Topics
- After brain trauma, infection or cardiac arrest
- ED for children - pitfalls, iatrogenicity, missed diagnoses, handover issues and quality control
- Blood tests, cultures and imaging in the ED
- Surviving sepsis guidelines
- Ventilate young children with acute respiratory failure or asthma
- Intubate the small abnormal airway - Tips, tricks and algorithms
- Sudden unexplained death in infancy is often inflicted
- How dangerous are interhospital transfers for critically ill/injured children
- Suicide attempts in adolescents are better taken serious
- Palliative care and beyond
- Cases of orthopaedic time critical emergencies
- Cases of surgical time critical emergencies
- Congenital heart diseases in the ED
- Infections in the ED and emergency antibiotics
- Analgosedation
- Metabolic diseases in the ED
- Vasoactive medications
- Massive transfusion
- Emergency ultrasound in children
- MRI imaging in children
- Acute organ failure in children
- Stroke in children
- The future of e-medicine
Who should Attend
Emergency physicians, pediatricians, anaesthetists or resuscitators.
Organized by the departments of Pediatrics, Intensive Care, Anesthesiology and Emergency Medicine of the University hospital of Ghent, Belgium, in collaboration with several national societies and groups (BAPA, BRC, BVK, BESEDIM, SEUP, GFRUP, Turkish SPEICM, APEM)