Sepsis Awareness Posters - Now Available as a Free Download in WSD Toolkit Section
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Today, we are excited to welcome the newest addition to our ever-growing WSD Toolkit Section - sepsis awareness posters!

The following 5 posters are available:

  • Sepsis - A Global Health Crisis

  • Symptoms of Sepsis

  • Sources of Sepsis

  • Prevention of Sepsis

  • Risk Groups of Sepsis

All posters are A3 (297 × 420 millimeters, 11.69 × 16.54 inches), PDF, and optimized for print. They are a quick and free download in our WSD Toolkit Section.

Over time, we will add more posters as well as more languages – stay tuned.

As always, we are eager to hear your feedback - please tell us what you like about the posters, but especially what you don’t like or what could be improved - we really do look forward to hearing from you!

Marvin Zick
Congratulations to the Winners of the 2019 Global Sepsis Awards
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The Global Sepsis Awards, which are sponsored by the Erin Kay Flatley Memorial Foundation, honor outstanding efforts to increase sepsis awareness and raise the quality of sepsis prevention and management. The awards are granted in three categories, namely governments and healthcare authorities, non-governmental organizations, patient advocate or healthcare provider groups, and individuals, consistent with the aims of the World Sepsis Declaration and the World Sepsis Day Movement.

 

WINNERS CATEGORY I - GOVERNMENTS AND HEALTHCARE AUTHORITIES

The winner in category I is the Health Service Executive from Dublin, Ireland.

 
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The Health Service Executive is awarded for its efforts to improve sepsis care in Ireland. The jury was particularly impressed with what the HSE has achieved in only a few years in Ireland, especially by improving recognition in the Emergency Department and in the in-patient, with all clinicians involved in acute patient care expected to recognize the at risk patient who is deteriorating due to infection and to start the Sepsis Six Bundle. Since 2016, the HSE publishes an annual outcome report, demonstrating an absolute reduction of 5% in mortality (20% relative reduction) hospital-wide. Lastly, the jury was impressed by tests of maternity and pediatric sepsis programs which are currently being rolled out across Ireland, and which could serve as a blueprint for other healthcare systems and countries in the future.

 

Winners Category II - Non-governmental organizations, patient advocate groups, or healthcare provider groups

The winners in category II are the German Sepsis Aid and the African Sepsis Alliance.

 
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The German Sepsis Aid (German: Deutsche Sepsis-Hilfe e.V., DSH) is the world's first association of sepsis patients and their relatives. Their common goal is to raise awareness for the symptoms of sepsis and to fight the often lasting sequelae of this disease.

The jury awarded the German Sepsis Aid with the GSA Award for the following longtime achievements:

  • Providing a unique platform for sepsis survivors and their families to connect with each other, to share experiences, to find support and to attend trainings.

  • Establishing the "sepsis-hotline”, a telephone-helpline that was set up for those who have questions about sepsis. The number is 0700-737747-00. Specific medical questions can be forwarded to physicians who volunteer for German Sepsis Aid or to cooperating departments of the University Hospital Jena.

  • Providing the booklet “Information for Patients and Relatives”, with useful information about sepsis as well as numerous personal reports of sepsis patients. So far, this booklet has been sent to 2,350 representatives of ICU`s in Germany.

  • The DSH has been a supporter of World Sepsis Day for years and hosts events for WSD in Jena.

On request, the German Sepsis Aid is able to organize public training events on the subject of sepsis. The DSH provides information on its homepage and their Facebook page.

 
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The African Sepsis Alliance (ASA) under the leadership of Dr. Emmanuel Nsutebu became the driving force for sepsis activities in Africa. The jury awarded the African Sepsis Alliance with the GSA Award for the following achievements:

  • The ASA published the Kampala declaration and campaign, drawing attention to the priorities for sepsis improvement in Africa. With over 2,500 signatories representing over 100 countries to date, the declaration demonstrates the multidisciplinary and wide-ranging response it planned to invoke at the patient, health facility, societal, and governmental level.

  • ASA is working with the Sudan Sepsis Alliance and Global Sepsis Alliance to produce the Khartoum Resolution. Said resolution commits the Khartoum Minister of Health to host a conference of African Ministers of Health to develop a strategy for sepsis improvement in Africa.

 

Winners Category III - Individual Nominees

The winners in category III are Prof. Dr. Necmettin Unal from Turkey and Dr. Rasha Ashour from Qatar.

 
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Professor Necmettin Unal was awarded because under his presidency, the Turkish Society of Intensive Care developed and implemented a national strategy to fight sepsis in Turkey. Highlights of this strategy between 2014 and 2019 were:

  • Developing and conducting a sepsis education program for health care professionals, with participation of over 47,000 health care professional from 79 cities in Turkey.

  • Conducting a study on the knowledge of lay people in Turkey with more than 1,600 participants. This study demonstrated that only 11% did know the word sepsis.

  • Conducting a knowledge evaluation survey on medical students that included more than 7,000 students from 30 medical faculties.

  • Organizer and co-author of the first study on sepsis epidemiology in Turkish intensive care units, which was published in an international journal.

  • Organizer of press conferences with broad coverage in national print and TV media in context of World Sepsis Day.

  • Organizer of awareness and education activities of 95 rotary clubs within Rotary district 2430.

 
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Dr. Rasha Ashour from Sidra Medicine in Qatar is awarded for her efforts to create and implement a national sepsis initiative across Qatar. This program includes approved sepsis guidelines with standardized reliable evidence-based clinical care pathways for pediatric sepsis, which were shared with all Qatar healthcare facilities through the national patient safety collaborative in 2018.

She and her team are collecting data with the aim of decreasing mortality in pediatric patients with sepsis through increasing compliance to the Pediatric Sepsis Six Bundle of Care to 95% by end of December 2019 in all pediatric facilities in Qatar.

They also created a pediatric sepsis eLearning module, mandatory for all pediatricians, nurses, pharmacists, and allied health professionals every two years.

Lastly, she and her team also developed a pediatric sepsis order set as well as the ‘golden hour’ order set to assure the order includes the Sepsis Six Bundle of Care within 60 minutes.


In addition to the 2019 GSA Award Winners above, the following organizations and individuals who have applied or have been nominated for the 2019 GSA Awards were honored by the GSA Award Jury for their excellent activities with a Certificate of Commendation:

  • Physician-Patient Alliance for Health & Safety, US

  • Ohio Hospital Association, US

  • Croatian Society of Nurses in Anesthesiology, Reanimatology, Intensive Care and Transfusion, Croatia

  • U.O. Quality management and patients safety - Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria Catania, Italy

  • Sepsisfonden, Sweden

  • Home Care Association of New York State, US

  • Annabelle Carter-Finch, US

  • Lisa Bartlett, US

  • Luciano Acevedo, Brazil


Over the coming months, we will give both the 2019 GSA Award Winners as well as the activities and initiatives by the entities that were commended the possibility to share their projects and initiatives in more detail on our websites.

We would like to once again applaud all activities in the fight against sepsis and encourage others to become involved in raising awareness of sepsis.


Congratulations again to all 2019 GSA Award Winners.
All awardees will receive their trophy and certificate at an upcoming international congress. Winners in category II and III will receive $2,500 prize money each. A huge thanks to everybody who applied. Applications and nominations for the 2020 GSA Award open in January 2020 and close on March 31st, 2020.

Marvin Zick
The GSA Is Hiring - Apply Now to Become Our New Head of Regional Sepsis Alliances
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We are looking for a
Head of Regional Sepsis Alliances
to become our fourth team member. You will be working full-time (40h a week) at the World Sepsis Day Head Office in Berlin, Germany. Home office arrangements, particularly in Brussels, will be considered.

 

About Us

The Global Sepsis Alliance is an international 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 90 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 by the WHO Resolution on Sepsis.

 

Tasks

  • Closely work with GSA Members, international stakeholders, and national governments to coordinate the implementation of the demands of the WHO Resolution on Sepsis

  • Support the creation, development, and implementation of national action plans

  • Support the creation and development of regional sepsis alliances, especially the European Sepsis Alliance and the African Sepsis Alliance

  • Represent the ESA towards EU policy makers (in Brussels and in national governments), in collaboration with GSA leadership, as Head of the European Sepsis Alliance

 

Requirements

  • Experience in project management, preferably with geographically dispersed teams

  • Experience in working in a government affairs role, ideally with a charitable

    organization/non-profit

  • Reliability and ability to work unsupervised

  • Excellent written and verbal communication skills in English and another European

    language (preferably German or French)

  • Excellent organizational skills and attention to detail

  • Basic knowledge of medical concepts and terms and experience in working with the

    medical community would be an advantage

 

We offer

  • Diversified, exciting challenge in the fast-growing healthcare sector

  • Opportunity to collaborate with renowned experts and key opinion leaders who are world-class in their particular area of expertise

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

 

If you can identify yourself with the above requirements, we look forward to receiving your application documents via our website no later than Sunday, June 30th, 2019. We ensure absolute discretion. With equal qualifications, severely disabled are preferred.

Marvin Zick
World Sepsis Day 2019: Inspiration, Ideas, and Resources
© Wolfgang Hanke, Lindgrün GmbH

© Wolfgang Hanke, Lindgrün GmbH

The 8th World Sepsis Day is just little over 4 months away. Below, we have collected some ideas and inspiration for you to host the perfect World Sepsis Day event on September 13th.

Lots of materials for your event is available in our toolkit section - including infographics, pocket cards, posters, banners, stickers, folders, the WSD flyer, presentation templates, pink picnic material, and more.

Over the next months, we plan to add even more material, including new infographics, infographics in new languages, as well as an overhauled fact sheet and new awareness posters. And there is also something entirely new we are working on, but are not quite ready to share yet – stay tuned.

 

Online Events / Social Media

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  • Embed the "What Is Sepsis? - sepsis explained in 3 minutes"-video on your website and/or share it on social media (English / Spanish / Portuguese / French / Italian / Turkish / German)

  • Share one (or more) WSD Infographic on your Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram page or story, or put up a post mentioning @WorldSepsisDay

  • Tweet about or at World Sepsis Day, using the hashtag #WorldSepsisDay, #StopSepsis, or #SaveLives

  • Add a WSD Frame to your profile picture on Facebook - go to your Facebook profile, click on your profile picture, click on add frame, and search for World Sepsis Day

  • Add a pink banner or a button to your website or set up a landing page informing your visitors about WSD

  • Participate in the photo challenge - see below

  • Add ‘September 13 is World Sepsis Day – Stop Sepsis, Save Lives’ to your email signature

  • Organize a Twitter chat, a webinar, a Reddit AMA, a Facebook Live, or a Periscope

  • Share the link to our toolkit section (www.worldsepsisday.org/toolkits) with your colleagues or friends, encouraging them to join the online campaign

 

Sign the World Sepsis Declaration

The easiest way to show your support for World Sepsis Day is to sign the World Sepsis Declaration - think of it like a petition against sepsis. So far, more than 9,300 entities (hospitals, healthcare workers, non-profit organizations, corporations, and individuals) have signed the declaration.

 

Events for Medical Professionals

  • Set up sepsis awareness stalls with sepsis quizzes and sepsis information in the entrance area of your institution/hospital

  • Offer special educational sepsis trainings for staff around World Sepsis Day

  • Participate in the photo challenge - see below

  • Organize conferences, symposia, round-table discussions, etc.

  • Host a pink picnic - see below

  • Change the wallpaper of the computers within your institution to one of our WSD Wallpapers (coming to the toolkit section before WSD)

  • Show the "What Is Sepsis? - sepsis explained in 3 minutes"-video at your event or embed it on your company’s website (English / Spanish / Portuguese / French / Italian / Turkish / German)

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Photo Challenge

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  • Take a picture of yourself or your team with one of our WSD promotional boards (available in our toolkit section before World Sepsis Day)

  • Share the picture with the world on Twitter, Instagram, or Facebook, using the hashtag #WorldSepsisDay, or tweet the picture at us directly - @WorldSepsisDay

  • We will highlight the best pictures on our website after World Sepsis Day

 

Public Events

 
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  • Plan sport events - they a great opportunity for people to watch or participate, even spontaneously - organize a sport event like a city marathon, a bicycle tour, a volleyball tournament, a sepsis 5k or team run, a Zumba event, or another sport activity - the possibilities are endless. Hand out information leaflets along the way. Use pink bibs or t-shirts to attract attention, and plan the route so lots of people see you, for example through a town square, or similar.

  • Organize a family afternoon, together with sepsis survivors, if possible. Set up stalls and decorate the area to attract people. Think about having some music or performers and something fun for the kids like face-painting or sepsis-related handicraft work.

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  • Organize a gala event or a special dinner - this is a glamorous opportunity to raise awareness for sepsis in your network, including for fundraising. For example, check out the Sepsis Heroes Gala Event by the Sepsis Alliance.

 
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Pink Picnics

  • Set up a pink picnic. Pink Picnics are social events where pink is used to signify the relation to World Sepsis Day. You can include pink salads or cupcakes, BBQ’s, treats, beverages, plates, other table decor...and whatever you can think of! Use pink balloons for decoration. Both pink picnic as well as event material is available in our toolkit section.

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In Your Company / Institution

  • Color your cafeteria/canteen pink, by using infographics, stickers, pocket cards, balloons, flyers, and whatever else you can think of

  • Bake for your colleagues why not raise awareness for sepsis among your colleagues by making muffins with pink frosting, or a pink cake? They will certainly talk about you and World Sepsis Day…make sure to also share leaflets, infographics, stickers, and other goodies with them as well

  • Show the "What Is Sepsis? - sepsis explained in 3 minutes" - video to your colleagues (English / Spanish / Portuguese / French / Italian / Turkish / German)

  • Change the wallpaper of the computers within your institution to one of our WSD Wallpapers (coming to the toolkit section before WSD)

  • Encourage your colleagues to participate in the photo challenge - see above

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Bonus Tip: Illuminate a Building

  • I mean, why not? One hell of a way to raise awareness…

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Promotional Material for World Sepsis Day 2019

Please go to the toolkit section - you will find everything you are looking for, and more. If there is something missing, or you have ideas for additional material, please contact us. Wallpapers, the template for the photo challenge, and sepsis awareness poster will be added before WSD.

 

Media Coverage

Use your network and the network of your colleagues, friends, members, or supporters to see if there is a chance to have your event covered professionally. Informing your local media about your event as early as possible increases the likelihood of them covering your event dramatically. In any case, make sure to take lots of pictures. We will supply a template for a press release in August 2019.

 

World Sepsis Day Event Poster

Like in the past years, the World Sepsis Day Head Office will collect pictures from your events and create the World Sepsis Day Event Poster 2019, so please make sure to take great and high-resolution pictures of your activities and submit them to us via our website after WSD.

 

Why Is World Sepsis Day Important?

World Sepsis Day is held on September 13th every year and is an opportunity for people worldwide to unite in the fight against sepsis. Sepsis accounts for at least 8 million deaths worldwide annually. Yet, depending on country and education, sepsis is known only to 7 – 50% of the people. Likewise, it is poorly known that sepsis can be prevented by vaccination and clean care and that early recognition and treatment reduces sepsis mortality by 50%. This lack of knowledge makes sepsis the number one preventable cause of death worldwide.

 

Why Should You Participate in World Sepsis Day

World Sepsis Day is a favorable moment to increase public awareness for this poorly acknowledged healthcare disaster, but also to show support and solidarity with the millions of people who lost their loved ones, or, as sepsis survivors, suffer from the long-term consequences of sepsis. World Sepsis Day is a great opportunity to remind the public, media, national, and international healthcare authorities, healthcare providers, and healthcare workers, policy makers, and the governments that there is an urgent need to increase and improve education on the facility, regional, national, and international level. The easiest way to support World Sepsis Day: Share the link for signing the World Sepsis Declaration with your colleagues, families, friends, and everyone that should be informed about sepsis.

 

We wish you good luck in preparing your World Sepsis Day event and thank you for your valuable contribution in the fight against sepsis!

If you couldn't find what you were looking for, please contact us

Marvin Zick
May 5th is World Hand Hygiene Day - Save Lives: Clean Your Hands

World Hand Hygiene Day is this Sunday, May 5th. The World Health Organization, healthcare facilities, health workers, patient advocacy groups, ministries of health, and other committed partners all around the world are gearing up to raise awareness for hand hygiene, universal health coverage, infection prevention and control, and, last but not least, sepsis.

Please join us in celebrating World Hand Hygiene Day this Sunday. Share the official song (embedded below) with your friends and colleagues, join the campaign on social media, participate in the free WHO teleclass on May 3rd, or register your institution, if you have not done so already.

Although 80 % of sepsis cases are contracted outside of the hospital (see video below), hand hygiene plays a critical role in the prevention of infections, and therefore the prevention of sepsis.

Consequently, the WHO and the GSA urge all healthcare institutions, all health workers, as well as all policymakers and other stakeholders to not underestimate the relationship between hand hygiene, infection prevention, and sepsis.

Sepsis is estimated to affect more than 30 million patients every year worldwide, and global rates of sepsis are thought to be growing rapidly. In May 2017, the World Health Assembly adopted a resolution on improving the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of sepsis, spearheaded by the Global Sepsis Alliance.

Marvin Zick
Kayleigh’s Sepsis Story - Quadruple Amputee Turning Tragedy into Triumph
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Kayleigh Ferguson-Walker, young wife, mother, devout Christian, and awe-inspiring spirit is the bubbly South Florida woman who is becoming an international figure due to her ability to motivate countless lives without initially intending to do so. The now 32-year old Kayleigh captured global headlines in 2017 when she suffered a trilogy of unexpected experiences beyond what most people could ever fathom, yet remained steadfast in her spiritual faith in spite of her new circumstances. It was during her sixth month of pregnancy that Kayleigh suddenly became ill one evening and had to be rushed to a local hospital. What transpired next would forever change her life and the lives of her family members and friends.

Shortly after entering the hospital's Emergency Room, Kayleigh was diagnosed with a very severe infection and sepsis was quickly spreading throughout her body. Sepsis not only claimed the life of her unborn son, but also led to Kayleigh being forced to have both of her own arms and both of her own legs amputated in order to save her life. Quite a sacrifice for a woman who was merely seeking to have a (second) child.

Unexpectedly, a lingering separate story of heartache that occurred a few years earlier crossed paths and oddly connected Kayleigh's story to another. In April of 2012, my one and only son (who was a college sophomore at the time) was tragically shot in the head and killed at the tender age of 25-years old. Dealing with the overwhelming stress of such a profound loss, I was soon diagnosed with high blood pressure, which led to kidney failure and other health challenges that altered my life as well.

Instead of remaining bitter towards the world over the loss of my son, I was faced with two options: continue to grow resentful towards the world around me or use my experience as a motivating factor to try to help someone else's life who is enduring an immense challenge of their own. Thus, upon learning of Kayleigh's unfortunate circumstances, which began with her health crisis followed by her unfair termination of employment as a Pharmacy Technician after she was unable to return to work within a few months due to her enduring and healing from multiple surgeries, and being made aware of the couple's mounting financial challenges, I felt compelled to take the initiative to accomplish something big by simply sparking a small gesture. A random act of kindness without expecting anything in return from them or anyone else. And, proof of what limitless things God can orchestrate by using one ordinary person to accomplish extraordinary things.

Strangers to me prior to reaching out to Kayleigh and her amazingly supportive husband Ramon, I chose to follow a Biblical philosophy (* James 2: 14-17 - “What good is it, my brothers and sisters, if someone claims to have faith but has no deeds? Can such faith save them? Suppose a brother or a sister is without clothes and daily food. If one of you says to them, “Go in peace, keep warm and well fed,” but does nothing about their physical needs, what good is it? In the same way, faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by ACTION, is dead.”) 

After a series of conversations and meetings with the Ferguson-Walker family, it was determined that the best way to accommodate helping Kayleigh and her small family, which includes her husband Ramon and their 4-year old daughter Aaliyah, is to spearhead building her a one-level, ADA-compliant, Ranch-style house that will be equipped with smart home technology, which will allow her to control most things inside the home with the simple use of voice commands. 

On the contrary, critics who've spanned from leaders of several well-known nonprofit organizations to decision-makers throughout the philanthropic community, to even leaders of many church/faith-based organizations across the nation, to members of the general public (and some within my own social circles too) have insinuated that my objective was “noble, admirable, even impressive, but likely impossible at best.” Further made challenging by the fact they each either nonchalantly refused to partner with the Ferguson-Walker's and myself for this project or else they sheepishly offered us nothing more than “lip service,” yet nothing tangible. 

Fiercely determined, I reached out to several homebuilders throughout the Southeast U.S. and advocated for Kayleigh to each of them until one agreed to build the home and sell it to the Ferguson-Walker's at cost. So, this is why we need your help and that of so many others - there is strength in numbers! Accordingly, we are seeking small financial donations to help Kayleigh have a house built that she can comfortably call “home” again. We welcome you, your family members, friends and co-workers to be a part of the 'Kayleigh Ferguson-Walker Homebuilding Fund' by contributing to the project.

Additionally, we may not lose sight of the fact that sepsis, the devastating global killer that caused Kayleigh to lose her unborn son, both arms, and both legs in the first place, is nothing less than a neglected global health crisis. Sepsis is both the main reason for amputations as well the number one healthcare expenditure in the US.


The article above was written by Santura Pegram and is shared here with his and Kayleigh’s explicit consent. The views in the article do not necessarily represent those of the Global Sepsis Alliance. They are not intended or implied to be a substitute for professional medical advice. The whole team here at the GSA and World Sepsis Day wishes to thank Kayleigh and her family as well as Santura for sharing their story and for fighting to raise awareness of sepsis.


Please consider supporting Kayleigh’s homebuilding fund to make her house accessible-friendly or to donate to WSD to support our cause.

Marvin Zick
The Dubai Resolution and the Establishment of the Eastern Mediterranean Sepsis Alliance
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On April 4th, 2019, on the occasion of the 15th Emirates Critical Care Conference in Dubai, the Global Sepsis Alliance hosted the launch meeting of the Eastern Mediterranean Sepsis Alliance. Representatives from the International Pan Arab Critical Care Medicine Society, the World Federation of Critical Care Nurses, the African Sepsis Alliance, and representatives of several medical professional societies united in the common goal of fighting sepsis in the Eastern Mediterranean Region.

This region is widely diversified with countries that show great variations in economic, social, and health indicators. The natural and manmade disasters and conflicts that affect several countries constitute a major challenge. These deplorable circumstances make the populations in this region even more prone to sepsis.

Sepsis does not discriminate against age, gender, religion, or geographic borders. Each year in the Eastern Mediterranean Region, an estimated more than 2.7 million individuals develop sepsis. At least 540,000 do not survive, and an additional one-third of survivors die during the following year. Many survivors face lifelong consequences, such as new physical, psychological, and cognitive problems. This makes sepsis the most preventable cause of death and disability in the Eastern Mediterranean Region .

The participants of the launch meeting, representing major stakeholders in the fight against sepsis in the region, unanimously adopted the Dubai Sepsis Resolution (download below), which urges government authorities, policy makers, healthcare managers, professionals, and associated societies to:

  • endorse the WHO Resolution on Sepsis and establish national action plans to prevent sepsis, to enhance early recognition and management in a continuous effort to improve access to care and adequate resources and to reduce inequity

  • focus on sepsis prevention by providing adequate sanitation, vaccination to at-risk groups, and adequate nutrition, as well as reducing maternal and pediatric deaths

  • cooperate in partnership to ensure adequate sepsis treatment in all nations, through undergraduate and post graduate training of healthcare professionals focused on improving outcomes in both patients and survivors, recognizing that the establishment of adequate national policies to treat sepsis in one country will clearly benefit other nations

  • promote sepsis awareness among lay people and healthcare workers, including recognizing World Sepsis Day (September 13th) as a national date

  • implement measures aimed at minimizing the risk of the development and spread of antimicrobial resistance and hospital-acquired infections

  • promote collaborative research to further understand the burden of sepsis as well as to identify local perspectives and priorities for adequate recognition and treatment

We encourage representatives from health authorities, professional societies of physicians and nurses from the fields of emergency medicine, intensive care medicine, infectious diseases, microbiology, public health, and from non-government organizations to become founding members of the Eastern Mediterranean Sepsis Alliance. To become involved in the EMSA, please contact us.

Marvin Zick
Erin’s Campaign for Kids Nursing Awards - International Pediatric Nurses Apply Now
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Applications for Erin's Campaign for Kids Nursing Awards are now open, including for pediatric nurses living outside the United States.

Our colleagues at the Sepsis Alliance created Erin’s Campaign for Kids Nursing Awards in honor of Erin Kay Flatley, an aspiring teacher who tragically and suddenly died of sepsis when she was only 23 years old. These awards recognize nurses and nursing students who demonstrate excellence in their work and a commitment to improving outcomes among sepsis patients.

Awards are granted in the following four categories: Pediatric Nurse, International Pediatric Nurse (nurses living outside the United States), Sepsis Coordinator, and Nursing Student.

Qualified applicants are licensed pediatric nurses NOT living in the United States who are dedicated to improving outcomes among pediatric patients with sepsis. The selected awardee will receive a $1,000 grant and a certificate of recognition.

Marvin Zick