We Are Hiring – Apply Now to Become Team Assistant at the Global Sepsis Alliance

We are looking for a

Team Assistant

to become our fifth team member. You will be working part-time (20h a week) at the World Sepsis Day Head Office at the Charité University Hospital in Berlin, Germany, and remotely.


About Us

The Global Sepsis Alliance is a non-profit charity organization with the mission to provide global leadership to reduce the worldwide burden of sepsis. The GSA is the initiator of World Sepsis Day on September 13 and World Sepsis Congress, a series of free online congresses bringing knowledge about sepsis to all parts of the world, among other initiatives.

The GSA works closely with its over 100 member organizations, patient advocacy groups, professional societies, healthcare authorities, and governments to implement changes on how sepsis is prioritized, diagnosed, and treated all around the world, as laid out in the WHO Resolution on Sepsis.


Tasks

  • You assist the team as needs arise – drafting documents, scheduling meetings, making travel arrangements, bank transfers, and more

  • You support individual projects and preparatory accounting

  • You organize team events and think about new formats and concepts

  • You are an active contributor to the team and make sure the team members find the

    best conditions to thrive


Requirements

  • You are a true organizational talent, proactive, and a person you can always rely on

  • You have everything in view and keep a cool head even in stressful situations

  • You can familiarize yourself with new tasks quickly and easily

  • Excellent written and verbal communication skills in English (German helpful, but not mandatory)

  • You like to work independently and don’t need constant instructions ‘from above’, but think proactively

  • Experience in the field of office management, project management, in the event, hotel, or restaurant industry, or as an assistant is an advantage, but not a must. It is more important to us that you bring the right attitude and that you are an organized and positive person.


We Offer

  • A diversified, exciting challenge in a growing and purpose-driven organization

  • Opportunity to help shape sustainable structures in this young non-profit organization with flat hierarchies

  • Opportunity to involve yourself in global projects, possibility to increase hours or to be promoted to project manager in the future

  • Modern IT infrastructure and the possibility to work from home


If you can identify yourself with the above requirements, we look forward to receiving your application via the GSA website. We ensure absolute discretion.

We select candidates exclusively on the basis of their skills and qualifications. Should you nevertheless wish to apply anonymously – without your given name, picture, or gender – please feel free to expressively mention it in your candidature, omit your name and photo, and use an alias email address. Please make sure we have a proper way to contact you.

Marvin Zick
Saturday, Nov 26: 12th International Fluid Academy Day 2022 with Focus on Fluids, Sepsis, and ARDS – Onsite and Livestream

It is time to treat fluids as drugs

The International Fluid Academy Day – #IFAD2022 – is back in Brussels, Belgium on November 26, 2022.

The past 2.5 years have been challenging for all healthcare professionals. When conferences and meetings were moved online, it became apparent that the human contact of speaking to friends and colleagues face-to-face can never be replicated on any online platform.

With this in mind, and true to IFA’s spirit of innovation, this year’s event will be unlike any of the previous years. We will cover, discuss, dissect and collaborate on sepsis and all things fluids focused on the 4 phases of fluid management, hemodynamic monitoring, and the concept of fluid stewardship. A neglected topic for way too long, the interest in fluid therapy seems to be quickly rising as the medical community is making a shift from looking at fluids as a mere method of stabilization towards the appreciation of its relevant side effects.

Uniquely, lectern-based lectures will be limited. Instead, there will be panel discussions where all colleagues can ask questions and as well as examine in detail clinical practice and research findings.

Come join us in the IFAD lounge and share your thoughts, views, and opinions. We look forward to seeing you.

We will build again a repository with video lectures. Access to these lectures will remain available for premium delegates (3 months in Whova - 6 months via tablet or smartphone - 12 months via embedded agenda).

We are pleased to announce that this year's IFAD will be organized together with the 9th Emergency Medicine Symposium (BEMS), at the Erasmus Campus - Building W in Brussels (1070). This year's SympoMed theme is EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT OF SEPSIS AND RESPIRATORY DISTRESS. This congress will be held in English, French, and Dutch. The English track is dedicated to the IFAD.
We look forward to seeing you in Brussels on November 26 or virtually via the Repository App! The IFAD/BEMS meeting will be held in English, Dutch and French.


Discount Codes and Registration

To register for onsite participation, please use the code BEMSIFAD35 for a 35% discount.

To participate in the live stream, use code ifad22gsa35 for a 35% discount, or code ifad22gsa100 to enter the daily free ticket raffle.


Objectives

After participation in the 12th IFAD, delegates will learn the following:

  • Fluids should be considered drugs that come with indications, contraindications, and potential adverse effects, they have a dose, rate, timing, etc…

  • The 4 D’s of fluid therapy are important: Drug – Dose – Duration and De-escalation

  • The 4 questions that need to be answered regarding fluid therapy: when to start fluids – when to stop fluids – when to start fluid removal – when to stop fluid removal

  • The 4 phases of fluid therapy according to the ROSE concept: Resuscitation – Organ support – Stabilization – Evacuation

  • The 4 indications for fluid therapy: Resuscitation – Maintenance – Replacement – Metabolic (nutrition)

  • Different fluid types: Colloids (starches vs gelatins) vs Crystalloids vs Albumin vs Blood products and when to give and when not to give them

  • Dangers of fluid overload/accumulation and its impact on organ function, morbidity, and mortality

  • Fluid stewardship: how to implement

  • Acid-base disturbances, the Stewart approach, and the strong ion difference

  • Balanced vs unbalanced solutions

  • Organ function monitoring in sepsis (cardiac output and beyond)

  • Triggers, markers, and endpoints of successful resuscitation

  • Fluids in specific populations: obese, heart failure, pediatrics, trauma, neurologic,

  • Overview of the recent major trials in critical care: SPLIT, SALT, SMART, BASICS, PLUS

  • Dangers of underfilling, hypovolemia, and hypoperfusion

Marvin Zick
World Prematurity Day 2022: A Parent’s Embrace: A Powerful Therapy – Enable Skin-To-Skin Contact From the Moment of Birth

Every year on 17 November we raise awareness of the challenges and the global burden of preterm birth on the occasion of World Prematurity Day. Initiated in 2008 by EFCNI and other European parent organizations and joined by the US organization March of Dimes, the African organization LittleBigSouls, and the Australian National Premmie Foundation in 2010, this day wants to honor the 15 million babies that are born preterm every year, worldwide. What started as a small initiative, has become a global movement. Today, individuals and organizations from across the world join forces with activities and events to draw attention to the topic of preterm birth and to eventually improve the situation of preterm babies and their families.

Each year, World Prematurity Day is dedicated to a global motto, which this year is: A parent’s embrace: a powerful therapy. Enable skin-to-skin contact from the moment of birth.

© EFCNI/GLANCE 2022

This motto is not only intended to emphasize the role of Infant and family-centered development care (IFCDC) in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). It also highlights methods such as skin-to-skin care and Kangaroo Care as powerful practices to promote the health outcomes of preterm and very low birth weight babies from the very beginning.
Compared to their term-born peers, babies born prematurely often have a weaker immune system and are more likely to receive intensive medical treatment, making them especially susceptible to sepsis. An infection can be transferred during invasive medical procedures such as intravenous lines or breathing support by a mechanical ventilator. IFCDC practices such as Kangaroo Care have been shown to reduce severe infections by 65% as they have a positive effect on the temperature regulation of the baby and support breathing, and weight gain.[1]


[1] Conde-Agudelo A. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 8 (2016)

Marvin Zick
This Friday, Nov 18: WHO Global Webinar for World Antimicrobial Awareness Week 2022

To kick off World Antimicrobial Awareness Week 2022, the WHO is hosting a free global webinar on infection prevention and control, titled ‘Back to the Future: Inspiring the Next Generation on Hand Hygiene’. Register now to participate virtually and for free this Friday, November 18, at 13:00h Central European Time.

Infection prevention and control (IPC) action is acknowledged as playing a prominent role in curbing emerging and ongoing threats in health-related activities ranging from water, sanitation, and hygiene and health worker and patient safety to preventing specific conditions, such as AMR and sepsis.

Outline

Infection prevention and control (IPC) is essential to prevent the spread of microorganisms both in the context of outbreaks and every day in settings where healthcare is delivered. IPC has a critical role in combating antimicrobial resistance (AMR), essentially through two means:

  1. by stopping the spread of antimicrobial-resistant microorganisms, and

  2. by reducing the frequency of infection and thus, the need for using antimicrobials which inevitably leads to the emergence of AMR.

Whether implemented as a stand-alone intervention or integrated into multifaceted interventions, hand hygiene has been highlighted as the most effective single measure for reducing the transmission of microorganisms and infection in healthcare settings.

This WHO global webinar will be held in the context of the World Antimicrobial Awareness Week 2022 and is aimed at highlighting the importance of hand hygiene to reduce infection and AMR in healthcare settings. It will also be an exceptional moment to celebrate the career of Professor Didier Pittet whose work and leadership have been revolutionary and paramount in hand hygiene improvement worldwide. Furthermore, other experts who contributed to the research, development, and implementation of innovative strategies for hand hygiene improvement will be part of a panel discussion.

Objectives

  • To review innovative approaches that changed the history of hand hygiene promotion

  • To understand the adaptation and adoption of evidence-based strategies for hand hygiene improvement worldwide

  • To highlight the example of an exceptional global leader and inspire the next generation of leaders on hand hygiene

The webinar will be held in English, with simultaneous interpretation available in Arabic, Chinese, Spanish, Russian, and French.

Marvin Zick
Register Now for the ASA Webinar – Learn About Sepsis and Save Lives in Africa – Nov 22, 4 PM

We are thrilled to invite you to the free webinar ‘Learn About Sepsis and Save Lives in Africa’ on November 22, 2022, at 4 PM Central Africa Time.

The webinar is a collaboration between the World Continuing Education Alliance (WCEA) and the ASA and will feature the following speakers and presentations:

  • Epidemiology of sepsis in Africa – presented by Evariste Mushuru, Rwanda

  • Sepsis definition and diagnosis – presented by Romeo Bayode, Gabon

  • Causes of sepsis in Africa – presented by Patrick Katoto, Democratic Republic of Congo

  • Sepsis – initial management – presented by Appollinaire Manirafasha, Rwanda

  • Sepsis management in ICU – presented by Kamal Osman, Sudan

  • Sepsis improvement and management – the role of nurses – presented by Halima Salisu, Nigeria

The event will be moderated by our very own Emmanuel Nsutebu, Founder and Chair of the African Sepsis Alliance, and Board Member of the GSA.

How to Register

If you already have a WCEA Account:

  1. Log into the WCEA App or LMS

  2. Go to ‘Events’ on the Homepage

  3. Register for the webinar and you will receive a Zoom invitation via email

For new users:

  1. Go to https://wcea.education/register/

  2. Find your organization and fill out the registration form. You will receive your username and password via email

  3. Download the WCEA app or log into the LMS here: https://cpd.wcea.education

  4. If your organization is outside our partners, please create your account from here: Join the Webinar Platform

Marvin Zick
The Global Sepsis Alliance Supports Movember – And You Can, Too

Every November, Movember is celebrated all around the world, raising awareness for men’s health, especially focused on mental health, suicide prevention, as well as prostate and testicular cancer.

With the COVID Pandemic still not a thing of the past – significantly affecting the mental health of millions – the work of the Movember Foundation has never been more important – and they have never needed your support more.

Although sepsis does not primarily affect males – it strikes women and men about equally – we encourage you to join the noble cause of Movember this year, by growing a mo to save a bro, moving 60km, hosting a mo-ment, getting involved on social media, and more.

Marvin Zick
Session 6 of 'Making Sepsis a National and Global Health Priority' Now on YouTube

The panel discussion – Learning from Successful National Sepsis Initiatives – from ‘Making Sepsis a National and Global Health Priority – Celebrating 10 Years of World Sepsis Day’ on September 16 is now available, embedded above. It’s moderated by Edmund Neugebauer and Daniel Schwarzkopf and features the following speakers and topics:

Overview Topics & Speakers

The Success Factors of the Surviving Sepsis Campaign on a Global Scale
Mitchell Levy, Brown University, USA

The Challenges and Successes in the Fight Against Sepsis in Latin America
Daniela Carla Souza, Sírio‐Libanês Hospital, Brazil

Building a Successful National Sepsis Campaign in Japan
Naoyuki Matsuda, Japanese Sepsis Alliance, Japan

The History and Success Factors for the Sudanese National Sepsis Plan
Mohammed Elfatih Ahmed, Sudanese Sepsis Alliance, Sudan

Background and Impact of the National Clinical Programme on Sepsis Mortality
Michael O‘Dwyer, Health Service Executive, Ireland

History, Achievements, and Future Strategy by Sepsis Alliance in the US
Thomas Heymann, Sepsis Alliance, USA

The Role of Nurses in the National Sepsis QI Initiative in Saudi Arabia
Maha Aljuaid, Global Sepsis Alliance, Saudi Arabia

The Strategy of the MoH‐Funded “Germany Recognizes Sepsis”‐Coalition
Ellen Heyd, Coalition for Patient Safety, Germany

The SepWiss Project in Berlin and Brandenburg: Strategy and Lessons Learned
Wiltrud Abels, Sepsis Stiftung, Germany

Please enjoy and feel free to share with colleagues and interested parties.


Release Schedule

This session concludes our event – all sessions are now available on our World Sepsis Day YouTube Channel.

  • Opening Session – September 28, 2022

  • S2: The Burden of Sepsis, COVID-19, and AMR – October 5, 2022

  • S3: How to Boost the Implementation of the WHA Sepsis Resolution – October 12, 2022

  • S4: Learning by Exchange on the Global, National, and Facility Level – October 19, 2022

  • S5: The Challenges of, and Lessons Learned from the Pandemic – October 26, 2022

  • S6: Panel – Learning from Successful National Sepsis Initiatives – November 2, 2022

Marvin Zick
'From Struggles to Success' by Emmanuel Nsutebu Now on Sale

The consequences of delayed diagnosis and treatment of sepsis can be devastating for patients, their loved ones, and healthcare workers. Mismanagement of sepsis leads to unavoidable harm and can cause reputational damage to any healthcare facility.

Sepsis improvement initiatives are often initiated after a major patient safety incident or crisis. In addition, sepsis improvement can feel like a struggle. However, struggles are gifts and can be used to bring about significant change and success. If you have been affected by sepsis or trying to bring about improvements in care, is it possible to emerge from your darkest moments into a bright and better future for yourself and others? The answer is yes!

In this groundbreaking book, Dr. Emmanuel Nsutebu shows that these are all possible. Tragedy struck when his close friend passed away due to sepsis (uncontrolled and undiagnosed infection) following a minor hospital procedure. He uses the story of this crisis to describe his subsequent work which has led to life-saving changes to sepsis recognition and management in the UK and Africa.

You will learn Dr. Emmanuel’s Five-Step Model for turning struggles into success. Everybody can learn this essential skill, and the more you practice the better you will become. Dr. Emmanuel’s Five Step model can be used successfully by individuals, teams, or large organizations. Everybody and indeed every leader needs this skill.

The proceeds from the sale of this book via our website will be used to support the work of the African Sepsis Alliance. Everybody in Africa deserves a chance to survive sepsis.

Marvin Zick