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BAPEN 2022 Annual Conference

Hilton Brighton Metropole – Tuesday 29th & Wednesday 30th November 2022

The BAPEN Conference focuses on providing quality nutritional care and is the networking and learning event for all professionals involved in and committed to improving nutritional policy, care and treatment in community, care and hospital settings.

Reasons to be there!

  • UK’s largest multidisciplinary Clinical Nutrition conference.
  • Wide range of symposia with nutrition experts covering all the hot topics.
  • An unmissable opportunity to network with colleagues and experts from multidisciplinary backgrounds since the pandemic.
  • An unbeatable way to boost your CPD portfolio.

PROGRAMME

Tuesday 29th November 2022
09:30 - 11:00

Good Morning BAPEN, live from Brighton!
BAPEN President, Dr Trevor Smith, will be joined by members of the BAPEN Executive and Standing Committees to provide this year’s BAPEN highlights including BAPEN @30 years and review of BAPEN’s values and strategy.


Short Bowel Syndrome – Transforming patient outcomes and experience
Dr Simon Gabe, Consultant in Gastroenterology & Intestinal Rehabilitation, St. Mark’s Hospital, Harrow

Carolyn Wheatley, Chair, PINNT


A New Era ‘Malnutrition and Big Data’
Dr Sorrel Burden, Reader in Nutrition and Dietetics, University of Manchester

11:00 - 11:30 Refreshments, Exhibition & Networking
11:30 - 13:00

Symposium 2
Distal Enteral Feeding

This exciting BIFA symposium will assess distal feeding and chyme reinfusion, not only as possible alternatives to parenteral nutrition but as ways to prepare the gut for surgery. The potential physiological and nutritional benefits will be discussed. The practicalities of distal feeding will be explained before looking at new technological developments that facilitate chyme reinfusion. The Pam Harris lecture for the Nightingale Trust for Nutritional Support will be given during this session.


Chyme Feeding: Why, when and the effects on drug absorption
Prof Gil Hardy, Emeritus Professor of Clinical Nutrition, Massey University, Auckland, New Zealand



Distal feeding: How and with what?
Kirstine Farrer, Consultant Dietitian – Intestinal Failure, Salford Care Organisation

The Pam Harris Lecture

Symposium 3
Optimising ICU Recovery through Nutrition Support

As more people survive an ICU stay, the long-term debilitation sometimes associated with critical illness is becoming more apparent and the need for strategies to try and avoid muscle loss and maximize recovery are becoming increasingly clear. Ella Terblanche will give an overview of her exciting research on the importance of nutrition in post critical care recovery, before we look at feeding during ICU stay. Optimal estimation of energy requirements during ICU admission may be a crucial part of reducing muscle loss but do we need indirect calorimetry to do it accurately? An expert in the field will set out to answer the question ‘indirect colorimetry – is it all it’s cracked up to be?’ Finally the focus will shift to the method of enteral feed infusion and whether bolus feeding offers any advantages in preserving muscle mass.

Indirect Calorimetry – Is it all it’s cracked up to be?
Dr Emma Ridley,
Senior Research Fellow and NHMRC Emerging Leadership Fellow, Monash University, Australia


Does bolus feeding have a role in critically ill patients?
Dr Zudin Puthucheary, Clinical Senior Lecturer, Barts and The London School of Medicine & Dentistry


Recovering from Critical Illness and the Digital Recovery Pathway
Ella Terblanche, Research Associate, Applied Technologies for Clinical Care, King’s College London


Symposium 4
Optimising nutrition in young people with neuro-disability

Following an expert review of the prevalence and management of gastrointestinal dysfunction in young adults, the symposium will focus on the option of enteral blended diet and its role in severe neurodisability. The complexities of transition of nutritional management from paediatric to adult services will be analysed before a thought provoking look at the ethical issues surrounding the use of long-term parenteral nutrition in severe neurodisability.


Gastrointestinal Dysfunction in Young Adults with Neurodisability – Prevalence and management
Dr Mark Beattie,
Consultant Paediatric Gastroenterologist, Southampton Children’s Hospital


Blended Diet and its Role in Improving Enteral Tolerance in Young People with Severe Neurodisability
Amanda Wall,
Paediatric Dietitian, Royal Blackburn Teaching Hospital


Transition from Child to Adult Health Services – Challenges faced by young people with chronic neurodisability
Joanna Elverson,
Consultant in Palliative Medicine, Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals


Ethical Issues Around the Use of Long-term Parenteral Nutrition in Severe Neurodisability
Elena Cernet,
Paediatric Gastroenterologist, Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust

13:00 - 14:30

Lunch, Exhibition & Networking
BAPEN Annual General Meeting


Chaired Poster Sessions
Posters showcasing new research will be displayed throughout the conference in the Poster Exhibition area. ‘Themed’ facilitated poster presentations will provide an opportunity for informal discussion with the author.

14:30 - 16:00

Symposium 5
IBD and Nutrition in Adults

The incidence and prevalence of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is on the rise. Whilst there has always been a recognition of the importance of diet in IBD, it is only recently that we have developed our understanding of its role in the modulation of inflammation, the gut microbiome, and response to medical therapies. In this symposium, our speakers will give an overview of diet in IBD, the practicalities of administering dietary therapy, and the new upcoming dietary therapies on the horizon.


Dietary Landscapes in IBD
Prof Kevin Whelan,
Professor of Dietetics and Head of Department of Nutritional Sciences, King’s College London


Practicalities of Administering Dietary Therapy in IBD Patients
Gabriela Poufou, Dietitian, St Mark’s Hospital, Harrow


The CD-Treat Diet: A revolutionary therapy
Prof Konstantinos Gerasimidis,
Professor of Clinical Nutrition, School of Medicine, University of Glasgow


Symposium 6
Evolving World of Parenteral Nutrition

This BPNG symposium will open with an update on PN capacity and an introduction on how we got to the current situation with homecare, current aseptic compounding capacity and current options for homecare, providing a comparison of all UK nations and an update on national reviews and working groups. The second presentation will provide a review of the use of licensed PN bag in-patients and in the homecare setting and what considerations need to be made and the bag options available. The symposium will conclude with a case study of a patient requiring multiple infusions and the considerations to be made with regards to stability and compatibility, and patient safety.


Update on PN Capacity
Jackie Eastwood, Regional Pharmacy Procurement Specialist – London, Guy’s and St Thomas NHS Foundation Trust


The Use of Licensed Bags in Paediatric PN
Sarah Zeraschi, Consultant Pharmacist Nutrition, Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust


Infusing PN/HPN with Multiple Infusions
Simon Harrison, Specialist Pharmacist – Intestinal Failure, Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust

Symposium 7
A NICE look at MEED: Refeeding in eating disorders and complex gastrointestinal dysmotilities

Patients with eating disorders are not just encountered in specialist centres and may often be seen on endocrinology and psychiatric wards where they are referred to dietitians and nutrition support teams. In addition there are many similarities between eating disorders patients and those with complex gastrointestinal dysmotilities frequently referred for nutritional management on gastro wards. Such patients are almost always at high risk of refeeding syndrome, requiring complex decisions regarding introduction of nutrition and replacement of fluid and electrolytes. This symposium will aim to guide practitioners through the different expert recommendations, focusing on the practicalities of fluid and electrolyte provision. This will be followed by case scenarios featuring an expert panel including key authors of guidelines who will also be available to answer delegate queries in an extended Q&A session.


The Fine Line between Eating Disorders and Gastrointestinal Dysmotilities
Dr Trevor Smith,
Consultant Gastroenterologist, University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust


The Practicalities of Replacing Vitamins and Electrolytes in Refeeding Syndrome
Pete Turner,
Clinical Specialist Nutrition Support Dietitian, Ulster Hospital, Northern Ireland


Case Scenarios in Feeding and Refeeding Patients with Eating Disorders and Complex Dysmotilities
Expert multidisciplinary panel including representatives from BAPEN and MEED


16:00 - 16:30 Refreshments, Exhibition & Networking
16:30 - 17:30 Pennington Lecture: 'The journey of the nutrition nurse consultant' Alison Young, Nurse Consultant in Nutrition, Royal Liverpool and Broadgreen University Hospitals NHS Trust
17:30 - 18:30 Satellite Symposia
Further details to be announced.
20:00 BAPEN’s Social Event: Reliving the 70's - 'A Night with ABBA'
Wednesday 30th November 2022
07:00 - 08:30 Nutricia Breakfast Symposium
Details to be announced.
09:00 - 10:30

Symposium 8
Prehabillitation

The PENG symposium this year will focus on prehabilitation in oncology which has an emerging evidence base and provides the opportunity to provide targeted therapy to optimise patients nutritionally, physically and emotionally prior to treatments. The session takes a dietary perspective looking at the benefits of ERAS in UGI cancer patients, giving insight in to how to develop and run a prehab service by learning from outstanding practice and looking at national developments and frameworks.


Prehabilitation in Head & Neck Cancer Radiotherapy – a Pilot MDT Project in Northern Ireland
David Curtin, Macmillan Clinical Lead Speech and Language Therapist specialising in Head and Neck Oncology, Western Health and Social Care Trust
Ciara McSherry, Specialist Oncology Dietitian in Head & Neck, North West Cancer Centre


Developing a national prehabilitation framework for patients affected by cancer: Scotland's perspective
Fraser Breed, Macmillan Project Manager/Advanced Dietitian, NHS Borders


The challenges of achieving enhanced recovery in oesophago-gastric surgery
Fiona Huddy, Specialist Oesophago-Gastric Dietitian, Royal Surrey NHS Foundation Trust

Symposium 9
Outpatient follow up of home parenteral support (HPS)

This BIFA led symposium will be about the home parenteral support (HPS) multidisciplinary team (MDT) outpatient clinic. An MDT panel will discuss a complex remote HPS case discharge, which will then be followed with talks about what is done in an MDT virtual or face-to-face clinic (including the objectives and psychosocial issues), and about the appropriate haematological and biochemical monitoring.



What to do in a Home Parenteral Support Out Patient Department Follow-up Clinic
Dr Michael Glynn,
Consultant Gastroenterologist & Hepatologist, Barts Health NHS Trust
Mia Small,
Nurse Consultant Nutrition and Intestinal Failure, St Mark’s Hospital, Harrow.


What/when to monitor
Dr Nick Thompson, Consultant Gastroenterologist, The Newcastle Upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

 

Case presentation
Dr Jeremy Woodward,
Physician, Addenbrookes Hospital


Panel:
Dr Phil Stevens,
Surgeon, Glasgow Royal Infirmary


Sarah Zeraschi,
Consultant Pharmacist Nutrition, Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust


Carolyn Wheatley,
Chair PINNT


Dr Sarah Kelly,
Consultant Clinical Psychologist, Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust

Symposium 10
Exploring NG ‘Never Events’ – is NGT standardisation the answer in the modern NHS?

NG ‘never events’ are in the top 5 reported patient safety Incidents in the modern NHS. In September 2020, the NGSiG Arm of BAPEN. Presented its Statement Paper, “Time to put Patient’s Safety First”. www.bapen.org.uk/pdfs/ngsig/a-position-paper-on-nasogastric-tube-safety-v2.pdf
The NNNG ask - “Should WE standardise NG practice in the modern NHS?”.

  • How do we standardise a complex process of BLIND insertion, placement, confirmation displacement recognition of NG insertion and care?
  • If we can’t standardise practice, how do we train, assess and confirm NG competence?
  • Is there an optimal staffing model for practising NGT care?
  • Numerous patient safety alerts, best practice guidance and evidence base papers have been created to manage NG ‘never events?’ But they continue to happen with alarming frequency – why?

Speakers to be announced

10:30 - 11:00 Refreshments, Exhibition & Networking
11:00 - 12:30

Symposium 11
Nutrition in Renal Medicine

This exciting symposium jointly organised by the BDA Renal Nutrition Group and PENG will look at some key aspects of nutrition in kidney disease. Acute kidney injury, dialysis and nutrition on ICU will be explored in detail before the complexities of providing parenteral nutrition are in investigated by a specialist dietitian. Finally, the role of diet in the cause and treatment of renal stone disease in intestinal failure will be reviewed before delegates are given the opportunity to question the expert panel.


Acute Kidney Injury, Dialysis and Nutrition on the ICU
Dr Mark Devonald,
Consultant Nephrologist, Liverpool University Hospitals Foundation Trust.

Parenteral Nutrition in Kidney Disease
Bruno Mafrici,
Lead Renal Dietitian, Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust.


Renal Stone Disease in Intestinal Failure Charlie Tomson,
Retired Consultant Nephrologist, Trustee for Kidney Research UK.

Symposium 12
Nutritional Support in Adhesional Bowel Obstruction – A sticky problem

Managing patients with bowel obstruction is not without its challenges. The evidence base for guideline development is limited and practitioners are often reliant on practices that have evolved locally. We are therefore delighted to bring to delegates a symposium focussed on how we might improve the nutritional care of patients with bowel obstruction. Drawing on the experience of experts in clinical practice and emerging evidence, the symposia will explore barriers to care, decision-making for nutrition support and dietary management, with the aim to empower and motivate delegates, to pursue actions at a local level, to help provide timely and effective nutritional care to improve and enhance the patient experience.


Managing Bowel Obstruction – A surgical perspective
Josef Watfah,
Consultant Suregon, London North West Healthcare NHS Trust


Nutritional Management – Where is the obstruction?
Alison Culkin,
Consultant Dietitian in Intestinal Rehabilitation, St Mark’s Hospital, Harrow


Dietary Management of Sub-acute Obstruction: Where are we going?
Lindsey Allan,
Macmillan Oncology Dietitian, Royal Surrey NHS Foundation Trust


Facilitated panel discussion and audience Q&A
Chaired by Mr Akash Mehta and Dr Anne Holdoway

Symposium 13
Eating Behaviour After Bariatric Surgery

Both nutritional deficiencies and post-operative weight gain are significant concerns after various types of bariatric surgery. Here we present a coterie of innovative international speakers to discuss the physiological mechanisms and translational science behind food intake behaviour post-operatively and provide real-world evidence to support bariatric surgery patients in maintaining nutritional health in the long-term.


Using Direct Measures of Behaviour to Understand Food Intake Behaviour
Dr Ruth Price,
Clinical Trials Manager, Ulster University


Using Mechanistic Studies in Humans to Understand Food Intake
Dr Werd Al-Najim,
Clinical Nutritionist and Research Fellow, University College Dublin


Using Animal Studies to Make Sense of Human Food Intake Behaviour
Dr Caroline Cawthon,
Director of Philosophy, Florida State University

12:30 - 14:00

Lunch, Exhibition & Networking


Chaired poster sessions
Posters showcasing new research will be displayed throughout the conference in the Poster Exhibition area. ‘Themed’ facilitated poster presentations will provide an opportunity for informal discussion with the author.

14:00 - 14:45 Keynote Lecture: 'Improving fluid management: something for everyone?'
Dr Marcia McDougall, Fluid Lead for NHS Fife
14:45 - 15:00 BAPEN 2021/2022 Recognition and awards
15:00 - 15:50 Symposium 14 – Quandaries in clinical nutrition
In this interactive session, specialists, an expert panel and the audience will debate some of the dilemmas facing health care professionals working in nutrition support. We will be inviting the BAPEN membership to put their toughest predicaments to the experts, but some of the topics that might be covered include oral nutritional supplements in high output stomas, prophylactic versus reactive replacement of electrolytes in refeeding syndrome, use of MUST in enhanced recovery after surgery, and should 0.9% IV saline be banned?
16:00 Close of conference

 

EARLY BIRD REGISTRATION FEES

  Early Bird
(up to 30th September 2022)
  Member Non-Member
2-Day Conference Rate
Industry/company personnel including HCPs employed in such settings £332.50 + VAT = £399.00 £385.00 + VAT = £462.00
Consultants & Associate Specialists £332.50 + VAT = £399.00 £385.00 + VAT = £462.00
Trainee Doctors (ST3 and above) £297.50 + VAT = £357.00 £350.00 + VAT = £420.00
Nurse/Dietitian/Pharmacist/Allied health professional/Trainee Doctors below ST3

£262.50 + VAT = £315.00

£315.00 + VAT = £378.00

Student/Retired Health Professional

£122.50 + VAT = £147.00

£157.50 + VAT = £189.00

Day Delegate Rate
Industry/Company personnel including HCPs employed in such settings

£175.00 + VAT = £210.00

£218.75 + VAT = £262.50

Consultants & Associate Specialists

£175.00 + VAT = £210.00

£218.75 + VAT = £262.50

Trainee Doctors (ST3 and above)

£157.50 + VAT = £189.00

£192.50 + VAT = £231.00

Nurse/Dietitian/Pharmacist/Allied health professional/Trainee Doctors below ST3

£140.00 + VAT = £168.00

£166.25 + VAT = £199.50

Student/Retired Health Professional

£70.00 + VAT = £84.00

£82.50 + VAT = £99.00

 

The 2-Day Conference Rate includes registration fees for Tuesday and Wednesday, admission to the trade and poster exhibition, tea/coffee and lunch daily.

The Day Delegate Rate includes the registration fees for either Tuesday or Wednesday, admission to the trade and poster exhibition, tea/coffee and lunch.

The Members’ Rate is available if your BAPEN subscription has been received at the time of receiving your registration form. The Student Rate is available to all pre and post graduate Students. The retired professional rate is open to any retired healthcare professional with an interest in nutrition.

ACCOMMODATION

Accommodation is not included in the registration fee. Selected hotels and Bed & Breakfast establishments in Brighton, within easy reach of the Hilton Brighton Metropole, will be available to book via the online registration process. Further details will be available on the BAPEN Conference website.

BAPEN SOCIAL EVENT – Tuesday 29th November 2022

ABBA

Reliving the 70’s with a Night with ABBA

In 1974 Brighton hosted the Eurovision, where Swedish pop group, ABBA (Agnetha, Benny, Bjorn and Anni-Frid), was brought to the world with their winning entry “Waterloo”.

With nine number one singles in the UK, this year’s BAPEN social event with a ‘live’ ABBA tribute band will provide a one-night concert extravaganza including top hits; Waterloo, Mamma Mia Fernando and Dancing Queen, is set to get you singing and dancing all night long!

Ticket price: £36.75 to include buffet meal, drinks, entertainment and VAT.

NUTRITION VILLAGE

The Nutrition Village will return for this year’s BAPEN Annual Conference providing a clinical skills arena located in the exhibition area. The Nutrition Village will feature workshops on key practical skills in clinical nutrition: ambulatory pumps for parenteral nutrition, pump choice and care; vascular access devices; NG tube safety devices, feeding tubes, to name just a few. Each workshop will be led by clinical experts and will be held throughout both days of conference. Booking in advance is required for each 45- minute workshop.

PUBLICATION WORKSHOP

We are delighted to welcome back, Professor Mark Beattie, Editor in Chief, Frontline Gastroenterology, who will run a series of publication workshops at this year’s BAPEN Annual Conference, which will cover:

  • How journals process papers.
  • The peer review process.
  • ‘Getting the pitch right’, or how to ‘write for publication’.
  • Publishing opportunities.
  • The ‘changing world of publishing’.

A TRADE EXHIBITION WILL BE HELD THROUGHOUT THE MEETING

Late Breaking Abstracts

Late breaking abstracts will be accepted up to Monday 19th September 2022, midnight, with a non-refundable fee of £25.00+VAT to be paid upon submission.
The fee is applicable whether the abstract is accepted or not. Late breaking abstracts are also published in the online ESPEN Clinical Nutrition.

 

The BAPEN Annual Conference is a multi-disciplinary event organised by representation from each of the following organisations:

The BAPEN Annual Conference is organised by: Sovereign Conference Ltd
Lane, Astwood Bank, Redditch, Worcestershire, B96 6HB
Email: association@sovereignconference.co.uk

UK’s largest multidisciplinary Clinical Nutrition Conference

 

 

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