Raquel

Gutierrez Rodriguez

0209

Assem

Abdel Razek

Poster Round 21 0093 Oleg

Tarabrin

0114

Yoichiro

Kikuchi

0122

Sean

Neill

0163

Soohee

Kim

0182 0226 0231

Burcin Walquíria Nikki

Halacli Lopes Allorto

0257

Thibaut

Desmettre

A THERMAL CHALLENGE OF THE MICROCIRCULATION POSTOPERATIVE COMPLICATIONS FOR OPERATIVE REPAIR OF ACUTE AORTIC DISSECTION SAFETY AND EFFICACY OF CONTINUOUS STROKE VOLUME VARIANCE AS THE ENDPOINT IN HAEMORRHAGIC SHOCK. J GOOSEN, GC CANDY, GAG RICHARDS, KD BOFFARDJOHANNESBURG HOSPITAL, SOUTH AFRICA ROLE OF EPIDURAL ANESTHESIA WITH ROPIVACAINE IN FORMATION OF HEMOCOAGULATION DISORDERS AND SEPTIC COMPLICATIONS AT PATIENTS WITH ACUTE NECROTIZING PANCREATITIS СOAGULATION SYSTEM IN PREGNANT WOMEN WITH PREECLAMPSIA HEMOSTATIC RESUSCITATION IN ELECTIVE SURGERY CAUSING MASSIVE TRANSFUSION AND EMERGENCY SURGERY AFTER TRAUMATIC MASSIVE BLEEDING : A COMPUTER SIMULATION HAEMODYNAMIC MONITORING VERSUS SERUM LACTATE LEVELS DURING THE EARLY POSTOPERATIVE PERIOD AFTER LIVER TRANSPLANTATION: COMPLICATIONS AND EVOLUTION OF THE LIVER GRAFT. EVALUATION OF THE SAPS 3 SYSTEM IN CORONARY PATIENTS: A MULTICENTRE STUDY IN SPAIN CARDIOVASCULAR FLUID RESPONSIVENESS IN MECHANICALLY VENTILATED PATIENTS WITH SEVERE SEPSIS AND SEPTIC SHOCK USING OF THE HEMOVISCOELASTOGRAPHY FOR DETERMING HEMOSTASIS DISORDERS UNIQUE MEDICAL COALITION ADMINISTERED BY A REGIONAL HOSPITAL FOR QUALITY MANAGEMENT OF CRITICAL CARE RISK FACTORS RELATED TO TRANSFUSION REQUIREMENTS IN PATIENTS UNDERGOING IMPLANTATION OF VENTRICULAR ASSIST DEVICES PHYSICIANS' COMPLIANCE TOWARD CRITICAL CARE PHARMACIST'S INTERVENTION IN LUNG TRANSPLANTATION PATIENTS HEMOPHAGOCYTIC LYMPHOHISTIOCYTOSIS IN PATIENTS WITH SEVERE SEPSIS RELATIONSHIP OF WORKLOAD IN NURSING WITH MEDICAL LEAVES BLOOD TRANSFUSIONS IN BURN PATIENTS IN A REGIONAL BURN SERVICE. USE OF PROTHROMBIN COMPLEX CONCENTRATE FOR REVERSING THE VITAMIN K ANTAGONIST EFFECT IN PATIENTS UNDERGOING SURGERY: A FRENCH MULTICENTER OBSERVATIONAL STUDY (OPTIPLEX)

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o Serial Presenter No. Firstname Poster Round 22

Presenter Lastname

0014

Heleen

Van Aswegen

0036

Vijaydeep

Siddharth

0046

Cintia

Grion

0074

Leah

Naidoo

0087

Sangheon

Park

0129

Rodwell

Gundo

0261

Walquíria

Lopes

Title HEALTH-RELATED QUALITY OF LIFE OF SURVIVORS OF MAJOR TRAUMA ASSESSED SIX MONTHS AFTER INJURY: A COHORT STUDY. OUTCOME OF CARE PROVIDED IN MEDICINE INTENSIVE CARE UNIT OF THE APEX TEACHING HOSPITAL OF INDIA INCREASE IN NURSING WORK LOAD IN PATIENTS WITH SEPSIS EVALUATED BY NURSING ACTIVITY SCORE TOO WELL FOR ICU, TOO SICK FOR THE WARD - DEVELOPING AN ACUTE PHYSIOLOGICAL SUPPORT SERVICE FOR SURGICAL PATIENTS. SIX MONTHS OUTCOME OF CRITICALLY ILL PATIENTS TRANSFERRED IN ICU BY MULTIDISCIPLINARY RAPID RESPONSE TEAM USING ELECTRONIC MEDICAL RECORDBASED DASHBOARD SYSTEM ADMISSIONS AND OUTCOMES IN INTENSIVE CARE UNIT IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES IN AFRICA USE OF NURSING ACTIVITIES SCORE TOOL FOR MEASUREMENT OF WORK LOAD OF NURSING ICU

Poster Round 23 0054

Vijaydeep

Siddharth

0158 0179 0221

Elisabeth Raquel Kantharuben

Riviello Gutierrez Rodriguez Naidoo

0266

Malcolm

Miller

Poster Round 24 0040 Brett

Abbenbroek

0090

Christiane S.

Hartog

0120 0125

Pieter Takahiro

Bothma Hirayama

0148

Raquel

Gutierrez Rodriguez

0159

Kazuhiro

Kamata

0171

Arzu

Topeli

ASSESSMENT OF MEDICINE INTENSIVE CARE UNIT OF THE APEX TEACHING HOSPITAL OF INDIA AGAINST THE GUIDELINES PRESCRIBED BY EUROPEAN SOCIETY OF INTENSIVE CARE MEDICINE EPIDEMIOLOGY, OUTCOMES, AND PROGNOSTICATION FOR ICU PATIENTS IN RWANDA MORTALITY ASSESSMENT WITH SAPS-3 AND APACHE-III IN ICU PATIENTS. AUDIT OF ICU/HC BEDS IN SOUTH AFRICA: 2008-2009-IMPLICATIONS FOR THE NHI RETROSPECTIVE STUDY OF REFERRAL DATA COLLECTED USING A STANDARDIZED REFERRAL FORM,HIGHLIGHTING THE NEED FOR ADDITIONAL ICU BEDS. INTENSIVE CARE UNIT VOLUME-OUTCOME RELATIONSHIP: IS BIGGER BETTER? RISK FACTORS FOR POST-TRAUMATIC STRESS, ANXIETY AND DEPRESSION IN RELATIVES OF ICU PATIENTS WITH SEVERE SEPSIS AND END-OF-LIFE DECISIONS CEREBRAL AIR EMBOLISM, MISDIAGNOSED AND PRESENTING TOO LATE? QUALITY OF SLEEP IN ICU PATIENTS THE FUNCTIONAL PROGNOSIS OF TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY: EARLY HAEMODYNAMIC MONITORING COMPARED WITH OTHER FACTORS. AN ADULT CASE OF SEASONAL INFLUENZA ASSOCIATED ENCEPHALOPATHY BISPECTRAL INDEX CORRELATES WITH RICHMOND AGITATION SEDATION SCALE IN MECHANICALLY VENTILATED CRITICALLY ILL PATIENTS

Poster Round 25 0113

Yoichiro

Kikuchi

0147

Lizl

Veldsman

0242

Lara

Prisco

0282

Jonathan

Handley

EARLY ADOPTION OF PERCUTANEOUS ENDOSCOPIC GASTROSTOMY BY NEUROSURGEONS IMPROVES PATIENT AND FAMILY SUPPORT, AS WELL AS COSTEFFECTIVENESS MONITORING OF ENERGY AND PROTEIN INTAKE INCLUSIVE OF ENERGY FROM NONNUTRITIONAL ENERGY SOURCES (NNES) IS ESSENTIAL IN THE ICU ADMISSION HYPERGLYCEMIA AS PROGNOSTIC INDICATOR OF MORTALITY IN SUBARACHNOID HAEMORRHAGE. ICU STATISTICS, EDENDALE HOSPITAL, 2012 - IN SEARCH OF LATE PRESENTATION MARKERS

Poster Round 26 0086

Hee-Pyoung

Park

0095

Hubert

Hon

EFFECT OF TRACHEOSTOMY TIMING ON CLINICAL OUTCOME IN NEUROSURGICAL PATIENTS: EARLY <I>VERSUS</I> LATE TRACHEOSTOMY CHEST X-RAY AFTER ULTRASOUND GUIDED CENTRAL VENOUS CATHETER INSERTION, DO WE NEED IT?

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o Serial Presenter No. Firstname Poster Round 27 0023 Krishnaswamy

Presenter Lastname

Title

Sundararajan

0030

Jessica

Bernon

0117

Pedro

Gutiérrez-Lizardi

0150

Mammie

Motiang

0161

Gerlinde

Mandersloot

0256

Diego

Orbegozo Cortes

0277

Dyuti

Maharaj

ACCIDENTAL REMOVAL OF CATHETERS AND TUBES IN THE INTENSIVE CARE UNIT THE WORRYING REALITY - ENDOTRACHEAL TUBE CUFF PRESSURES:A COMPARATIVE AUDIT OF INTRA-OPERATIVE VERSUS EMERGENCY INTUBATIONS EUTHANASIA IN CRITICAL CARE: AN OPINION SURVEY OF MEXICO'S CRITICAL CARE PRACTITIONERS THE DIAGNOSES AND TREATMENT OUTCOMES OF OBSTETRIC PATIENTS ADMITTED TO INTENSIVE CARE UNIT OF DR GEORGE MUKHARI HOSPITAL, GARANKUWA SOUTH AFRICA FIVE YEAR REVIEW OF ADULT INTENSIVE CARE PALLIATIVE CARE PATHWAY, UNITED KINGDOM PROGNOSTIC VALUE OF CRP IN CRITICALLY ILL PATIENTS EVALUATION OF ADHERENCE TO THE GLUCOSE CONTROL PROTOCOL BY THE HEALTH CARE WORKERS IN A CARDIOTHORACIC ICU AT CMJAH: A RETROSPECTIVE ANALYSIS

Poster Round 28 0019

Wen-Jinn

Liaw

0024

Heleen

Van Aswegen

0162

Fábio Poianas

Giannini

0168

Gerlinde

Mandersloot

0173

Sheila Nainan

Myatra

0203

Krishna Prasad

Mulavisala

OUTCOME CORRELATION BETWEEN HYPERGLYCEMIA AND POSTOPERATIVE CRITICALLY ILL PATIENTS AFTER-HOURS PHYSIOTHERAPY SERVICE DELIVERY IN SOUTH AFRICA: REPORT ON SURVEY CONDUCTED BY CARDIOPULMONARY PHYSIOTHERAPY REHABILITATION GROUP OF SOUTH AFRICAN SOCIETY OF PHYSIOTHERAPY. OBSTETRIC POPULATION IN THE INTENSIVE CARE UNIT : WHAT DO MODERN MORTALITY PREDICTION SCORES ADD? INTRODUCING AN EXTENDED CARE BUNDLE FOR DONOR MANAGEMENT A PROSPECTIVE STUDY TO DETERMINE THE SAFE DEPTH OF INSERTION OF ENDOTRACHEAL TUBES DURING NASAL AND ORAL INTUBATIONS IN THE INDIAN POPULATION USE OF AN INTRAVASCULAR CONTINUOUS BLOOD GLUCOSE SENSOR DURING POST OPERATIVE ICU CARE OF CARDIAC SURGERY PATIENTS.

Poster Round 29 0032

David Lee

Skinner

0056

Yoko

Asaka

0109

Andrew

Udy

0165

Seok Chan

Kim

0205

Young-Joo

Lee

THE INCIDENCE AND OUTCOMES OF ACUTE KIDNEY INJURY AMONGST PATIENTS ADMITTED TO A LEVEL I TRAUMA UNIT IS EARLY INITIATION OF RENAL REPLACEMENT THERAPY IN CRITICALLY ILL PATIENT WITH ACUTE KIDNEY INJURY REALLY GOOD? THE INFLUENCE OF AUGMENTED RENAL CLEARANCE ON PLASMA ANTIBACTERIAL CONCENTRATIONS IN CRITICALLY ILL PATIENTS RECEIVING BETA-LACTAM THERAPY. A CASE OF SEVERE TRANSFUSION-RELATED ACUTE LUNG INJURY (TRALI) MANAGED WITH EXTRACORPOREAL MEMBRANE OXYGENATION (ECMO). EFFICACY OF CONTINUOUS RENAL REPLACEMENT THERAPY (CRRT) OF THE BRAIN-DEAD DONORS FOR ORGAN DONATION

Poster Round 30 0085

Chae-Man

Lim

0097

Mi Ae

Jeong

0127

Sungwon

Na

0130

Hayaki

Uchino

0275

Georgi

Georgiev

HIGH-FLOW NASAL CANNULA VERSUS NONINVASIVE VENTILATION IN POST-EXTUBATION RESPIRATORY FAILURE ACUTE PULMONARY EDEMA DUE TO HYPOXIA DURING A DIFFICULT INTUBATION IN A RHEUMATOID ARTHRITIS PATIENT: A CASE REPORT SYMPATHETIC BLOCKADE ATTENUATES THE PROGRESSION OF PULMONARY HYPERTENSION VIA NITRIC OXIDE AND ARGINASE PATHWAYS WHERE IS TRACHEA!? - COMPLETE TRACHEAL TRANSECTION FOLLOWING BLUNT TRAUMA EXTENDING THE CHALLENGE BEYOND SPONTANEOUS BREATHING TRIAL

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o Serial Presenter No. Firstname Poster Round 31

Presenter Lastname

0157

Carlos A

Santacruz H

0167

Sergio

Nemer

0170

Keren

Mandelzweig

0186

Busisiwe

Mrara

0193 Arzu 0200 Samantha 0233 Portia 0253 Xavier Poster Round 32

SPECIFIC PHARMACOLOGIC THERAPIES FOR ADULT ACUTE RESPIRATORY DISTRESS SYNDROME (ARDS): SYSTEMATIC REVIEW AND META-ANALYSIS OF RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIALS LUNG PROTECTIVE VENTILATION AND ITS LIMITATIONS NON-INVASIVE VENTILATION (NIV) IN LOW RESOURCE SETTINGS (LRS): A LITERATURE REVIEW USE OF NON-INVASIVE NEGATIVE PRESSURE VENTILATION TO TRANSITION FROM NONINVASIVE POSITIVE PRESSURE VENTILATION TO UNSUPPORTED VENTILATION IN CHEST TRAUMA AND CHRONIC OBSTRUCTIVE AIRWAYS DISEASE PATIENTS WITH SEVERE ASTHMA FOLLOWED IN THE INTENSIVE CARE UNIT THE CORRELATION BETWEEN DIAPHRAGM STRENGTH, ENDURANCE AND THICKNESS ENDOTRACHEAL TUBE VERFICATION IN THE MECHANCILLY VENTILATED PATIENT. WEANING THE MECHANICAL VENTILATED PATIENT IN A CRITICAL CARE UNIT

Topeli Orrey Jordan Demingo

0033

Eizo

Watanabe

0077

Afzal

Azim

0088

Jigeeshu

Divatia

0104

Susan

Hanekom

0189

Jenny

Freeman

0258

Jose

Rojas-Suarez

0259 Siti NH Poster Round 33 0047 Jennifer 0089 Sudheer

Title

AN IRGM POLYMORPHISM (RS10065172) IS ASSOCIATED WITH MORTALITY OF SEVERE SEPSIS THROUGH THE DOWN-REGULATION OF <I>IRGM</I> GENE EXPRESSION WITH LPS CHALLENGE ­­­METABOLIC PROFILING OF HUMAN LUNG INJURY BY <SUP>1</SUP>H HIGH-RESOLUTION NUCLEAR MAGNETIC RESONANCE SPECTROSCOPY OF BLOOD SERUM EPIDEMIOLOGY AND OUTCOMES OF SEPSIS IN INDIAN ICUS : RESULTS FROM THE INDIAN INTENSIVE CARE CASE MIX AND PRACTICE PATTERNS STUDY (INDICAPS) THE EFFECTS OF A LUNG RECRUITMENT MANOEUVRE BEFORE EXTUBATION ON PULMONARY FUNCTION AFTER CORONARY ARTERY BYPASS SURGERY THE EVALUATION OF A NON-INVASIVE RESPIRATORY VOLUME MONITOR TO MONITOR RESPIRATORY STATUS IN INTENSIVE CARE PATIENTS AFTER EXTUBATION NON-INVASIVE MECHANICAL VENTILATION IN CRITICALLY ILL OBSTETRIC PATIENTS: A CASE SERIES. SEASHELL AND SAND ASPIRATION WITH NEAR DROWNING IN A CHILD

Buang Paratz Jose

0144

Raquel

Gutierrez Rodriguez

0145

Raquel

Gutierrez Rodriguez

0214

Bibiana

Paldusova

0241

Kathyrine

Salazar

0243

Sooraj

Motilall

0260

Petra

Brysiewicz

AN EXPEDITED DIAGNOSIS OF SEPSIS IN BURN PATIENTS HAIR DYE POISONING IN THE INTENSIVE CARE UNIT IN KUWAIT FACTORS PREDICTING HAEMORRHAGE DURING THE IMMEDIATE POSTOPERATIVE PERIOD AFTER LIVER TRANSPLANTATION. EARLY AND LATE COURSE AFTER LIVER TRANSPLANTATION: STUDY OF FACTORS PREDICTING GRAFT SURVIVAL. SEVERE ETHANOL POISONING: CVVHD AS A FIRST LINE OF TREATMENT PREVALENCE OF MULTIPLE ORGAN DYSFUNCTION SYNDROME (MODS) IN CRITICALLY ILL CHILDREN FROM JANUARY 2002 TO DECEMBER 2011: A RETROSPECTIVE CROSSSECTIONAL STUDY BLUNT THORACIC AORTIC INJURY. A POSSIBLE ROLE FOR CONSERVATIVE MANAGEMENT? PSYCHOSOCIAL DISTRESS FOR FAMILIES OF CRITICALLY INJURED TRAUMA PATIENTS ADMITTED TO ICU IN DURBAN, KWAZULU-NATAL

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Support World Sepsis Day, 13 September Sign the World Sepsis Declaration world-sepsis-day.org Open “World Sepsis Day Meeting” Join us: 29 August 2013 15:15 – 16:15 Meeting Room 12


deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o

SPEAKER PREPARATION CENTRE A speaker preparation centre is located in Hospitality Suite 25 on the 2nd floor of the Convention Centre. Presenters are required to visit the speaker preparation centre to upload their presentations at least 24 hours prior to their presentation. The technical team will ensure that the presentation is uploaded onto the server and available in the meeting room of their presentation at the time of presentation. Speaker preparation centre opening times are: Tuesday, 27 August Wednesday, 28 August Thursday 29, August Friday, 30 August Saturday, 31 August Sunday, 1 September

07h30 – 17h30 07h30 – 19h00 07h00 – 19h00 07h30 – 17h30 07h30 – 17h30 07h30 – 12h00

Please note that all meeting rooms are fitted with computer projection facilities only. No overhead projectors are available. Speakers should report to the meeting room of their scheduled presentation 15 minutes before the start of the session to meet the session chairperson and familiarise themselves with the audio visual equipment and venue layout. Session chairpersons will be instructed to stop your presentation when you exceed your allocated time.

SOCIAL PROGRAMME Opening Ceremony Date Thursday 28 August 2013 Time 18h00 for 18h30 – 19h30 Venue Hall 5 and 6 International Convention Centre - Durban Welcome Reception Date Thursday 28 August 2013 Time 19h30 – 21h30 Venue Hall 1 and 2 – Durban Exhibition Centre Dress code Smart Casual South African Carnival Evening Date Saturday 31 August 2013 Time 19h00 – 00h00 Venue uShaka Marine World Dress code Casual Transport for Social Events Please see the Transport Schedule on page 80 for further information.

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2012/13


deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o

EXHIBITOR FLOORPLAN KEY Exhibitor in Alphabetical order Stand No 2015 Seoul WFSICCM Congress 99 34th ISICEM 73 Abbott Laboratories 125 AbbVie 71 Acute Innovations 27 Adcock Ingram Critical Care 9 Alere 122 Aspen Pharmacare 66 AstraZeneca 1 B. Braun 127 Bard 64 Bayer Healthcare 4 Becton Dickinson 14 Bedfont Scientific 134 Beier Drawtex Healthcare Pty Ltd 13 CareFusion 62 CareFusion 111 Cepheid 123 Cook Medical 40 Cossni Medical 84 Covidien 115 Covidien 118 CritiCare 2014, Jaipur (India) 76 Dale Medical Products 48 DePuySynthes 112 Doctors Without Borders MSF 89 Dr채gerwerk AG & Co. KGaA 41 Edward Lifesciences 45 European Society of Intensive Care 77 Medicine Fanem 70 Fisher & Paykel 70 Fresenius Kabi Deutschland GmbH 87 Gaumard Scientific / Anatomical 55 GE Healthcare 35 Hamilton Medical AG 95 HeartWorks by Inventive Medical 81 Ltd Hill-Rom 61 Hospital Information Services 44 Intersurgical 15 Janssen Pharmaceutica 56 Karl Storz Endoskope 78 KCI Medical 130 Lekawi 133 LifeMax 92 Mbuso Medical Supplies 74 MEDIHOSP 135 Mindray 63 MSD 85 Nihon Kohden Middle East FZE 82 Novalung GmbH 49 Nutricia Advanced Medical 79 Nutrition PerryHill International Trading 90 (Pty) Ltd Pfizer 20

Pharma Dynamics Philips Medical Systems Radiometer Ranbaxy RCA Resuscitation Training Media Sanofi Siyakhanda Medical & East Coast Medical Sleepnet Breathenet Smith & Nephew Smiths Medical Specpharm SSEM Mthembu Medical (Pty) Ltd Stat-Tiakeni Medical / Medin Medical Innovations Tecmed Africa Teleflex Medical The Scientific Group Torque Medical VitalAire Weinmann Welch Allyn ZOLL Medical CRRT Innovation Suite.

Exhibitor by Stand No AstraZeneca Welch Allyn Bayer Healthcare The Scientific Group Ranbaxy Adcock Ingram Critical Care Philips Medical Systems Beier Drawtex Healthcare Pty Ltd Becton Dickinson Intersurgical Smith & Nephew Sanofi Teleflex Medical Pfizer Acute Innovations GE Healthcare Pharma Dynamics Cook Medical Dr채gerwerk AG & Co. KGaA Hospital Information Services Edward Lifesciences Specpharm Stat-Tiakeni Medical / Medin Medical Innovations

38 12 51 8 69 109 17 131 126 16 107 46 105 47 117 19 5 124 114 65 3 129 VIP Suite

Stand No 1 3 4 5 8 9 12 13 14 15 16 17 19 20 27 35 38 40 41 44 45 46 47

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Dale Medical Products 48 Novalung GmbH 49 Radiometer 51 Gaumard Scientific / Anatomical 55 Janssen Pharmaceutica 56 Hill-Rom 61 CareFusion 62 Mindray 63 Bard 64 Weinmann 65 Aspen Pharmacare 66 RCA 69 Fanem 70 Fisher & Paykel 70 AbbVie 71 34th ISICEM 73 Mbuso Medical Supplies 74 CritiCare 2014, Jaipur (India) 76 European Society of Intensive Care 77 Medicine Karl Storz Endoskope 78 Nutricia Advanced Medical 79 Nutrition HeartWorks by Inventive Medical 81 Ltd Nihon Kohden Middle East FZE 82 Cossni Medical 84 MSD 85 Fresenius Kabi Deutschland GmbH 87 Doctors Without Borders MSF 89 PerryHill International Trading 90 (Pty) Ltd LifeMax 92 Hamilton Medical AG 95 2015 Seoul WFSICCM Congress 99 SSEM Mthembu Medical (Pty) Ltd 105 Smiths Medical 107 Resuscitation Training Media 109 CareFusion 111 DePuySynthes 112 VitalAire 114 Covidien 115 Tecmed Africa 117 Covidien 118 Alere 122 Cepheid 123 Torque Medical 124 Abbott Laboratories 125 Sleepnet Breathenet 126 B. Braun 127 ZOLL Medical 129 KCI Medical 130 Siyakhanda Medical & East Coast 131 Medical Lekawi 133 Bedfont Scientific 134 MediHosp 135 CRRT Innovation Suite VIP Suite


deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o

EXHIBITOR FLOORPLAN

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o

EXHIBITOR INFORMATION Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Information:

2015 SEOUL WFSICCM CONGRESS Stand No: 99 8th Fl., Samick Lavied’or Bldg., 234, Teheran-ro, Gangnam-gu, Seoul 135-920, Korea + 82-2-3452-7291 Fax: +82-2-3452-7292 wfsiccm2015@intercom.co.kr www.wfsiccm2015.com Under the theme of “One Step Further: The Pursuit of Excellence in Critical Care,” the 12th Congress of the World Federation of Societies of Intensive and Critical Care Medicine (2015 Seoul WFSICCM Congress) will be held from 29 August to 2 September, 2015 in Seoul, Korea. The world’s leading experts in the field will convene to promote the highest standards of intensive and critical care medicine. The Congress will serve as a global platform in which participants can discover the latest scientific advances and strengthen their social network. In this regard, it will be an inspiring opportunity for attendees to take their development as caregiver in the intensive care unit ONE STEP FURTHER. We plan to hold numerous small-group discussions and workshops tailored for every level of intensive and critical care to complement our excellent scientific programs. It will be held in Seoul, Korea’s capital and the city that treasures its 600 years of tradition while embracing the future as a world leader in information technology. You will find a harmonious blending of the past and present, history and future in this ever-changing city where culture, economy, environment, creative imagination and innovation thrive. We look forward to welcoming you in Seoul, a truly global city where tradition and modernity, nature and high technology coexist.

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

34th ISICEM Route de Lennik 808 – 1070 Brussels - BELGIUM +32 479 589 157 Veronique.de.vlaeminck@ulb.ac.be www.intensive.org

Information:

The objective of this four day symposium is to review concepts and technology and present recent advances in the management of the critically ill patients. The symposium includes formal presentations as well as practical discussions such as tutorials, round tables, pro con debates, “meet the experts”, etc. Original scientific posters will be also presented. The meeting is open to all physicians, nurses and other allied health professionals interested in intensive care and emergency medicine.

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website: Information:

Stand No:

73

Fax:

+32 2 555 4555

Abbott Laboratories Stand No: 125 P.O. Box 7208, Weltevredenpark, 1715, South Africa +27 (0)11 858 2000 Fax: +27 (0)11 858 2048 Temoso.mashego@abbott.com or Yolandie.becker@abbott.com www.abbott.com We are a global, broad-based health care company devoted to discovering new medicines, new technologies and new ways to manage health. Our products span the continuum of care, from nutritional products and laboratory diagnostics through medical devices and pharmaceutical therapies. Our comprehensive line of products encircles life itself addressing important health needs from infancy to the golden years.

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Stand No:

AbbVie

71

Fax:

OUR LIFE'S WORK IS TO IMPROVE LIVES We are 21,000 people focused on developing new products and new ways to help people manage some of the most serious health conditions. We are scientists, researchers, communicators, manufacturing specialists, and regulatory experts. We also are parents, brothers, sisters, friends, community leaders, volunteers, and more. We have a lot in common with the people we serve, and we come together every day to create, discover, and deliver new ways to improve people's health. FINDING BETTER WAYS TO HELP PATIENTS AbbVie began as the pharmaceutical leader, Abbott, which was founded in 1888 by Chicago physician, Dr. Wallace Abbott. Since then, Abbott has evolved to become a global healthcare leader, delivering innovative pharmaceutical, nutritional, diagnostic, and medical products to people in more than 150 countries.

Information:

a NEW BEGINNING On January 1, 2013, AbbVie was founded, a global biopharmaceutical company with the focus and capabilities to address some of the world's greatest health challenges. AbbVie has the stability, resources, expertise, and passion to discover, develop, and bring to market ground breaking science to solve the biggest health problems that face the world today and tomorrow. ABBVIE IS… Focused - We are focused on developing leading-edge therapies and innovations. Passionate - We have the commitment, expertise, and capabilities to provide life-changing products to patients who need them most. Making a Difference - AbbVie combines deep understanding of patient needs and disease states to deliver treatments that have an impact on peoples' lives. ABBVIE HAS… A diverse product portfolio, including several market-leading medicines. A focused business and investment model designed to address unmet patient needs. Proven commercial capabilities, infrastructure, and expertise rooted in a 125-year history as an innovative leader in advancing healthcare. 21,000 dedicated employees who are committed to addressing the world's greatest health challenges.

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Information:

Acute Innovations Stand No: 27 21421 NW Jacobson Rd.,Suite 700, Hillsboro, OR 97124 866.623.4137 Fax: customerservice@acuteinnovations.com www.acuteinnovations.com ACUTE Innovations® looks to position itself as a leader in the medical device field by providing innovative product solutions to surgeons and their patients for challenging thoracic procedures. RIBLOC RIB FRACTURE PLATING SYSTEM ACUTE Innovations has designed a comprehensive system of implants and instruments specifically designed to fit the ribs anatomy. The RibLoc Rib Fracture Plating System addresses flail chest, acute fractures, chest wall deformities, and rib fracture non unions. ACUTIE STERNAL CLOSURE SYSTEM The AcuTie® Sternum Closure System's revolutionary design encompasses the simplicity of standard wire cerclage while providing increased compression and stability in multiple planes.

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Information:

Adcock Ingram Critical Care Stand No: 9 1 New Road, Midrand, Gauteng, South Africa +27 (0)11 635 0000 Fax: +27 (0)86 553 0000 info@adcock.com www.adcock.com Adcock Ingram began as the EJ Adcock Pharmacy in Krugersdorp 120 years ago. Adcock Ingram was listed on the main trading board of the JSE in 1950 before it became a wholly-owned subsidiary of Tiger Brands and was subsequently delisted from the JSE in 2000. After the unbundling from Tiger Brands, Adcock Ingram re-listed on the JSE in August 2008 at a share price of R33.50 with approximately 172.6 million ordinary shares in issue. The Company has a market capitalisation of about R9 billion and occupies a 10% share of the private pharmaceutical industry in South Africa. The unbundling from Tiger Brands and subsequent listing presented Adcock Ingram with opportunities that enabled us to drive our vision of being recognised as a leading, world-class, branded healthcare company. The Company looks forward to pursuing organic growth opportunities and acquisitions in selected markets, developing exportable competencies, and implementing meaningful Broad Based Black Economic Empowerment (BBBEE) within the business Hospital Products Business Adcock Ingram Critical Care is South Africa's largest supplier of hospital and critical-care products, blood systems and accessories as well as products used for renal dialysis and transplant medication. This business unit has a 60 year relationship with US-based Baxter International. Pharmaceutical Business Adcock Ingram provides an extensive range of branded and generic prescription and OTC products in a broad range of therapeutic classes such as: analgesics, allergy, cardiovascular, central nervous system, dermatology, ear/nose/ eye preparations, feminine health, gastrointestinal, vitamin, mineral and energy supplements as well as a selective range of personal care products. In generics, the Company markets a broad range of affordable products under the corporate brand. In branded products, the Company markets many well-recognised leading brands such as Adco Dol, Allergex®, Bioplus®, Citro-Soda®, Corenza® C, Myprodol®, Panado®, Syndol, vita-thion® and Unique Formulations, as well as a diverse range of brands on behalf of our international partners.

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Alere P O Box 2428, Bedfordview, 2008, South Africa +27(0)11 4504411 Venesse.hutchons@alere.com www.alerehealthcare.co.za

Information:

Alere Inc. enables individuals to take greater control of their health at home, under the supervision of their healthcare providers, by combining near-patient diagnostics, health monitoring capabilities, and information technology solutions. A leading global provider of point-of-care diagnostics and services, Alere has developed a strong commercial presence in cardiology, infectious disease, toxicology and diabetes. The company’s products and services help healthcare practitioners make earlier, more effective treatment decisions and improve outcomes for individuals living with chronic disease. Alere’s portfolio also includes a broad array of health information solutions that increase access to critical health data, provide clinical decision support, and facilitate more comprehensive performance reporting and analysis. Alere believes that the integration of these solutions with its novel diagnostics and monitoring services positions it to enable customers to reduce the healthcare costs associated with managing chronic disease considerably, addressing what may be the greatest burden faced by most health systems around the world today.

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website: Information:

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website: Information:

Stand No:

122

Fax:

+27(0)11 450 2267

Aspen Pharmacare Stand No: Healthcare Park, Woodlands Dive, Woodmead, Sandton, 2196, South Africa +27 (0)11 239 6200 Fax:

66

www.aspenpharma.com Aspen is a supplier of branded and generic pharmaceuticals in more than 150 countries across the world and of consumer and nutritional products in selected territories. Aspen is a leading generics manufacturer in the Southern hemisphere and is Africa’s largest pharmaceutical manufacturer. AstraZeneca Stand No: 1 Building 2, Northdowns Office Park, 17 Georgian Crescent West, Bryanston, 2191, South Africa T: +27 (0)11 797 6262 M: +27 (0)82 415 9324 Fax: mary.schenck@astrazeneca.com

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Information:

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Information:

Bard Stand No: 64 Building 13, Greenstone Jill, Greenstone, Johannesburg, South Africa +27(0)11 524 9900 Fax: +27(0)865399510 brendan.marshall@crbard.com www.crbard.com For more than 100 years, C. R. Bard, Inc. has been developing innovative medical devices that meet the needs of healthcare professionals and patients. From a one man shop in 1907 to a global leader in the medical device industry we are committed to enhancing the lives of people around the world. BARD has five divisions and more than 8,000 products in the disease areas of Vascular, Urology, Oncology, and Surgical Specialty. Our products range from devices that treat hernias, to stents that prevent blood clots from traveling to the lungs, catheters that reduce hospital-acquired infections, thermoregulatory devices designed to monitor and control a patient’s temperature, and ports that delivery chemotherapy reducing frequent needle sticks for children and adults. On display this week: The ARCTIC SUN® 5000 Temperature Management System is designed to monitor and control a patient’s temperature within a range of 32°C to 38.5°C (89.6°F to 101.3°F). It consists of an electronic module and disposable ARCTICGEL™ Pads. The system includes a stand-alone electronic module with an interactive touch screen. This is connected to the conductive pads that are placed on the patient and provide thermal-energy transfer to deliver targeted temperature management therapy to the patient. Please visit us at booth no. 64 and do not miss the symposium on Targeted Temperature Management, Friday August 30th at 14:30. Bayer Healthcare 27 Wrench Road, Isando, 1600, South Africa +27 (0)11 921 5000

Stand No:

4

Fax:

+27(0)11 921 5041

www.bayer.co.za Bayer is a global enterprise with core competencies in the fields of health care, agriculture and high-tech materials. As an inventor company, it sets trends in research-intensive areas. Bayer’s products and services are designed to benefit people and improve the quality of life. Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals is the pharmaceutical division of Bayer HealthCare. Bayer markets its products in more than 100 countries. More than 37,000 members of staff currently work for Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals worldwide – of which more than 6,500 in research and development alone. Improving people's quality of life is Bayer’s aim. Research and development of innovative medicines and novel therapeutic approaches are the means by which this is achieved, while at the same time constantly improving established products. In this context, Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals uses experience it has gained from over a century in the business. The key therapeutic areas of development for Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals are: Men’s Health, Anti-Infective, Oncology, Cardiovascular and blood diseases, Women's healthcare , Imaging techniques.

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website: Information:

B. Braun PO Box 1787, Randburg, 2125, South Africa 010 222 3000 Carla.silva@bbraun.com www.bbraun.com

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Becton Dickinson Stand No: 14 20 Woodlands drive, The Woodlands Office Park, Building 31, 2nd Floor, Woodmead, 2199, South Africa +27 (0)116032620 Fax: +27 (0)116032640 BDSA_RSA_SERVICE@EUROPE.BD.COM www.bd.com/za BD is a leading global medical technology company that develops, manufactures and sells medical supplies, devices, laboratory instruments, antibodies, reagents and diagnostic products through its three segments: BD Medical, BD Diagnostics and BD Biosciences. The Company is dedicated to improving people's health throughout the world. BD is focused on improving drug delivery, enhancing the quality and speed of diagnosing infectious diseases and cancers, and advancing research, discovery and production of new drugs and vaccines. BD's capabilities are instrumental in combating many of the world's most pressing diseases. Founded in 1897 and headquartered in Franklin Lakes New Jersey, BD employs nearly 30,000 associates in more than 50 countries throughout the world. The BD office in South Africa is located in Johannesburg. Established in 1995, this location employs more than 70 associates. The Company serves healthcare institutions, life science researchers, clinical laboratories, the pharmaceutical industry and the general public.

Information:

Stand No:

127

Fax:

010 222 3066

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website: Information:

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Information:

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

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Bedfont Scientific Stand No: 134 Station Yard, Station Road, Harrietsham, Maidstone, Kent, ME17 1JA, UK 0044 (0)16 22 85 11 22 Fax: 0044 (0)16 22 85 48 60 ask@bedfont.com www.bedfont.com Established in 1976, Bedfont Scientific specialise in the manufacture of exhaled breath and gas monitoring instruments for worldwide medical, scientific and industrial markets. Supplying high quality products specifically tailored for INO therapy, NOxBOXO2 allows accurate, real-time monitoring of NO, NO2 and O2, also showcasing the newly launched NOxBOXi innovative intelligent delivery and monitoring system, offering both continuous and synchronous NO delivery modes for use with adult, paediatric and neonatal patients. Beier Drawtex Healthcare Pty Ltd Stand No: 13 PO Box 12942, Clubview, 0014, South Africa +27 (0)12 661 1751 Fax: +27 (0)12 661 1753 chris@drawtex.com www.drawtex.com Beier Drawtex Healthcare (Pty) Ltd is a member of the Beier Group of Companies , and is the Inventor, developer and owner of the Drawtex® ADVANCED WOUND CARE SYSTEM and all Intellectual Property Rights associated with Drawtex®. Beier Drawtex Healthcare (Pty) Ltd is a proudly South African company with the sole and exclusive right to manufacture and supply Drawtex® worldwide. Drawtex® was invented in 1997 and is a South African patented invention, with world-wide patents pending. Drawtex® is registered as a trademark in South Africa and globally including in the USA, Canada, the United Kingdom, the European Union, India, China, Russia. South Korea, Australia, New Zealand and in most African countries. Beier Drawtex Healthcare (Pty) Ltd is a Medical Device development company that intends to market and sell Drawtex® Hydroconductive Wound Dressings world-wide under license, through a network of professional and reputable distributors/partners. CAREFUSION Stand No: 111 Unit 2 Oude Molen Business Park, Oude Molen Road, Ndabeni, 7405, South Africa +27(0)21 510-7562 Fax: +27(0)21 510-7567 Brenda.wessels@carefusion.com www.carefusion.com CAREFUSION Improving the safety and cost of healthcare CareFusion, Alaris® Products is a leader in the healthcare industry focused on improving the delivery of care to patients. Our technologies include the Alaris® range of infusion systems, Guardrails® medication safety software and SmartSite® needle-free safety devices. New to our bundle of safety products is the MaxPlus™ positive displacement needleless connectors, Centurion dressings and securement devices, Alaris® Enteral Syringe Pump with colour coded enteral feed disposables. Our mission is to deliver clinically proven products and services that measurably improve the productivity and safety of healthcare globally.

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Carefusion 3750 Torrey View Ct San Diego, CA 92130, United States +1 858-617-2000 Richard.Featherstone@Carefusion.com www.carefusion.com

Stand No:

Information:

At CareFusion, we are united in our vision to improve the safety and lower the cost of healthcare for generations to come. Our 14,000 worldwide employees are passionate about healthcare and helping those that deliver it - from the hospital pharmacy to the nursing floor, the operating room to the patient bedside. Our clinically proven product families include Pyxis® for medication and supply dispensing, Alaris® for infusion, AVEA® ventilators, Jaeger® for respiratory diagnostic instruments, AVAmax® and PleurX® for interventional procedures, V. Mueller® and Snowden-Pencer® surgical instruments, and ChloraPrep® skin antiseptic. To make global healthcare better, we partner with our customers to help them improve medication management, lower costs in procedural areas, reduce risk of infection, advance the care of ventilated patients and turn the endless amount of data generated in healthcare into actionable information. Actionable Intelligence. Leveraging medical device and HIT investments through connectivity and integrated analytics. Infection Prevention. Providing clinicians with a systematic approach to identify and help prevent infections.. Medication Management. Protecting infusion and oral medication dosage forms at all major points of care. OR Effectiveness. Helping to improve profitability and advance clinical and operational effectiveness within the high-cost, high-risk procedural environment. Respiratory Care. Helping to improve patient outcomes through targeted lung protective strategies

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

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Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

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Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website: Information:

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

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Cepheid Stand No: 123 Famous Grouse House, Kildrummy Office Park, Cnr Witkoppen Road & Umhlanga Ave, Paulshof, South Africa +27(0)11 234 9636 Fax: fimmie.steyn@cepheid.com www.cepheidinternational.com Cepheid is a leading molecular diagnostics company that is dedicated to improving healthcare by developing, manufacturing, and marketing accurate yet easy-to-use molecular systems and tests. By automating highly complex and time-consuming manual procedures, the company’s solutions deliver a better way for institutions of any size to perform sophisticated genetic testing for organisms and genetic-based diseases. Through its strong molecular biology capabilities, the company is focusing on those applications where accurate, rapid, and actionable test results are needed most, in fields such as critical and healthcare-associated infections, sexual health, genetic diseases and cancer. Stand No:

Cook Medical

40

Fax: www.cookmedical.com A global pioneer in medical breakthroughs, Cook Medical is committed to creating effective solutions that benefit millions of patients worldwide. Today, we combine medical devices, drugs, biologic grafts and cell therapies across more than 16,000 products serving more than 40 medical specialties. Founded in 1963 by a visionary who put patient needs and ethical business practices first, Cook is a family-owned company that has created more than 10,000 jobs worldwide. Cook manufactures products for the difficult airway, endobronchial blockers, percutaneous tracheostomy, centesis and drainage, enterable feeding tubes, products for emergency medicine & trauma, dialyses sets, central venous and arterial catheters. Cossni Medical Stand No: 84 85 – 10th Avenue, Edenvale , Johannesburg, 1609, SouthAfrica +27 (0)11 524 0794 Fax: +27 (0)11 524 0219 info@cossni.co.za www.cossni.co.za Exclusive suppliers of ALung’s innovative HEMOLUNG Respiratory Assist System (CO2 Removal) for optimised ECCO2R in lung protective ventilation strategies. Cossni Medical also specialises in Cardiothoracic and Vascular Surgery products such as the Medos cardiac perfusion range, Cardiamed heart valves, the Jotec Vascular Surgery range, Braceplus poststernotomy braces, the Hemobag, etc Covidien Stand No: 115 298 Roan Crescent, Corporate Park North, Randtjiesfontein, Midrand, South Africa +27(0)11 542 9555 Fax: +27(0)11 542 9501 Eurika.goosen@covidien.com www.covidien.com Covidien is a global market leader in its specialty product portfolio and focus on decision makers—clinicians and caregivers alike—who operate in an environment in which patients are often in serious or critical condition, requirements for patient care are greater and trained medical professionals are expected to do more with less. Covidien is one of the only companies with the long history and in-depth knowledge needed to provide extensive insight into all respiratory care areas, namely airways, patient monitoring and ventilation. Covidien is committed to working with healthcare professionals to develop innovative products. Its holistic approach to the three key areas of patient safety, medical efficacy and healthcare efficiency helps improve outcomes in respiratory care.

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Information:

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Information:

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website: Information:

Covidien Stand No: 118 Corporate Park North, 379 Roan Crescent, Randjespark, Midrand, South Africa +27 (0)11 5429500 Fax: +27 (0)11 5429619 Michelle.martins@covidien.com www.covidien.com Covidien is a global market leader in its specialty product portfolio and focus on decision makers—clinicians and caregivers alike—who operate in an environment in which patients are often in serious or critical condition, requirements for patient care are greater and trained medical professionals are expected to do more with less. Covidien is one of the only companies with the long history and in-depth knowledge needed to provide extensive insight into all respiratory care areas, namely airways, patient monitoring and ventilation. Covidien is committed to working with healthcare professionals to develop innovative products. Its holistic approach to the three key areas of patient safety, medical efficacy and healthcare efficiency helps improve outcomes in respiratory care. Criticare 2014, Jaipur (India) Stand No: 76 INDIAN SOCIETY OF CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, JAIPUR (INDIA) +91 141 515 50 50 Fax: Criticare2014@gmail.com, drnrungta@gmail.com, drmmunjal@hotmail.com www.criticare2014.com, www.apaccm2014.com India is a country of the most ancient cultures and civilisation. It is a country which has beaches to Himalayas with world’s highest lake to back waters, animal sanctuaries, a saga of diverse geographical treats. You will get parasailing to mountaineering adventure at its best, the total medicine and health package which heals your mind and soul – yoga, Ayurveda meditation and most modern spas. You will be treated with cultural Extravaganza to culinary delights the ultimate taste of royalty. Largest Democracy in the world, it lives the shining example of unity in diversity. It has 20 official languages with 2000 dialects changing every 10th mile you walk yet almost all understand English. Probably the only nation where all religions and faiths live in one place. You will have the site of Coexistence of ancient traditions & modern practice everywhere in India. “Atithi Devo Bhavah” “Guest, you are God to me” has been our traditional belief and therefore “Padharo Mhare Desh” which means “Sir/Madam welcome to my land”. Jaipur, the host capital city is perfect blend of modern and ancient heritage architecture. The pink colored walled city, the Amer Palace, City Palace, Sisodia Rani Garden and the Jalmahal (Palace in water) represent the history of rajput royal dynasties reflection of their grandeur. February is the perfect weather for any one from any part of the world to visit Jaipur. From minimum 8 degrees to maximum 28 degrees during mid-day, its most pleasant part of the year. A shoppers delight Jaipur will offer you traditional to modern gold and diamond jewellery for all tastes and ranges. The Rajasthani Cuisine blend with its traditional hospitality will leave you stunningly pleased and overwhelmed. The congress will be held at the majestic, sprawling Birla auditorium a symbol of indian architectural heritage. You will enjoy the ambiance at its best. The evening air will be filled with entertaining fragrance of indian music, dance and of course the cuisine you will ever remember. Jaipur is well connected by air, road and rail. It has best world class heritage and ultramodern hotels for your hospitality. The science of Critical Care Medicine will be served to you at its best by medical Scientists from Asia, Pacific and Western world. More than 20 hands on Workshops, more than 250 lectures which will include plenaries, panels, debates. Thematic lectures will form the part of scientific agenda. It is expected that the congress will see presentations from more than 250 faculties and participation of more than 3500 delegates and industry representatives. It makes all the reasons for you to join us at Jaipur from 14th to 18th February 2014 in the carnival of critical care medicine and international cultural exchange. The occasion is joint meeting of 20th Annual conference of the Indian Society of Critical Care Medicine and 18th Conference of Asia Pacific Association of Critical Care Medicine. Dale Medical Products Stand No: 48 7 Cross ST Plainville MA 02762 800-343-3980 Fax: a.belanger@dalemed.net www.dalemed.com Dale Medical Products, Inc. develops and manufacturers innovative post-surgical care products for the acute, sub-acute and long-term care markets, designed to save nursing time and reduce skin irritation, while leading to comfortable, trouble-free recovery.

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website: Information:

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Information:

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Information:

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Information:

DePuySynthes Stand No: 112 Johnson and Johnson, 2 Medical Drive, Midrand, South Africa +27(0)11 265 7500 Fax: Turnbull.noelle@synthes.com please cc: landman.tamara@synthes.com www.depuysynthes.com DePuy Synthes Companies are inspired by the opportunity to help people return to living active and fulfilling lives. They deliver a broad array of orthopaedic and neurological solutions—inspired solutions that go beyond quality implants and include services, education, instruments, and emerging technologies Doctors Without Borders MSF Stand No: 89 3RD Floor Orion Building, 49 Jorrisen Street, Braamfontein, South Africa +27(0)11 403 4440 Fax: +27(0)11 403 4443 BRETT.SANDLER@ JOBURG.MSF.ORG www.msf.org.za Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF) is an international, independent, medical humanitarian organisation committed to two objectives: providing medical assistance to people affected by armed conflict, epidemics, healthcare exclusion, natural and man-made disasters; and speaking out about the plight of the populations assisted. MSF offers assistance to people based only on need and irrespective of race, religion, gender or political affiliation. Founded in 1971 as a not-for-profit organisation, today MSF is present in more than 60 countries, where thousands of MSF doctors, nurses, logisticians, water-and-sanitation experts, and other medical and non-medical professionals work together to bring essential health services to people caught in humanitarian crises. Services and activities include provision of emergency medicine, response to epidemics, war surgery, nutrition and vaccination campaigns, operating feeding centers for malnourished children, mental health care and support to hospitals and clinics. Drägerwerk AG & Co. KGaA Stand No: 41 Moislinger Allee 53-55, D- 23558 Lübeck, Germany +49-451-882-0 Fax: +49-451-882-2080 info@draeger.com www.draeger.com Dräger. Technology for Life® Dräger is an international leader in the fields of medical and safety technology. Dräger products protect, support and save lives. The product range in the medical technology division comprises anesthesia workstations, ventilators for emergency and intensive care and home ventilation, intensive and transport ventilation as well as warming therapy for premature infants. Patient monitoring, IT solutions, accessories and consumables, ceiling mounts and lighting systems and central supply units for medical gases complement the range. Edwards Lifesciences Stand No: 45 20 Regency Drive, Route 21 Cororate Park, Irene, South Africa +27(0)12 345 2482 Fax: +27(0)12 345 5848 erin_ronnenbergh@edwards.com www.edwards.com Clarity in Every Moment... Helping to advance the care of the critically ill for 40 years, Edwards Lifesciences seeks to provide the valuable information you need, the moment you need it. Through continuing collaboration with you, ongoing education and our never-ending quest for advancement, our goal is to deliver clarity in every moment. The EV1000 clinical platform from Edwards Lifesciences presents the physiologic status of the patient in an entirely new, intuitive and meaningful way. Designed in collaboration with and validated by clinicians, the EV1000 clinical platform offers you scalability and adaptability in both the Operating Room and Intensive Care Unit. The EV1000 clinical Platform was purposefully designed with a separate monitor and databox. The separate databox allows for choice in placement location and the Modularity offers choice of sensors and catheters. The Databox allows for seamless adoption of future technology as Edwards Lifesciences continues to advance hemodynamic monitoring. The EV1000 clinical platform displays the parameters provided by the FloTrac sensor, the PreSep and PediaSat oximetry catheters and the VolumeView set. Experience the EV1000 clinical platform with the different choice of the parameters and bring clarity to every moment.

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

European Society of Intensive Care Medicine Rue Belliard 19, 1040 Brussels, Belgium +32 2 559 03 50 members@esicm.org www.esicm.org

Information:

ESICM - The Intensive Connection. The European Society of Intensive Care Medicine is an international non-profit association of more than 6000 doctors, nurses, physiotherapists and other allied healthcare professionals. Through its global network, ESICM is dedicated to promoting and strengthening education, scientific research, and professional development in intensive care medicine. (e.g. EDIC-European Diploma in Intensive Care Medicine, ICM journal, PACT & more). LIVES 2013, ESICM’s 26th Annual Congress: Oct. 5-9, PARIS www.esicm.org

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Information:

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Information:

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Information:

Stand No:

77

Fax:

+32 2 559 03 79

Fanem Stand No: 70 Av. General Ataliba Leonel, 1790, CEP 02033-020 - São Paulo - SP - Brasil 55 11 2972-5700 Fax: 55 11 2979-1575 jacinto@fanem.com.br www.fanem.com.br Fanem is a Brazilian multinational company, pioneer in the manufacturing of medical and laboratory equipment. The company was founded in 1924 by Arthur Schmidt who, with the support of his son Walter Schmidt, introduced innovative techniques and methodologies, tracing a technological route with a high level of representativeness in the Brazilian health products chain. In the 40s, Fanem was already the market leader in Brazil and since then, it remains strong, being the pioneer in the launch of several products, such as: the first Brazilian incubator; the first Brazil’s radiant warmer; the world’s first microprocessed phototherapy; among many other innovations that marked the Brazilian neonatology history. With Marlene Schmidt in the Executive Board and Djalma Luiz Rodrigues in the Industrial Management, Fanem took a bold step towards expansion in the international market and became the first Brazilian company of this sector to open a factory in India. Complementing the extension strategy, Fanem opened, in 2011, an office in Amman, Jordan, the main company’s channel for the Middle East. Nowadays, Fanem occupies the leadership of the neonatology Brazilian market, and it is the most remembered brand among the main executives and purchasing professionals of many Brazilian hospitals. Fisher & Paykel Stand No: 15 Maurice Paykel Place, East Tamaki, Auckland 2013 PO Box 14 348, Panmure, Auckland 1741 New Zealand +64 9 574 0100 Fax: Simon.Hall@fphcare.co.nz www.fphcare.co.nz

70

+64 9 574 0158

We are a leading designer, manufacturer and marketer of products and systems for use in respiratory care, acute care, and the treatment of obstructive sleep apnea. Our products and systems are sold in over 120 countries worldwide. We sell our products through direct sales offices operations in most of our major markets, and a network of distributors that sell to hospitals, homecare providers and other manufacturers of medical device. Fisher & Paykel entered the respiratory care market in 1971 with the development of a unique respiratory humidifier system for use in critical care. We now offer a broad range of products and systems for use in respiratory and acute care and in the treatment of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). Fresenius Kabi Deutschland GmbH Stand No: 87 Else-Kroener-Strasse 1, 61352 Bad Homburg, Germany +49 6172 686 0 Fax: +49 6172 686 2628 communication@fresenius-kabi.com www.fresenius-kabi.com Fresenius Kabi is a leading international health care company focusing on products for the therapy and care of critically and chronically ill patients inside and outside the hospital. We develop, produce and market pharmaceuticals and medical devices. Our product portfolio comprises a comprehensive range of I.V. generic drugs, infusion therapies and clinical nutrition products as well as the medical devices for administering these products. Within transfusion technologies, Fresenius Kabi offers products for whole blood collection and processing as well as for transfusion medicine and cell therapies. With our corporate philosophy of “caring for life,” we are committed to supporting medical professionals in the best therapy of patients.

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Information:

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Information:

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Information:

GE Healthcare Stand No: 35 130 Gazelle Ave, Midrand, South Africa +27(0)11 653 8800 Fax: +27(0)11 653 8880 Sophie.kasimatis@ge.com www.ge.com With the advent of the first x-ray technology, GE Healthcare has been active in Africa for over 100 years, working with a range of healthcare providers to develop comprehensive solutions to uniquely African healthcare challenges. Through its broad portfolio and partnerships across Africa, GE is proud to offer a range of integrated healthcare systems, medical diagnostics, performance and healthcare IT solutions, to promote an earlier model of health. GE’s offerings include those designed to translate in both high and low resource areas and throughout the hospital setting to support better patient outcomes. Our diverse portfolio of radiology solutions enables quick and accurate diagnosis, providing improved levels of patient comfort, clinical confidence and connectivity, to help clinicians give a more human touch to healthcare delivery.Moreover, through GE’s global healthymagination initiative, we are at work to increase access to affordable, high quality innovations and technologies that contribute to a sustainable model of care.At GE we believe that a better model of healthcare is achievable only through collaboration and dialogue with our partners. In 2013 and beyond, with a commitment to nurturing long-term sustainable partnerships and developing solutions that address real areas of need, we are at work for a healthier Africa. Gaumard Scientific / Anatomical

Stand No:

55

Fax:

We offer all products pertaining to medical education. Ie: Manikins, Models, Charts etc. Our aim is to improve education for all persons within the medical industry which will ultimately improve healthcare and patient outcomes. We have built our business over the last 12 years primarily on recommendations, due to service and looking after the clients after they have purchased equipment from us. We specialize in setting up simulation training centres throughout Southern Africa. We are the sole agents for the Gaumard range of manikins and have been trained by them to ensure that when manikins are delivered we can train the clients in the use and care. These manikins are not going to assist in improving healthcare if they are not used to their full potential. Our goal is to supply reliable products and manikins with well trained end users and exceptional after-sales service. What makes the HAL® S3201 so unique is that health care providers get lifelike feedback using real medical devices such as Osat monitors, BP cuffs, defibrillators, cardiac pacemakers and even ventilators and 12 lead ECG monitors. HAL’s revolutionary dynamic airway and lungs allow one to change lung compliance and airway resistance during scenarios so students see humanlike respiratory waveforms on a real ventilator. HAL® holds PEEP, triggers the ventilator, and exhales real and measurable CO2. Students can display and interpret HAL’s 12 lead ECG using a real 12 lead monitor. Students can choose from the thousands of cardiac rhythms or can create their own with our rhythm editor. An integrated MI module can be utilized to specify the extent of an occlusion, ischemia, or necrosis and the dynamic waveforms displayed using a conventional 12 lead monitor in real time. Hamilton Medical AG Stand No: 95 Via Crusch 8, CH-7402 Bonaduz, Switzerland 0041 81 660 60 10 Fax: 0041 81 660 60 20 info@hamilton-medical.ch www.hamilton-medical.com HAMILTON MEDICAL specializes in the design and development of ventilation equipment for patients ranging from neonates to adults. Innovative Intelligent Ventilation solutions such as Adaptive Support Ventilation (ASV®), invented by HAMILTON MEDICAL, are part of our mission to deliver a unique combination of ease of use, improved patient outcomes, and efficiency through innovation. HAMILTON MEDICAL was born from a passion for improving the lives of patients on respirators and the people who care for them. Since 1983, our commitment to innovation has resulted in creative solutions including on-airway flow measurement, lung function graphical monitoring, and the world’s first closed-loop ventilation modes, ASV® and the next-generation INTELLiVENT-ASV®, using our patented Intelligent Ventilation technology. HAMILTON MEDICAL’s unique INTELLiVENT-ASV® is the world's first and only fully closed-loop ventilation technology for oxygenation and ventilation, providing automatic adjustments of minute volume, oxygen, and PEEP. It covers all applications from intubation to extubation, significantly reducing patient ventilation time with the ease of use you have come to expect from HAMILTON MEDICAL. INTELLiVENT-ASV® is the result of three decades of development and is derived from the clinically proven ASV®. Today, HAMILTON MEDICAL maintains this cutting edge tradition with the world’s finest ICU ventilation technologies and a total dedication to Intelligent Ventilation by offering a full range of ventilation solutions, from clinical to mobile ICU. HAMILTON MEDICAL is proud to be one of the top three global providers for ventilators and the supplier with the largest and the most modern ventilator portfolio worldwide.

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website: Information:

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Information:

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website: Information:

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website: Information:

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Information:

HeartWorks by Inventive Medical Ltd Stand No: 81 5th Floor East, 250 Euston Road, London, NW1 2PG +44 203447 9360 Fax: +44 203447 9544 Sandy.stanton@inventivemedical.com www.heartworks.me.uk HeartWorks is an interactive and accurate computer generated 3D model of the heart that allows detailed exploration of cardiac anatomy. Custom designed ultrasound simulation software has been integrated with the animated model to produce real-time TEE and TTE image simulation. The addition of a life-size manikin simulator to the HeartWorks software completes the system, creating realistic replication of TEE and TTE procedures with true to life control of probe movements and image acquisition. Hill-Rom Stand No: Dubai Healthcare City (DHCC), Al Razi Complex (Building No. 64) - Block E Ground Floor, Unit 9-4R P.O. Box: 113083 Dubai - UAE +971(4) 4503530 Fax: Amin.Abi-Fares@hill-rom.com www.hill-rom.com

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+971(4)4503621

Hill-Rom is a leading worldwide manufacturer and provider of medical technologies and related services for the health care industry, including patient support systems, safe mobility and handling solutions, non-invasive therapeutic products for a variety of acute and chronic medical conditions, medical equipment rentals, surgical products and information technology solutions. Hill-Rom's comprehensive product and service offerings are used by health care providers across the health care continuum and around the world in hospitals, extended care facilities and home care settings to enhance the safety and quality of patient care. Enhancing outcomes for patients and their caregivers. HOSPITAL INFORMATION SERVICES Private Bag X2067, Krugersdorp, 1740, SOUTH AFRICA +27(0)11-761-1000 hid.za@jw.org

Stand No:

44

Fax:

+27(0)11-761-1305

Hospital Information Services is part of an international network disseminating authoritative information regarding clinical strategies to avoid allogeneic blood transfusion and facilitating access to health care for patients who are Jehovah’s Witnesses. Professional educational materials, outlining cost-effective management of hemorrhage and anemia without allogeneic transfusion, are available without charge. Intersurgical Stand No: 15 Crane House, Molly Millars Lane, Wokingham, Berkshire, UK, RG41 2RZ +44(0)1189 656300 Fax: +44(0)1189656356 info@intersurgical.com www.intersurgical.com Intersurgical manufacture and supply a complete range of respiratory care products for use in the Intensive Care and Accident & Emergency. Key products include a complete range of breathing systems for adult, paediatric and neonates, CPAP and Bilevel systems, active humidification systems, transport systems, Breathing Filters and Heat & Moisture Exchangers, Oxygen Face Masks and Nebulisers. Choose Intersurgical for quality, innovation and choice. Janssen Pharmaceutica Stand No: 56 21 Woodlands Drive, Building No. 6, Country Club Estate, Woodmead, 2191, South Africa +27 (0)11 518 7000 Fax: +27(0)11 518 7067 zavenant@its.jnj.com www.janssen.co.za Johnson & Johnson is the world’s most comprehensive and broadly based manufacturer of health care products, as well as a provider of related services, for the consumer, pharmaceutical, and medical devices and diagnostics markets. There are more than 200 Johnson & Johnson operating companies employing approximately 122,000 men and women and sell products throughout the world.Janssen is a wholly owned subsidiary of Johnson & Johnson. Janssen is involved in clinical trials and medical education.The Company product portfolio consists mainly of Psychiatry, Neurology, Gastro, Antifungal, Analgesia, Anaesthesia, Biotechnology and Gynaecology.In the Johnson & Johnson Credo Janssen sees itself as having a responsibility towards its Customers, Employees, and Community in which it operates and its Shareholders.

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website: Information:

Karl Storz Endoskope PO Box 6061, Roggebaai, 8012, South Africa +27(0)21 417 2600 a.carlisle@karlstorz.co.za www karlstorz.com

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

KCI Medical Stand No: 130 P.O. Box 30186, Kyalami, 1684, South Africa +27(0)11 315 0445 Fax: +27(0)11 256 8488 ntillema@kci-medical.com www.kci-medical.co.za Kinetic Concepts, Inc. (KCi) is a leading global medical technology company devoted to the discovery, development, manufacture and marketing of innovative, high-technology therapies and products for the wound care, negative pressure therapy and tissue regeneration markets. South Africa has a National footprint servicing all major and regional areas, in both Private and Public sectors, as well as Sub-Sahara Africa.

Information:

Stand No:

78

Fax:

+27(0)21 417 2650

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website: Information:

LEKAWI UNIT 2 19 Pasita Street, Belville, South Africa +27(0)21 975 3682 Info@lekawi.co.za

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

LIFEMAX Stand No: 92 Unit D 15, Lifestyle Riverfront Office Park, Bosbok Rd, Randpark Ridge, JHB, South Africa +27(0)11 793 4740 Fax: +27(0)117936727 info@lifemax.co.za www.lifemax.co.za LifeMax focusses on marketing specialized new technology products to health professionals involved in the nutrition, health, fitness, sports & medical markets. By the use of our products, our customers are able to accurately and effectively assess and conduct analysis on the physiological parameters that impact on disease, human performance and health.

Information:

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website: Information: Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website: Information:

Stand No:

133

Fax:

+27(0)86 543 6562

BellaVista Ventilators and consumables

Mbuso Medical Supplies Stand No: 74 15th Floor UCS Building, 209 Smit Street, Braamfontein, Johannesburg 2017, South Africa +27(0)114034073 Fax: +27(0)114034072 sales@mbusomed.co.za www.mbusomed.co.za The three stands are all under Mbuso Medical and will allocate different suppliers from overseas. MEDIHOSP Stand No: 135 11, Main Road, Riverbend, Kya Sands, Randburg, Johannesburg, South Africa +27(0)11 888 5450 Fax: +27(0)86 612 6599 Catherine@medihosp.co.za or sales@medihosp.co.za www.medihosp.co.za Leading suppliers of hospital beds, mattresses and furniture. Medihosp supplies all private hospital groups and government hospitals in South Africa and surrounding African countries.

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Information:

Mindray Stand No: 63 Mindray Building, Keji 12th Road South, High-tech Industrial Park, Nanshan, Shenzhen 518057, P. R. China. 0086 755 81887316 Fax: 0086 755 86140347 - 87316 Joe.Zou@mindray.com www.mindray.com Mindray was founded in 1991 in Shenzhen, China, with a mission to deliver high-quality, competitively priced medical devices to make healthcare more accessible and affordable around the world. Over the last 17 years, we have become a leading developer, manufacturer and marketer of medical devices in China with a rapidly growing international presence. We are expanding our distribution network, sales and sales support staff to bring our products closer to end users. We currently have 29 local sales and service offices in China, as well as sales and service subsidiaries in Amsterdam, Istanbul, London, Mexico City, Moscow, Mumbai, Sao Paulo, Seattle, Toronto and Vancouver.

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website: Information:

MSD Stand No: 85 117 16th Road, Halfway House, Midrand, Gauteng, 1685. Private Bag 3, Halfway House, 1685, South Africa +27(0)11 655 3000 Fax: +27(0)11 655 3180 msdza@merck.com www.msd.co.za

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

NIHON KOHDEN Middle East FZE Stand No: 82 Jafza view 19, Jebel Ali Freezone, Dubai, U.A.E. +97148840080 Fax: +97148800122 info@nkme.ae www.nihonkohden.com Nihon Kohden is Japan's leading maker of EEG, patient monitors, AED, and medical electronic equipment. The following support is provided by your local dealer or distributor: Technical support Questions about equipment operation Repair and service User manuals Service manuals

Information:

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Novalung GmbH Im Zukunftspark 1, 74076 Heilbronn,Germany +49 7131-2706-0 info@novalung.com www.novalung.com

Stand No:

49

Fax:

+49 7131 2706-299

Information:

Novalung at a glance: Innovation in medical technology is created when a clinical need is identified and met by courageous solutions. Novalung‘s aim is to create new solutions for the treatment of acute and chronic lung failure. The iLA® therapy is an alternative to harmful invasive mechanical ventilation, which protects the lung and permits controlled gas exchange independently of it. Awake, mobile, and self- determined patients can participate actively in their therapy. The iLA® Membrane Ventilator is the only membrane ventilator for pumpless (arteriovenous) extrapulmonary lung support. Due to its efficiency and ease of handling it has been used successfully in thousands of patients, and it has become an established part of intensive-care medicine. The world‘s leading iLA activve® system is combined with a range of membrane ventilator kits to meet individual support requirements. With the NovaTherm® heater/cooler, the patient‘s blood can be warmed or cooled. iLA activve® covers the full spectrum of extrapulmonary lung support: From effective removal of carbon dioxide to complete oxygenation, for new-born infants through to adults. The best extrapulmonary lung support technique can only be as effective as the vascular access – the connection between the patient and the therapy system – allows. Since there is nothing more individual than a patient scenario, we offer NovaPort® cannulas: high-quality, high-tech cannulation systems in a range of different designs, sizes and lengths. Thanks to our clear focus, we are able to provide customers with everything they need from a single source. Whatever form of extrapulmonary lung support is required, Novalung can offer a tailored solution. Today Novalung is the first to offer a complete product portfolio for extrapulmonary lung support.

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Information:

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website: Information:

Nutricia Advanced Medical Nutrition

Stand No: Fax:

Nutricia is a specialised healthcare company, focussed exclusively on research-based scientifically-proven nutrition, developed to meet the needs of patients and individuals for whom a normal diet is not sufficient or possible. Our focus is on Elderly Care, Pediatric Care, Supportive and Critical Care & Metabolic Control. Our unique product range is designed to give health care professionals the scope to select nutritional options that are accurately targeted to support specific management regimes and to enhance patient recovery. Many of these products are oral nutrition – designed to support patients who are able to consume normally. But for those who cannot eat unaided – in hospitals, longterm care and hospice environments – we market a range of special enteral nutrition products and delivery systems. In most cases, these products are essential to a patient’s quality of life. For some, they are necessary to survival. Nutricia has been the pioneer of Advanced Medical Nutrition in Europe, and is rapidly expanding its services for patients across the world. We have developed a broad and unique portfolio of products for many classes of patients, and we seek to provide solutions and services wherever nutritional intervention can be shown to improve clinical outcomes. In partnership with doctors, healthcare professionals and caregivers, we work to make a real difference in people's lives by speeding recovery and encouraging independence. Products developed by our ground-breaking science teams have long been used to help people who cannot eat, who lack specific nutrients or who have special nutritional needs. The specialised nutrition of today can also help manage certain diseases, or even delay the progression of disease in patients. Our ambition is to deliver only proven benefits through nutrition, as an integral part of disease management. PerryHill International (Pty) Ltd Stand No: 90 18 Village Crescent, Linbro Business Park, Sandton, South Africa +27 (0)11 608 0750 Fax: +27 (0)11 608 0428 info@perryhill.co.za www.perryhill.co.za At PerryHill International, it is our pledge to provide our customers with the most advanced, high quality products and solutions available. The products we distribute for our esteemed suppliers represent some of the best technology the world’s medical industry can offer. We pride ourselves in offering the best service, product, and solution at competitive prices, resulting in total customer satisfaction.

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website: Information:

Pfizer 85 Bute Lane, Sandton, South Africa +27(0)11320-6000 Kunesha.chetty@ymail.com

Stand No:

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Pharma Dynamics

Stand No:

Information:

79

20

Fax:

38

+27(0)82 855 9940 Fax: b.bouwer@pharmadynamics.co.za www.pharmadynamics.co.za According to independent international market research (IMS Dec 2012), Pharma Dynamics now 5th largest generic company in South Africa, and still remains the fastest growing pharmaceutical company in the top 20 ranked companies. With its wide range of Cardiovascular (CVS) medicine, Pharma Dynamics is now the overall market leader in this therapeutic area in South Africa. The company has also successfully entered other treatment categories, including the Central Nervous System (CNS) and Female Healthcare categories, and also supplies a range of Over the Counter (OTC) products. During the course of 2012, the company’s new Hospital Division launched its first IV product, supplying mostly hospitals, and will be launching its first anti-infective (antibiotics) in the second quarter of 2013. The company’s growth has not been confined to South Africa. During 2012, Pharma Dynamics managed to secure its first registrations in other African countries and started exporting its CVS, antibiotic, allergy and cold & flu medication to Zambia and Mozambique, with exports to Nigeria and Angola commencing during the course of 2013. The success of the company is attributed in part to its practice of sourcing products from the best manufacturers globally. In this respect Pharma Dynamics differs from other generic pharmaceutical companies, who rely on the expertise of only a few producers.

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Information:

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website: Information:

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website: Information:

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Information:

Philips Medical Systems 195 Main road, Martindal, South Africa +27(0)11 471 6000 Megan.keung@philips.com

Stand No:

12

Fax:

+27(0)11 471 5268

About Royal Philips Electronics Royal Philips Electronics of the Netherlands (NYSE: PHG, AEX: PHI) is a diversified health and well-being company, focused on improving people’s lives through meaningful innovation. As a world leader in healthcare, lifestyle and lighting, Philips integrates technologies and design into people-centric solutions, based on fundamental customer insights and the brand promise of “sense and simplicity.” Headquartered in the Netherlands, Philips employs approximately 122,000 employees with sales and services in more than 100 countries worldwide. With sales of EUR 22.6 billion in 2011, the company is a market leader in cardiac care, acute care and home healthcare, energy efficient lighting solutions and new lighting applications, as well as lifestyle products for personal well-being and pleasure with strong leadership positions in male shaving and grooming, portable entertainment and oral healthcare. Radiometer Stand No: 51 Growthpoint Business park, Tonnetti Road, Halfway House, Midrand, South Africa +27(0)11 5643173 Fax: +27(0)115643185 Doreen.blignaut@radiometer.co.za www.radiometer.co.za Radiometer are suppliers of diagnostic point of care equipment and patient monitoring equipment for bloodgas and stat immunoassay testing with laboratory quality results. They invented the first bloodgas analyser in 1954, and have expanded their product profile in 2009 with an immunoassay cardiac, infection, pregnancy and coagulation analyser that can be used a POC to reduce TAT and improve patient outcome. Radiometer also supply patient monitors for transcutaneous pO2/pCO2 for neonatology and tcpO2 for wound care. Ranbaxy Stand No: 8 1303 Heuwel Avenue, Centurion, 0046, South Africa +27(0)12 643 2000 Fax: +27(0)12 643 2003 Peter.walton@ranbaxy.com www.ranbaxy.com Enriching Lives Globally with quality and affordable pharmaceuticals, 6% of annual turnover spend on R&D, 1000 Scientists, NDDS(Novel Drug Delivery System) based products, NCE (New Chemical Entity) Research and Development Products sold in 125 countries, Manufacturing located in 8 countries, and over 14 000 employees globally represented by 50 nationalities. RCA Stand No: 69 449 Granite Road, Kya Sands Business Park, Kya Sand, 2169, South Africa +27(0)11 708 3926 Fax: +27(0)11 708 3936 anli@rca.za.com www.rca.za.com RCA, originally Respiratory Care Africa, is a privately held company established in 1998, historically only focusing on the areas of Critical Care, Neonatology and pulmonary function testing. ​Over the last 15 years we have also established ourselves as Market Leaders in the areas of pendant systems and theatre lights and have experienced significant growth in the areas of aneasthetics, patient monitoring, imaging, theatre tables and hospital beds. Today, RCA is capable of offering complete solutions for the Operating Theatre, all ICUs, Trauma Units, Maternity, General Wards and Radiology. Our business is structured into operating divisions staffed and managed by dedicated independent teams, thus offering focus and expertise in order to ensure high levels of professional service. A team of qualified and experienced application specialists supports every division to ensure our clients are secure in their knowledge of the products. In addition to our product divisions, RCA has a technical department servicing all RCA supplied equipment as well as a clinical support department responsible for training and clinical support. This structure along with our comprehensive yet focused product offering has allowed RCA to grow from a start-up company in 1998 with only 1 member of staff to a company with a national footprint incorporating 4 Regional offices, a Johannesburg based head office and a staff complement in excess of 100 people. During our short history RCA has received in excess of 20 excellence awards, the most significant of which is the Critical Care Society of Southern Africa Floating trophy, won twice in 5 years. We have also been awarded a Level 3 BEE rating and are continuously looking for new ways to invest in the future of South Africa by supporting human resource programs for our previously disadvantaged employees as well supporting specific community upliftment projects. RCA is committed to focused growth and will continued to acquire the best skills in the industry.

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website: Information:

Resuscitation Training Media Stand No: 109 P.O. Box 3455, Somersert West, 7129, South Africa +27(0)713 605 805 Fax: rstm@rstm.co.za www.rstm.co.za Resuscitation Training Media (Pty) Ltd is an Authorised Distributor for American Heart Association in Africa.

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Sanofi Stand No: 17 44 on Grand Central Office Park, 2 Bond Street, Grand Central Ext 1, Midrand, South Africa +27 (0)11 256 3700 Fax: +27 (0)11 847 5099

Information:

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

www.sanofi.co.za Sanofi is a diversified healthcare company. We act with our partners to protect health, enhance life and respond to the potential healthcare needs of the 7 billion people around the world. The company differentiates itself as an innovative and progressive organization with an experienced workforce that is dedicated to the pursuit of excellence in order to maintain the company’s position as a leading multinational pharmaceutical company. Our extensive portfolio of products addresses fundamental health issues by availing solution for major therapeutic areas namely: thrombotic and cardiovascular diseases, metabolic disorders, central nervous system, internal medicine, oncology, consumer healthcare product (OTC), generic medicines, nutraceuticals and vaccines. Committed to local manufacturing, Sanofi has a production site in Waltloo, Pretoria, which manufactures and packages a wide range of pharmaceutical products. The factory is a global centre of excellence producing products for South Africa and the global market. To mention few lifesaving products which are manufactured but not limited to products such as anti-tuberculosis products, antibiotics and medicines for central nervous system, with a dedicated complementary medicines facility for the production of consumer health product range. The Sanofi factory adheres to good manufacturing practices from both local and international standards. Sanofi’s primary object at all time is to deliver quality medicine at affordable prices and to ensure that the human right to health becomes a reality, by developing programs to improve access to medicine for all patients irrespective of financial status. Siyakhanda Medical & East Coast Medical East London & Durban +27(0)43 736 3111 & (0)31 2015585 tessa@siyakhanda.co.ca james@eastcoastmedical.co.za www.siyakhanda.co.za www.eastcoastmedical.co.za

Stand No:

131

Fax:

+27(0)43 736 3959

SIYAKHANDA MEDICAL SERVICES was established in 2001 and evolved from a service company (founded in 1970) whose main objective it was to serve the medical equipment maintenance needs of institutions in the Eastern Cape. In 2001 an experienced sales team was added and a new company was born.

Information:

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Information:

In conjunction with partner-company EAST COAST MEDICAL (established in 1987), business has expanded throughout South Africa, serving the medical equipment and consumable requirements of institutions across the country. Eastern, Western and Northern Cape as well as the Free State are served by SIYAKHANDA MEDICAL SERVICES while EAST COAST MEDICAL attends to Kwazulu-Natal, Gauteng, North- West Province, Limpopo and Mpumalanga. Owing to both companies’ proud history in technical support, extremely high standards are set in terms of after-sales service and only products from manufacturers who provide full technical collaboration, are considered for marketing. With sound employment equity and skills transfer policies in place as well as a comprehensive range of quality products, our mission is to expand our combined presence as distinguished market leaders without compromising on expertise and the exceptional personal service to which many satisfied customers have, over many years, grown accustomed. Sleepnet Breathenet Stand No: 126 E7 Centurion Business Park, Democracy Way, Cape Town, South Africa +27 (0)21 551 0325 Fax: +27 (0)21 551 6745 admin@sleepnet.co.za www.sleepnet.co.za At SleepNet we specialize in the supply of equipment and skilled aftercare to patients requiring respiratory support at home and in hospital. With the support of our suppliers and their world-renowned products, we are able to assist in the treatment of various respiratory ailments to patients of all ages. With 8 branches Nationally we have a large reach and are currently the market leaders in the supply of CPAP and non-invasive ventilation to the sleep industry in the Western Cape. We are unrivaled in aftercare support and have strong relationships with our referring doctors, which has strengthened our credibility in the market place. Beyond equipment supply, our expertise extends to the clinical aspects of our patients’ therapy where we are able to call on the extensive experience of Clinical Technologists who specialize in respiratory conditions.

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Information:

Smith & Nephew Stand No: 16 30 The Boulevard, Westend Office Park, Westville, South Africa +27(0)312428111 Fax: +27(0)312428106 www.smith-nephew.com www.smith-nephew.com Smith&Nephew At Smith&Nephew we have a culture of performance, innovation and trust. Our name and our products are trusted around the world because integrity is the foundation on which we build our business practices. Smith & Nephew, South Africa is responsible for the marketing and sale of the Group's medical devices throughout South Africa and into other developing markets in Africa. Our dedicated divisions: Orthopaedic Trauma and Orthopaedic Reconstruction, Endoscopy and Advanced Wound Management specialise in innovative, cost-effective products and services that make healthcare more affordable and speed recovery. For more than 80 years in South Africa we have been making life better for our customers and their patients. “We help people regain their lives.” Advanced Wound Management Smith & Nephew are the recognised global experts across the full spectrum of wound care including: prevention, wound bed preparation, management, closure and aftercare. Whether caused by ageing, illness or injury, some wounds are often very painful, slow to heal and difficult to treat. Our understanding of the treatment of acute, trauma and chronic wounds and our comprehensive range of products help surgeon and nursing professionals heal more wounds, faster with documented health-economic outcomes. Products and technologies include advanced polymeric gels, films and foams that create a moist environment that encourages healing; and antimicrobial dressings and ointments for treating and preventing wound infection. Sophisticated biological materials like enzyme preparations for removing dead and devitalised tissue, and biological skin replacement are leading treatments in this field. Patients benefit from fewer reapplications of dressings, less pain, faster healing and reduced risk of complications like infection and amputation. Key technologies include Allevyn®, Acticoat®, Biobrane, Versajet®, Negative Pressure Wound Therapy, Opsite® and Intrasite®.

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Smiths Medical Stand No: San Croy Office park die Agora Road, Croydon, Isando, South Africa +27(0)11 974 7134 Fax: Ronel.dehaan@smiths-medical.com www.smiths-medical.com

Information:

Smiths Medical International is a leading supplier of Medical devices for use in hospital, Emergency, home, specialist and veterinary environments. Trusted for over 60 years , Smiths Medical provides comprehensive care for patients along the entire continuum of care with the following products: Level One® fluid warming, Equator™ convective warming and snuggle warm blankets. Infusion devices - Graseby™ brand syringe & Volumetric pumps, CADD™Solis , computer aided drug delivery systems with programmable intermittent bolus. A fully trained local staff of technicians are on hand in our ISO 13485 certified service facility to perform repairs. Portex® airway and pain management products – ET tubes, spinal needles respiratory care products , tracheostomy tubes. Jelco™ family of peripheral catheters conventional and safety, straight hub and injection port , FEP polymer and Polyurethane cannulae. Needlepro™ safety blood collection , insulin and hypodermic needles & syringes. Port – o - cath™ implantable ports and safety Edge ™gripper needles. Logicath™ central venous catheters adults and paediatric for measurement of central venous pressures. Logical™pressure transducers for intra-arterial pressure measurement and Central venous pressure mentoring. Hemodraw™ safety blood collection devices for use with patients suffering from Iatrogenic anaemia.

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

SPECPHARM PO Box 651, Halfway House, 1685, South Africa +27(0)11 652 0400 tbarrett@specpharm.co.za www.specpharm.com

Information:

Specpharm Holdings (Pty) Ltd. is a black empowered and integrated South African pharmaceutical company, with a world class Manufacturing and Packaging facility as well as a highly experienced Sales and Marketing Division. Our Sales Team comprises of a Private Market and a Hospital Division. Specpharm prides itself in its consistent delivery of high quality products and ensures that all partners are audited and meet the high standards required by the Pharmaceutical Inspection Convention (PIC).

Stand No:

46

Fax:

+27(0)866 296 414

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Information:

SSEM Mthembu Medical (Pty) Ltd Stand No: 105 73 5th Street, Wynberg, Sandton, South Africa ( Head office ) +27(0) 11 430 7000 Fax: +27(0) 11 444 8171 info@ssemmthembu.co.za www.ssemmthembu.co.za SSEM Mthembu Medical (Pty) Ltd promotes and supports electro-medical equipment and medical consumables throughout Southern Africa. Our mission is to provide exceptional service to the medical industry, with our extensive array of device and consumable solutions that cater for a broad range of medical applications. With 25 years of experience in the field, six national offices and our own in house medical engineers, we are able to supply you with local regional support, minimising any downtime and putting your practice and patient safety requirements first. Our Commitment to the Southern African Critical Care community is evident by our support of the South African Critical Care Society, sponsorship of events, on-going training, the introduction and support of leading edge equipment and consumable technologies to the benefit of patients and medical professionals. This leading edge technology encompasses the following critical care product ranges from our leading international medical manufacturers and manufacturers: Patient Monitors, Ventilators, Ultrasound Imaging devices, Non-Invasive Cardiac Output, ECG, Defibrillators and AED’s, Oxygen Blenders, Pulse Oximeters, Resuscitators and suction devices. A comprehensive portfolio of critical care oriented consumables, this diverse range includes: Disposable Video Scopes, Breathing circuits filters and accessories, Pressure Monitoring transducers, Vascular Access catheters, stoma care products, Cuff pressure gauges, Pressure Infusion bags, Stylets / Introducers / Tube Exchangers. We look forward to welcoming you to our congress stand to discuss your requirements.

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

STAT-TIAKENI Medical / MEDIN Medical Innovations Unit 41, Elsecar Street, Kya Sands, JHB, South Africa +27(0)117086363 sales@statmedical.co.za www.statmedical.co.za www.medin-innivations.com

Information:

STAT Medical has been marketing, distributing and servicing best-of-class medical equipment to the Hospital, Trauma, Primary Healthcare and Homecare markets since 1999. Medical Innovations GmbH - "medin" in short - develops, produces and sells nCPAP systems for newborns and premature infants treated in delivery rooms, intensive care units and during transport.

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website: Information:

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Information:

Stand No:

47

Fax:

+27(0)117086364

TECMED Africa Stand No: 117 P O Box 4229, Halfway House,1685, South Africa +27(0)11 653 2000 Fax: Thelma@tecmed.co.za www.tecmed.co.za TECMED AFRICA is the leading supplier of “Gold Standard” international brands developed specifically for the Critical Care (ICU) environment. Our range of Ventilators, Patient Monitors, ICU fittings and furniture, Pendants and accessories are tailored to meet the ever changing needs of the care giver. Our brands include Stephan, Trumpf, Schiller, Paramount beds, Comen and Spencer. TECMED AFRICA have branches across the Southern African continent and are committed to prompt delivery and unsurpassed service and training. Teleflex Medical Stand No: 19 22 Witkoppen Road, Paulshof, Ext 24, Sandton, Johannesburg; South Africa +27(0)11 807 4887 Fax: +27(0)11 8074994 Antoinette.scholtz@teleflex.com or Candice bashing@teleflex.com www.teleflex.com Teleflex is a leading global provider of specialty medical devices used for diagnostic and therapeutic procedures in critical care, urology and surgery. With a strong customer focus, it is our aim to provide optimal solutions with every single product we manufacture. Our Range of capabilities and expertise technically advanced vascular access catheters, such as CVCs, sheath introducers and arterial lines a unique portfolio of top quality endotracheal tubes, laryngeal masks and laryngoscopes regional anaesthesia products including spinal, epidural and peripheral nerve block catheters a complete range of breathing circuits as well as high efficiency filters for airway protection and the prevention of nosocomial infections. A broad range of Foleys, intermittent catheters and urinary collection devices, we provide bladder management products for every indication, application and anatomy. We also provide a large portfolio of products for operative urology and endourology. A surgical portfolio product line includes ligation and closure products consisting of appliers, clips, sutures and skin staplers and laparoscopic access ports used in minimally invasive surgical procedures. The Cardiac product range includes technologically advanced left heart products for critically ill cardiac patients and right heart catheter products, including thermodilution and Berman cathethers, pacing catheters and various transradial access kits for intervention procedures as well as high kink-resistant sheath products.

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Information:

THE SCIENTIFIC GROUP Stand No: 5 P.O Box 13119, Vorna Valley, 1686, South Africa +27(0)87 353 5704 Fax: +27(0)86 688 9635 deniseh@scientificgroup.com www.scientificgroup.com The Scientific Group was started in 1983, in February 2011 Capital Works Equity Partners acquired a 74% shareholding in The Scientific Group with management and the balance of the shares (26%) remain with Brimstone Investment Corporation, Scientific Group’s black empowerment partner. The relationship between Brimstone and The Scientific Group is one that has prospered since 1999, leading the way in being one of the first empowered companies within the healthcare market. The Medical Division provides first world products for the cardiology, electrosurgical and ventilation market along with hospital requirements such as patient monitoring apparatus , suction devices, theatre lights, CSSD equipment, surgical equipment, ICU equipment and imaging equipment. In addition The Medical Division also supplies surgical devices and consumables related to its capital range of equipment. The Scientific Group still boasts one of the largest Service Divisions in the country within its chosen industry. By representing only the most prestigious manufacturers and niche products in the science and medical spheres worldwide, The Scientific Group keeps abreast of and supports the latest developments and is able to supply the most sophisticated and advanced technology.

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website: Information:

Torque Medical 1088 Bluegrass Street, Weltevreden Park, 1709, South Africa +27(0)11 475 6262 craig@torquemed.co.za

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

VitalAire Stand No: 114 25 Saint Christopher rd, Senderwood, Bedfordview, Johannesburg, South Africa +27(0)86 111 4578 Fax: Loraine.dubois@vitalaire.co.za www.vitalaire.co.za VitalAire is the Air Liquide global brand for Home Healthcare. In South Africa, VitalAire is the leader in respiratory Home Healthcare, offering services and products for both the treatment of Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA) and Long Term Domiciliary Oxygen Therapy (LTDOT). As a member of the Air Liquide group, VitalAire operates in an ethical manner ensuring all clients are treated with dignity, respect and the sensitivity required abiding to all local regulations and laws. Air Liquide, as the European home healthcare leader, currently cares for 800 000 patients at home worldwide. VitalAire South Africa benefits from this international relationship by using international best practices and adapting them for the South African Market ensuring innovation and quality service. VitalAire has a national footprint providing 24 hour service to patients residing in both the metropolitan and rural areas. Safety is our first priority and is the main goal to offer safer services to your members. Patients are repeatedly reminded about the safety aspects of using home oxygen and sleep apnea devices. All incidents are monitored and precautions are taken to prevent accidents. VitalAire ensures all cylinders are provided with a compact valve that prevents leaks; ensuring the safer use of the cylinder and safer delivery by using custom designed branded vehicles. Benefits of using VitalAire as a partner include: National Footprint, company with a level III BEE certification, 24 Hour Call Centre, ISO certified – ensuring Quality standards and service, swift delivery to clients, continued Medical Education (CME) to discuss medical topics, a Member of SAMED. Patient focus and safety continue being at the forefront of the service offering with a firm commitment of a professional, ethical service striving to be the supplier of choice for patients requiring home oxygen.

Information:

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website: Information:

Stand No:

124

Fax:

+27(0)866108044

Weinmann Stand No: 65 Kronsaalsweg 40 +49-40-54702-0 Fax: +49-40-54702-461 info@weinmann.de www.weinmann.de Weinmann Geräte für Medizin GmbH + Co. KG develops and markets products and system solutions for professional users in the field of sleep medicine and ventilation. The Hamburg-based family-run business offers therapeutic and life-saving devices and systems of the highest quality.

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website:

Information:

Exhibitor: Address: Telephone: Email: Website: Information:

Welch Allyn Stand No: 3 Welch Allyn South Africa (Pty) Ltd, Building 9-Pebble Beach, Fourways Golf Park, Roos Street, Fourways, 2191, South Africa +27(0) 1000 17788 Fax: +27(0)11 465 4576 Allan.moody@welchallyn.com www.welchallyn.co.za Welch Allyn South Africa (Pty) Ltd was formed in December 2001,and this move brought about opportunities that have allowed for enhanced levels of customer service, market penetration and greater operating flexibility in order to meet and exceed market demands. We remain a Company committed to meeting the quality healthcare needs in our Country. A Reputation for Excellence. The next time you're in a doctor's practice or hospital, take a look around. Chances are you'll see the Welch Allyn name all around you. Although best known for our high-quality diagnostic instruments--ophthalmoscopes, otoscopes, blood pressure gauges, and the like--we have a growing business in digital thermometry, cardiology, vital signs devices, and continuous patient monitors. Today, virtually every hospital department, practice or clinics around the world has Welch Allyn instruments in their facility. Many doctors who have held on to the same Welch Allyn stethoscope or otoscope they've had since medical school remark on how our products "last forever." These testimonials reflect the quality and durability we build into every device we make. Our products have stood the test of time and have established life-long loyalty among doctors and other health care providers. In the entrepreneurial spirit of our founding fathers, Welch Allyn continues to look for new and innovative ways to improve existing products, while also bringing new technology to the market place. Over the years, we have been pioneers in medical applications for lighting, fiber optics, bar coding. Today, we continue to offer innovation in our core physical exam products while positioning ourselves as a leader in digital technology and connectivity solutions. The future is unknown, but one thing is certain--the people and products of Welch Allyn will continue to be on the frontlines of care around the world. ZOLL Medical Newtonweg 18, 6662 PV Elst, Netherlands +31 481 366 410

Stand No:

129

Fax:

+31 481 366 411

www.zoll.com ZOLL Medical Corporation, an Asahi Kasei Group company, develops and markets medical devices and software solutions that help advance emergency care and save lives, while increasing clinical and operational efficiencies. With products for defibrillation and monitoring, circulation and CPR feedback, data management, fluid resuscitation, and therapeutic temperature management, ZOLL provides a comprehensive set of technologies that help clinicians, EMS and fire professionals, and lay rescuers treat victims in need of resuscitation and critical care.

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o

CONGRESS INFORMATION South Africa We welcome you with open arms, warm smiles and are excited to have you on our shores, in our homes and with the traditional South Africa “braai”. Experience our hospitality wherever you go and get in touch with our wide variety of fascinating cultures and local traditions. Our people are ready to show you our country’s natural wonders, draw you into the rhythm and soul of Africa, give you close encounters with our regal wildlife and take you on an unforgettable journey through our ancient and recent past.

Demographics: Blacks: 68%; Indians: 20%; Whites: 9%; Coloureds: 3% Main Languages: Zulu (63%); English (30%); Xhosa (3%); Afrikaans (1%) Main Religions: Christian (68%); 11% (Hindu); 3% (Muslim) Climate Durban has year round sunshine. It’s sub-tropical, with warm wet summers, mild frost-free winters, and an average daytime temperature of between 20°C (68˚F) and 23°C (73˚F). Perfect!

Durban Durban is an extraordinary city, the most culturally diverse in Southern Africa, with a rich and colourful history and a vibrant and wonderful present. The biggest and busiest city in the province of KwaZulu-Natal (although not the capital), Durban features vastly different coastal regions and landscapes, with the most spectacular mountain range in the country and the oldest game reserve in Africa not far away.

During the Congress the average temperatures are expected to be a minimum of 13˚C (55˚F) and a maximum of 23˚C (73˚F). The average rainfall in August is 4 wet days and 6 wet days in September.

It is also known as the friendliest city in South Africa, thanks to the great warmth and openness of its people and the laid-back lifestyle that everyone here enjoys.

Discovery CPD Accreditation Desk

Durban Beaches Durban has glorious sandy beaches that disappear into the Indian Ocean where the water (even in winter) has an average temperature of 19˚C (66˚F). Durban is a magnet for sun worshippers and surfers and has been listed as one of the world’s top 10 family beach holiday destinations by Lonely Planet’s Travel with Children. There are shark nets in the sea off the main beaches and the latter are patrolled from sunrise to sunset by lifeguards. A Long Promenade that’s Ideal for Walks and Bike Rides Extending from uShaka Beach in the south to Country Club Beach in the north, Durban’s beachfront Promenade offers visitors an uninterrupted 10 km of breath-taking sea views, as well as a wide selection of restaurants and pubs, open-air entertainment and nearby craft markets. There’s Always Something to do in Durban Long lazy days spent on the beach. Sultry nights outdoors breathing in the salty sea air. Get-togethers with friends in restaurants that offer the best in seafood, curries, steaks or traditional African fare. A wealth of nightclubs and bars. Heritage trails where you can see where Mahatma Gandhi lived, where Nelson Mandela cast his historic vote in South Africa’s first democratic elections, experience township life with its taverns and fortune-telling sangomas, or gain some insight into Zulu culture. Some of the biggest shopping malls in the Southern Hemisphere. Art galleries. Arts and crafts markets. Concerts. Mountain biking. Birding. Kite surfing. Durban has it all. Interesting Facts Location: 29°53’S 31°03’E; on the east coast of South Africa, in the province of KwaZulu-Natal (KZN) Area: 2 300 km² Population: 3 468 086

CPD Information

Discovery Health is facilitating the CPD process at the conference. The Discovery Health CPD Desk is situated in the ICC Foyer area opposite the registration desk. Please ensure you have a bar coded name tag on the reverse side of your conference name tag. The Discovery MYCPD staff will be scanning your bar coded name tag twice a day, once in the morning and again in the afternoon. CPD points will be allocated for every scan so please ensure that you have your bar coded name tag scanned twice a day for maximum points. The data is logged on the MYCPD website www.mycpd.co.za where you can view and download your CPD Certificate. You will receive notification via email and sms with your unique username and password 3-4 weeks after the conference. CPD Scanning Times Tuesday – Saturday 1st Scan from 07h30-12h30 2nd Scan from 13h00-17h00 Sunday Only ONE scan from 07h30-12h30 Ethics Sessions will be scanned separately outside the venue where the Ethics Session is being held. Please contact Leisha Henderson on CPD@discovery.co.za should you require any assistance with your CPD Certificate. Certificate of Attendance Attendance certificates can be collected from the conference registration desk from 08h00 on Saturday 31st August 2013. CPD Points Your attendance at the WFSICCM 2013 Congress will earn you 21 General points and 4 ethics points, speakers will earn an addition point per hour of presentation. The pre congress workshops will earn you additional point, please see the breakdown below:

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o Advanced Ventilation Workshop 8 points Non Cardiac Ultrasound in the Critically Ill Patient 6 points Cardiac Ultrasound in the Critically Ill Patient 5 points Advanced Airway Workshop 3 points Basic Assessment and Support in ICU 16 points Percutaneous Trachyostomy 3 points Basic Airway Workshop 2 points Congress (3.5 days) 21 points Ethics 4 points Congress Day Delegate Thursday, Friday or Saturday 6 points/day Congress Day Delegate Sunday 3 points

VAT / Tax Refunds on Departure VAT of 14% is levied on nearly all goods and services. Foreign tourists may claim back VAT paid on goods that will be taken out of the country. Original tax invoices, foreign passport, flight ticket plus all the goods items on which a refund is claimed, must be presented at the VAT Refund Administration Office or an appointed RSA Customs and Excise Official on departure from the airport, and the total VAT on these items will be refunded. Please note that VAT is refunded on goods and not services.

Registration Desk The registration desk is situated in the foyer of the International Convention Centre. The registration desk will be operational at the following hours to register onsite, collect pre-paid registration packs and for information about the congress: Tuesday 27 August Wednesday 28 August Thursday 29 August Friday 30 August Saturday 31 August Sunday 1 September

07h30 – 17h30 07h30 – 19h00 07h00 – 19h00 07h30 – 17h30 07h30 – 17h30 07h30 – 12h00

Dress Code Attire is smart casual, except for official functions or where otherwise stated. Participants are advised to carry a jacket when attending congress sessions, when going out in the evening or going on tours as most venues and coaches will be air-conditioned. Electricity and Power The electricity supply in South Africa is 220 – 240 volts, 50 Hz. The connection for appliances is a round three pin plug. Most hotels provide dual-voltage two pin razor sockets (100 – 200 volts and 220 – 240 volts).

Accommodation The congress organisers have secured a wide variety of accommodation at several Durban hotels to suit all budgets. If you have not already booked your accommodation, please visit the accommodation counter at the registration desk. Banks and Currency The unit of currency in South Africa is the South African Rand (ZAR) and is indicated with a capital R so that, for example, three Rand and fifty cents would be written as R3.50. South Africa has a decimal currency system with one Rand equalling 100 cents. Rand notes denominations are R200, R100, R50, R20 and R10 and of the coins are R5, R2, R1, 50c, 20c, 10c and 5c. Facilities for cashing travellers cheques are available at banks (operating hours are Monday – Friday 09h00 – 15h30, Saturdays from 08h30 – 11h00) and at most hotels. Banks are closed on Sundays. Foreign exchange agencies are open during the week and on Saturdays. Automatic teller machines (ATM) are open 24 hours and are located at most banks. International credit cards (Visa, MasterCard, Diners Club and American Express) are accepted at the majority of hotels, restaurants and shops. Price Guidelines Prices will vary from place to place, but following is an indication of what delegates might expect to pay as of 29 July 2013: R € 13.00 US$ 9.80 Tea or coffee 17 1.30 1.70 Restaurant meal 150 11 15 Cinema ticket 50 4 5 Wine (750ml) Bottle Store 46 3.50 4.70 Big Mac Burger 35 2.70 3.60 Beer (340ml) 15 1.15 1.50 Cola (340ml) 9 0.70 0.90 Sandwich 30 2.30 3.50

Health and Insurance There are no compulsory vaccination requirements for persons entering South Africa although a certificate for yellow fever is required if you are entering from certain South American or SubSaharan African countries. Certain parts of the country, mainly in the north, have been designated as malaria risk areas. If you intend travelling to one of these areas, it is essential that you take prophylaxis before arrival and whilst in the area. Protective clothing and insect repellents should also be used. Durban is a risk-free area. For international travel and health advisories please visit the WHO website at www.who.int/ith or www.cdc.org It is safe to drink tap water throughout South Africa. However, for those who prefer bottled mineral water, this is readily available at various stores. Smoking is prohibited by law in most public buildings in South Africa (airports, Durban International Convention Centre, restaurants etc.) except in designated smoking areas. Anyone requiring medical attention while in the Convention Centre should report to the information or registration desk for direction. Important Telephone Numbers Congress organisers 083 269 0279 Ambulance 10177 Transport organisers 083 263 3657 Netcare Medical Response 082 911 EMRS Medical Response 10177 Police and Flying Squad 10111

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o Indemnity The congress organisers have taken reasonable care in making arrangements for the congress, exhibition and social programme. Neither the organising body, the local organising committee, nor its sponsors or committee members assume any responsibility, contractual or delictual for any loss, injury or damage to persons or belongings, or additional expenses incurred as a result of delays or changes in air, rail, sea, road or other services, strikes, sicknesses, weather, or for any acts or omissions by any persons, or for any unforeseen changes to the programme including cancellation of the congress due to force majeure or any related events or activities. All participants are accordingly advised to make their own arrangements for adequate insurance cover including personal health and travel insurance. Language The official congress language will be English. Lunch Venues Lunches will not be provided by the Congress but will be available for purchase in the Exhibition Hall at the Exhibition Centre. Lost and Found For information about lost and found property please call at the registration desk. Parking Parking is available at the Durban International Convention Centre. Cash Parking Tariffs: 0 - 1 Hour Free 2 - 4 Hours R 20 6 - 8 Hours R 30 10+ Hours R 50

1 - 2 Hours 4 - 6 Hours 8 - 10 Hours Lost Ticket

R 15 R 25 R 35 R 90

Restaurants Durban is home to a wide variety of excellent restaurants presenting a range of cuisine from fresh Mediterranean flavours to exotic Asian spices and local dishes. Restaurants in Durban are generally well priced; in addition you will find excellent wine lists offering a wide selection of top local wines. Safety For those participants that have not previously visited South Africa or Durban and are concerned about personal safety, we wish to assure all visitors that Durban is like any other major city with good and bad areas. Common sense will ensure a trouble free and enjoyable congress and vacation. The area around the Durban Convention Centre is safe and well monitored at all times but we advise that you do not walk alone after dark in unpopulated streets. We recommend that you leave your passports and valuables in the safe in your hotel room. Ostentatious displays of wealth should be avoided at all times. During the congress, the registration and reception desk at the ICC and your hotels concierge will be able to assist you with information on places to visit and the appropriate means of transport.

Shopping Durban is home to 3 large shopping malls which include big chain stores and smaller boutiques as well as banking facilities, restaurants and coffee shops and movie theatres. Depending on their locations, some malls also offer curio shops. Most malls offer safe, pay-per-hour parking. Most shops in the city centre and suburbs open between 08h00 and 17h00. Shops in the major malls generally open between 08h30 and 19h00, including Sundays and public holidays. Government agencies still keep to traditional weekday only hours. Muslim owned businesses close at noon on Fridays and re-open at 13h00. Major malls include The Gateway Theatre of Shopping, The Pavilion and The Galleria. Telecommunications Mobile phones are referred to locally as “cell phones�. The main areas of South Africa are covered by all networks. You can use a GSM/tri-band phone from outside the country in South Africa, if you arranged for international roaming before leaving home. Public phones are either coin or card operated. International telephone dialling code is 00 plus the country code when dialling another country from South Africa. Time Difference The following time zone comparisons against South Africa Time are listed for your information and convenience: Durban 0 Beijing +6 Auckland +10 London -1 Los Angeles -9 Moscow +2 New York -6 Paris Same as South Africa Rio de Janiero -5 Singapore +6 Sydney +8 Tokyo +7 Tipping / Gratuity Gratuities are expected in South Africa. In restaurants, 10% of the bill usually applies for good service. Restaurants do not normally include the tip on the bill. Taxi drivers should also receive 10% of the amount charged. Porters at hotels normally get approximately R10 per a bag. South African petrol stations are not self-service and someone will always be on hand to fill your vehicle and clean your windscreen, for which you should tip around R2. Venue The venue for the congress, the Durban International Convention Centre, is conveniently located in the city centre. Registration, the official opening and all academic sessions will take place at the congress venue. The Congress Exhibition will take place at the Durban Exhibition Centre which is across the road from the International Convention Centre. Access to all areas of the convention centre will require the wearing of the official congress name badges at all times. Transport Transport will be offered to all registered delegates from appointed hotels to the ICC and to social functions. See schedule on Page 83. Airport Transfers The cost of a transfer between appointed accommodation and King Shaka International airport is R230.00 per person per transfer, one way. You may book your departure transfer at the tours and transfer desk at the congress venue.

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deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic Hospitals f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n o edicine C h t Parking 11

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RD

MA

SS CE IN PR

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Pigeon Valley

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OLD & NEW ROAD NAMES IN THE ETHEKWINI MUNICIPAL AREA

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OLD NAME NEW NAME Albert Street ..........................................Inguce Aliwal Street ..........................................Samora Machel Argyle Road............................................Sandile Thusi Baker Street ...........................................J N Singh Beatrice Street........................................Charlotte Maxeke Bellair Road............................................Vus iMzimela Bellevue Road ........................................Amical Cabral Berera Road (North) ...............................King Dinizulu Bideford Road (South)............................Zinto Cele Booth Road and Spine Road ...................Harry Gwala Brickfield Road .......................................Felix Dlamini Brickhill Road .........................................Sylvester Ntuli Broadway ...............................................Swapo

Cato Manor Street ..................................Mary Thipe Centenary Road......................................M L Sultan Chelmsford Road ....................................J B Marks Cowey Road and Edith Benson Road ......Problem Mkhize Dartnell and Mitchell Road ....................Gladys Manzi Davenport Road .....................................Helen Joseph Dharwar Road and Bikaner Road ...........Krishna Rabilal Doris Lane ..............................................Sanele Nxumalu Duranta Road .........................................Basil February Edwin Swales VC Drive ...........................Solomon Mahlangu Essenwood Road ....................................Steven Dlamini Field Street .............................................Joe Slovo First Avenue and Stamford Hill Rd ..........Mathess Meyima Fischer Road ...........................................Blessing Ninela

Fisher Road ............................................Masobiya Ndlulu Francois Road .........................................Rick Turner Frere Road ..............................................Esther Roberts Gale Street .............................................Magwaza Maphalala Gardner Street........................................Dorothy Nyembe Goble Road.............................................Smiso Nkwanyana Jan Smuts Highway ................................King Cetshwayo Kensington Drive....................................Adelaide Thambo King George V Road and South Ridge Road...................................Mazisi Kunene Kingsway Road.......................................Andrew Zondo KwaMashu Highway...............................Curnick Ndlovu Lamontville Main Road ..........................Msizi Dube Leopold Street ........................................David Webster

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Lorne Street ...........................................Ismail C Meer Manning Road........................................Lena Ahrens Mansfield Road ......................................Steve Biko Marriott Gardens ....................................Gladys Mazibuko Masonic Grove ........................................Dullah Omar McDonald Road ......................................Alan Paton Moore Road............................................Che Guevera Moss Street ............................................George Sewper Nicholson Road ......................................ZK Mathews Northway Road ......................................Kenneth Kaunda Old Dutch Road ......................................Chris Ntuli Old Fort Road .........................................K E Masinga Old Fort Place .........................................Archie Gumede Ordnance Road.......................................Braam Fischer

Pine Street .............................................Monty Naicker Prince Alfred Street ................................Florence Nzama Prince Edward Street ..............................Dr Goonam Point Road..............................................Mahatma Ghandi Queen Mary Avenue ...............................Sphiwe Zuma Queen Street ..........................................Denis Hurley Richmond Road......................................Henry Pennington Russell Street .........................................Joseph Ndlulu Shepstone Road .....................................Quashana Khuzwayo Smith Street ...........................................Anton Lembede Sparks Road and Abrey Road ..................Moses Kotana Spinal Rd aka Mangosuthu Highway ......Griffiths Mxenge St. George’s Street ................................ Maude Mfusi Stanley Copley Drive............................. R D Naidu

Sydenham Road ................................... John Zikhali Victoria Street ...................................... Berta Mkhize Walter Gilbert Road.............................. Isiah Ntshangase Warwick Avenue .................................. Julius Nyerere Watson Highway .................................. Ushukela West Street .......................................... Dr Pixley Kaseme William Road........................................ Khuzimphi Shezi Willowvale Road .................................. Albert Dlomo Winder Street ....................................... Dr Langalibalele D Windermere Road ................................ Lilian Ngoyi


deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o

TRANSPORT SCHEDULE: HOTELS

WEDNESDAY, 28 AUGUST Region ONE

hotel

pick up point

from hotel to icc

ICC to Hotel

ROYAL HOTEL

IN FRONT OF ROYAL HOTEL MAIN ENTRANCE OPPOSITE CITY HALL IN FRONT OF HOTEL OPPOSITE SIDE OF ROAD

> 17H30 :18H00

21H00 : 21H30 22H00 21H00 : 21H15 21H30 : 21H45 22H00

DOCKLANDS HOTEL

> 17H00 : 17H15 : 17H30 : 17H45 : 18H00

HIGC SOUTH BEACH TROPICANA

IN FRONT OF HIGC SOUTH BEACH

> 17H05 : 17H20 : 17H35 : 17H50 : 18H05

BEACH HOTEL BALMORAL HOTEL PROTEA EDWARD MARINE PARADE

AT THE BACK OF THE PROTEA EDWARD HOTEL BOSCOMBE PL.

> 17H10 : 17H25 : 17H40 : 17H55 : 18H10

CITY LODGE

AT THE GATE IN ORDINANCE RD

SUNCOAST TOWERS HOTEL AND SUNSQUARE HOTEL

AT THE BOTTOM OF THE ENTRANCE RAMP TO SUN COAST TOWERS HOTEL

> 17H15 : 17H30 : 17H45 : 18H00 : 18H15 > 17H00 : 17H15 : 17H30 : 17H45 : 18H00

BLUE WATERS HOTEL

IN FRONT OF HOTEL ON OPPOSITE SIDE OF THE ROAD (BEACH SIDE)

> 17H05 : 17H20 : 17H35 : 17H50 : 18H05

BELAIRE SUITES HOTEL

IN FRONT OF HOTEL ON OPPOSITE SIDE OF THE ROAD (BEACH SIDE)

> 17H10 : 17H25 : 17H40 : 17H55 : 18H10

HIGC NORTH ELANGENI

AT THE BACK OF THE ELANGENI

> 17H15 : 17H30 : 17H45 : 18H00 : 18H15

REGAL INN

IN FRONT OF HOTEL

THE BENJAMIN HOTEL QUARTERS : BOTH HOTELS ROAD LODGE GATEWAY CITY LODGE GATEWAY

ON CORNER OF FLORIDA RD AND ARGYLE ROAD IN FRONT OF CITY LODGE

> 17H20 : 17H35 : 17H50 : 18H05 : 18H20 > 17H00 : 17H30 : 18H00 > 17H00

FIVE

HOLIDAY INN EXPRESS

AT ENTRANCE ON UMHLANGA ROCKS DR.

> 17H10

PICK UP IN FRONT OF BEVERLY HILLS

> 17H20

SIX

BEVERLY HILLS HOTEL OYSTER BOX RIVERSIDE

IN MAIN CAR PARK

> 18H00

TWO

THREE

FOUR

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80

21H00 : 21H15 21H30 : 21H45 22H00

21H00 : 21H30 : 22H00 21H30

21H30


deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o THURSDAY, 29 AUGUST Region

hotel

pick up point

from hotel to icc

ICC to Hotel

ROYAL HOTEL

IN FRONT OF ROYAL HOTEL MAIN ENTRANCE OPPOSITE CITY HALL

> 07H00 : 07H30 : 08H00 : HOURLY FROM 10H00 – 15H00

DOCKLANDS HOTEL

IN FRONT OF HOTEL OPPOSITE SIDE OF ROAD

> 07H00 : 07H15 : 07H30 : 07H45 : 08H00 HOURLY FROM 10H00 - 15H00

HIGC SOUTH BEACH TROPICANA

IN FRONT OF HIGC SOUTH BEACH

> 07H05 : 07H20 : 07H35 : 07H50 : 08H05 HOURLY FROM 10H05 – 15H05

HOURLY ON THE HALF HOUR FROM 10H30 – 15H30 17H00 : 17H30 : 18H00 18H30 : 19H00 : 19H30 HOURLY ON THE HALF HOUR FROM 10H30 – 15H30 17H00 : 17H30 : 18H00 18H30 : 19H00 : 19H30

BEACH HOTEL BALMORAL HOTEL PROTEA EDWARD MARINE PARADE

AT THE BACK OF THE PROTEA EDWARD HOTEL BOSCOMBE PL.

> 07H10 : 07H25 : 07H40 : 07H55 : 08H10 HOURLY FROM 10H10 – 15H10

CITY LODGE

AT THE GATE IN ORDINANCE RD

SUNCOAST TOWERS HOTEL AND SUNSQUARE HOTEL

AT THE BOTTOM OF THE ENTRANCE RAMP TO SUN COAST TOWERS HOTEL

> 07H15 : 07H30 : 07H45 : 08H00 : 08H15 HOURLY FROM 10H15 – 15H15 > 07H00 : 07H15 : 07H30 : 07H45 : 08H00 HOURLY FROM 10H00 - 15H00

BLUE WATERS HOTEL

IN FRONT OF HOTEL ON OPPOSITE SIDE OF THE ROAD (BEACH SIDE)

> 07H05 : 07H20 : 07H35 : 07H50 : 08H05 HOURLY FROM 10H05 – 15H05

BELAIRE SUITES HOTEL

IN FRONT OF HOTEL ON OPPOSITE SIDE OF THE ROAD (BEACH SIDE)

HIGC NORTH ELANGENI

> 07H10 : 07H25 : 07H40 : 07H55 : 08H10 HOURLY FROM 10H10 – 15H10

AT THE BACK OF THE ELANGENI

> 07H15 : 07H30 : 07H45 : 08H00 : 08H15 HOURLY FROM 10H15 – 15H15

REGAL INN

IN FRONT OF HOTEL

THE BENJAMIN HOTEL QUARTERS : BOTH HOTELS

ON CORNER OF FLORIDA RD AND ARGYLE ROAD

> 07H20 : 07H35 : 07H50 : 08H05 : 08H20 HOURY FROM 10H20 – 15H20 > 07H00 : 07H30 : 08H00 HOURLY FROM 10H00 – 15H00

ROAD LODGE GATEWAY CITY LODGE GATEWWAY

IN FRONT OF CITY LODGE

> 07H00

FIVE

HOLIDAY INN EXPRESS

AT ENTRANCE ON UMHLANGA ROCKS DR.

> 07H10

PICK UP IN FRONT OF BEVERLY HILLS

> 07H20

SIX

BEVERLY HILLS HOTEL OYSTER BOX RIVERSIDE

IN MAIN CAR PARK

> 07H30

ONE

TWO

THREE

FOUR

www.criticalcare2013.com

81

HOURLY ON THE HALF HOUR FROM 10H30 – 15H30 17H00 : 17H30 : 18H00 18H30 : 19H00 : 19H30

HOURLY ON THE HALF HOUR FROM 10H30 – 15H30 17H00 : 17H30 : 18H00 18H30 : 19H00 : 19H30 18H00 : 19H30

18H00 : 19H30


deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o FRIDAY, 30 AUGUST Region

hotel

pick up point

FROM HOTEL TO ICC

ICC to Hotel

ROYAL HOTEL

IN FRONT OF ROYAL HOTEL MAIN ENTRANCE OPPOSITE CITY HALL

> 07H00 : 07H30 : 08H00 : HOURLY FROM 10H00 – 15H00

DOCKLANDS HOTEL

IN FRONT OF HOTEL OPPOSITE SIDE OF ROAD

> 07H00 : 07H15 : 07H30 : 07H45 : 08H00 HOURLY FROM 10H00 – 15H00

HIGC SOUTH BEACH TROPICANA

IN FRONT OF HIGC SOUTH BEACH

> 07H05 : 07H20 : 07H35 : 07H50 : 08H05 HOURLY FROM 10H05 – 15H05

HOURLY ON THE HALF HOUR FROM 10H30 – 15H30 : 17H30 : 18H30 HOURLY ON THE HALF HOUR FROM 10H30 – 15H30 17H00 : 17H15 : 17H30 17H45 : 18H00 : 18H30

BEACH HOTEL BALMORAL HOTEL PROTEA EDWARD MARINE PARADE

AT THE BACK OF THE PROTEA EDWARD HOTEL BOSCOMBE PL.

> 07H10 : 07H25 : 07H40 : 07H55 : 08H10 HOURLY FROM 10H10 – 15H10

CITY LODGE

AT THE GATE IN ORDINANCE RD

SUNCOAST TOWERS HOTEL AND SUNSQUARE HOTEL

AT THE BOTTOM OF THE ENTRANCE RAMP TO SUN COAST TOWERS HOTEL

> 07H15 : 07H30 : 07H45 : 08H00 : 08H15 HOURLY FROM 10H15 – 15H15 > 07H00 : 07H15 : 07H30 : 07H45 : 08H00 HOURLY FROM 10H00 – 15H00

BLUE WATERS HOTEL

IN FRONT OF HOTEL ON OPPOSITE SIDE OF THE ROAD (BEACH SIDE)

> 07H05 : 07H20 : 07H35 : 07H50 : 08H05 HOURLY FROM 10H05 – 15H05

BELAIRE SUITES HOTEL

IN FRONT OF HOTEL ON OPPOSITE SIDE OF THE ROAD (BEACH SIDE)

> 07H10 : 07H25 : 07H40 : 07H55 : 08H10 HOURLY FROM 10H10 – 15H10

HIGC NORTH ELANGENI

AT THE BACK OF THE ELANGENI

> 07H15 : 07H30 : 07H45 : 08H00 : 08H15 HOURLY FROM 10H15 – 15H15

REGAL INN

IN FRONT OF HOTEL

THE BENJAMIN HOTEL QUARTERS : BOTH HOTELS

ON CORNER OF FLORIDA RD AND ARGYLE ROAD

> 07H20 : 07H35 : 07H50 : 08H05 : 08H20 HOURY FROM 10H20 – 15H20 > 07H00 : 07H30 : 08H00 HOURLY FROM 10H00 – 15H00

ROAD LODGE GATEWAY CITY LODGE GATEWAY

IN FRONT OF CITY LODGE

> 07H00

HOLIDAY INN EXPRESS

AT ENTRANCE ON UMHLANGA ROCKS DR.

> 07H10

BEVERLY HILLS HOTEL OYSTER BOX

PICK UP IN FRONT OF BEVERLY HILLS

> 07H20

RIVERSIDE

IN MAIN CAR PARK

> 07H30

ONE

TWO

THREE

FOUR

FIVE

SIX

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82

HOURLY ON THE HALF HOUR FROM 10H30 – 15H30 17H00 : 17H15 : 17H30 17H45 : 18H00 : 18H30

HOURLY ON THE HALF HOUR FROM 10H30 – 15H30 : 17H00 : 17H30 : 18H00 18H30 18H30

18H30


deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o SATURDAY, 31 AUGUST Region

hotel

pick up point

FROM HOTEL TO ICC

ICC to Hotel

ROYAL HOTEL

IN FRONT OF ROYAL HOTEL MAIN ENTRANCE OPPOSITE CITY HALL

> 07H00 : 07H30 : 08H00 : HOURLY FROM 10H00 – 15H00 TO USHAKA : 18H40

DOCKLANDS HOTEL

IN FRONT OF HOTEL OPPOSITE SIDE OF ROAD

HIGC SOUTH BEACH TROPICANA

IN FRONT OF HIGC SOUTH BEACH

BEACH HOTEL BALMORAL HOTEL PROTEA EDWARD MARINE PARADE CITY LODGE

AT THE BACK OF THE PROTEA EDWARD HOTEL BOSCOMBE PL.

SUNCOAST TOWERS HOTEL AND SUNSQUARE HOTEL

AT THE BOTTOM OF THE ENTRANCE RAMP TO SUN COAST TOWERS HOTEL

BLUE WATERS HOTEL

IN FRONT OF HOTEL ON OPPOSITE SIDE OF THE ROAD (BEACH SIDE)

BELAIRE SUITES HOTEL

IN FRONT OF HOTEL ON OPPOSITE SIDE OF THE ROAD (BEACH SIDE)

HIGC NORTH ELANGENI

AT THE BACK OF THE ELANGENI

REGAL INN

IN FRONT OF HOTEL

THE BENJAMIN HOTEL QUARTERS : BOTH HOTELS

ON CORNER OF FLORIDA RD AND ARGYLE ROAD

> 07H00 : 07H15 : 07H30 : 07H45 : 08H00. HOURLY FROM 10H00 – 15H00 : TO USHAKA : WALKING DISTANCE > 07H05 : 07H20 : 07H35 : 07H50 : 08H05. HOURLY FROM 10H05 – 15H05 TO USHAKA : 18H10 : 18H25: 18H40 : 18H55 19H10 > 07H10 : 07H25 : 07H40 : 07H55 : 08H10. HOURLY FROM 10H10 – 15H10 TO USHAKA : 18H05 : 18H20 : 18H35 : 18H50 : 19H05 > 07H15 : 07H30 : 07H45 : 08H00 : 08H15. HOURLY FROM 10H15 – 15H15 TO USHAKA : 18H00 : 18H15 : 18H30 : 18H45 : 19H00 > 07H00 : 07H15 : 07H30 : 07H45 : 08H00. HOURLY FROM 10H00 – 15H00 TO USHAKA : 18H00 : 18H15 : 18H30 : 18H45 : 19H00 > 07H05 : 07H20 : 07H35 : 07H50 : 08H05. HOURLY FROM 10H05 – 15H05 TO USHAKA : 18H05 : 18H20 : 18H35 : 18H50 : 19H05 > 07H10 : 07H25 : 07H40 : 07H55 : 08H10. HOURLY FROM 10H10 – 15H10 TO USHAKA : 18H10: 18H25 : 18H40 : 18H55 : 19H10 > 07H15 : 07H30 : 07H45 : 08H00 : 08H15. HOURLY FROM 10H15 – 15H15 TO USHAKA : 18H15 : 18H30 : 18H45 : 19H00: 19H15 > 07H20 : 07H35 : 07H50 : 08H05 : 08H20. HOURY FROM 10H20 – 15H20 TO USHAKA : 18H05 : 18H20 : 18H35 : 18H50 : 19H05 > 07H00 : 07H30 : 08H00 HOURLY FROM 10H00 – 15H00 TO USHAKA : 18H45

HOURLY ON THE HALF HOUR FROM 10H30 – 15H30 17H00 : 17H30 : FROM USHAKA : 22H00 : 23H00 : 23H55 HOURLY ON THE HALF HOUR FROM 10H30 – 15H30 17H00 : 17H15 : 17H30 : 17H45 : 18H00 FROM USHAKA 22H00 : 22H30 : 23H00 : 23H30 : 23H55

ROAD LODGE GATEWAY CITY LODGE GATEWAY

IN FRONT OF CITY LODGE

> 07H00 : TO USHAKA 18H00

HOLIDAY INN EXPRESS

AT ENTRANCE ON UMHLANGA ROCKS DR.

> 07H10 : TO USHAKA 18H10

BEVERLY HILLS HOTEL OYSTER BOX RIVERSIDE

PICK UP IN FRONT OF BEVERLY HILLS

> 07H20 : TO USHAKA 18H20

IN MAIN CAR PARK

> 07H30 : TO USHAKA 18H30

ONE

TWO

THREE

AT THE GATE IN ORDINANCE RD

FOUR

FIVE

SIX

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HOURLY ON THE HALF HOUR FROM 10H30 – 15H30 17H00 : 17H15 : 17H30 : 17H45 : 18H00 FROM USHAKA 22H00 : 22H30 : 23H00 : 23H30 : 23H55

HOURLY ON THE HALF HOUR FROM 10H30 – 15H30 17H00 : 17H30 18H00 FROM USHAKA 23H00 17H00 : FROM USHAKA 23H00

17H00 : FROM USHAKA 23H00


deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o SUNDAY, 1 SEPTEMBER Region

hotel

pick up point

FROM HOTEL TO ICC

ICC to Hotel

ROYAL HOTEL

IN FRONT OF ROYAL HOTEL MAIN ENTRANCE OPPOSITE CITY HALL

> 07H00 : 07H30 : 08H00

DOCKLANDS HOTEL

IN FRONT OF HOTEL OPPOSITE SIDE OF ROAD

> 07H00 : 07H15 : 07H30 : 07H45 : 08H00 HOURLY FROM 10H00 - 15H00

HIGC SOUTH BEACH TROPICANA

IN FRONT OF HIGC SOUTH BEACH

> 07H05 : 07H20 : 07H35 : 07H50 : 08H05 HOURLY FROM 10H05 – 15H05

HOURLY ON THE HALF HOUR FROM 10H30 : 11H30 : 12H30 : 13H00 HOURLY ON THE HALF HOUR FROM 10H30 : 11H30 : 12H30 : 13H00

BEACH HOTEL BALMORAL HOTEL PROTEA EDWARD MARINE PARADE

AT THE BACK OF THE PROTEA EDWARD HOTEL BOSCOMBE PL.

> 07H10 : 07H25 : 07H40 : 07H55 : 08H10 HOURLY FROM 10H10 – 15H10

CITY LODGE

AT THE GATE IN ORDINANCE RD

SUNCOAST TOWERS HOTEL AND SUNSQUARE HOTEL

AT THE BOTTOM OF THE ENTRANCE RAMP TO SUN COAST TOWERS HOTEL

> 07H15 : 07H30 : 07H45 : 08H00 : 08H15 HOURLY FROM 10H15 – 15H15 > 07H00 : 07H15 : 07H30 : 07H45 : 08H00 HOURLY FROM 10H00 - 15H00

BLUE WATERS HOTEL BELAIRE SUITES HOTEL

IN FRONT OF HOTEL ON OPPOSITE SIDE OF THE ROAD (BEACH SIDE)

> 07H05 : 07H20 : 07H35 : 07H50 : 08H05 HOURLY FROM 10H05 – 15H05

HIGC NORTH

IN FRONT OF HOTEL ON OPPOSITE SIDE OF THE ROAD (BEACH SIDE)

> 07H10 : 07H25 : 07H40 : 07H55 : 08H10 HOURLY FROM 10H10 – 15H10

ELANGENI

AT THE BACK OF THE ELANGENI

> 07H15 : 07H30 : 07H45 : 08H00 : 08H15 HOURLY FROM 10H15 – 15H15

REGAL INN

IN FRONT OF HOTEL

THE BENJAMIN HOTEL QUARTERS : BOTH HOTELS

ON CORNER OF FLORIDA RD AND ARGYLE ROAD

> 07H20 : 07H35 : 07H50 : 08H05 : 08H20 HOURY FROM 10H20 – 15H20 > 07H00 : 07H30 : 08H00 HOURLY FROM 10H00 - 15H00

ROAD LODGE GATEWAY CITY LODGE GATEWAY

IN FRONT OF CITY LODGE

> 07H00

FIVE

HOLIDAY INN EXPRESS

AT ENTRANCE ON UMHLANGA ROCKS DR.

> 07H10

PICK UP IN FRONT OF BEVERLY HILLS

> 07H20

SIX

BEVERLY HILLS HOTEL OYSTER BOX RIVERSIDE

IN MAIN CAR PARK

> 07H30

ONE

TWO

THREE

FOUR

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84

HOURLY ON THE HALF HOUR FROM 10H30 : 11H30 : 12H30 : 13H00

HOURLY ON THE HALF HOUR FROM 10H30 : 11H30 : 12H30 : 13H00 11h00 :13H00

11h00 : 13H00


deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o

TRANSPORT SCHEDULE: BED & BREAKFAST

1 SEPTEMBER SUNDAY

31 AUGUST SATURDAY

30 AUGUST FRIDAY

29 AUGUST THURSDAY

28 AUGUST WEDNSEDAY

Date

BED AND BREAKFAST

pick up point

from B/B to ICC

ICC to B/B

SICA`S GUEST HOUSE

IN MAIN CAR PARK SICA`S

17H30

21H30

THE ACORN GUEST HOUSE

CNR OF MARRIOTT RD

17H40

AUDACIA MANOR AND ST JAMES ON VENICE

CNR INNES RD AND VENICE

17H45

SICA`S GUEST HOUSE

IN MAIN CAR PARK SICA`S.

07H00

THE ACORN GUEST HOUSE

CNR OF MARRIOTT RD

07H10

AUDACIA MANOR AND ST JAMES ON VENICE

CNR INNES RD AND VENICE

07H15

SICA`S GUEST HOUSE

IN MAIN CAR PARK SICA`S.

07H00

THE ACORN GUEST HOUSE

CNR OF MARRIOTT RD

07H10

AUDACIA MANOR AND ST JAMES ON VENICE

CNR INNES RD AND VENICE

07H15

SICA`S GUEST HOUSE

IN MAIN CAR PARK SICA`S.

07H00 : TO USHAKA : 18H30

THE ACORN GUEST HOUSE

CNR OF MARRIOTT RD

07H10 : TO USHAKA : 18H40

AUDACIA MANOR AND ST JAMES ON VENICE

CNR INNES RD AND VENICE

07H15 : TO USHAKA : 18H45

SICA`S GUEST HOUSE

IN MAIN CAR PARK SICA`S.

07H00

THE ACORN GUEST HOUSE

CNR OF MARRIOTT RD

07H10

AUDACIA MANOR AND ST JAMES ON VENICE

CNR INNES RD AND VENICE

07H15

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85

18H45 : 19H30

17h00 : 18H30

17H00 : FROM USHAKA 22H00 : 23H00 : 23H55

11h00 : 13H00


deration of Societies of Intensive and Critic f the World Fe al Care M o s s e r g n edicine 1 1 th C o

CONGRESS SPONSORS

Workshop lunch and equipment sponsored by: Pharma Dynamics, Covidien, Dräger, GE Healthcare, Intersurgical, Karl Storz – Endoskope, Medhold, RCA, The Scientific Group, Smiths Medical, Mindray, Perryhill International, Sonosite, Teleflex

www.criticalcare2013.com

86


Making

ventilation visible.

Invitation for the Dräger Educational Workshop “How EIT helps to guide lung protective ventilation therapy” Join us at the WFSICCM 2013: Saturday, 31st August from 12:00 to 13:10h in room 2A Speakers: Eckhard Teschner, Germany, Diederik Gommers, Netherlands and Tommaso Mauri, Italy

4554

FURTHER INFORMATION: WWW.DRAEGER.COM/PULMOVISTA500


Visit us at boot h 87

Critical Care is in our DNA • with an innovative product portfolio • through efficient therapy concepts • with outstanding services • through a trustful partnership Lunch Symposium

N EEDW ULE SCH

Update in volume resuscitation Saturday, 31st August 2013 13:15 — 14:45h, Hall 1B

www.fresenius-kabi.com


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