Community Engagement Event

World Sepsis Day 2021 Panel: Bridging gaps in post-sepsis care for sepsis survivors

September 13, 2021, 10:00 am to 10:00 am

On World Sepsis Day 2021, join sepsis survivors and health care providers as they discuss the long-term impacts of sepsis and the services and support needed by sepsis patients during discharge and the post-discharge period. This online discussion will center on what patients wish they had been told while in-hospital to prepare them for life after discharge, what are the barriers that limit clinicians from effectively supporting patients with post-sepsis syndrome, and how this varies across different demographics.

Missed the event? Watch a recording of the panel here.

Panelists: 

Kristin MacDonald, MSc - Kristin is a sepsis survivor working with the Action On Sepsis Patient Advisory Council to improve recognition of sepsis and post-sepsis syndrome, and is the Managing Editor at 'Applied Spectroscopy', an international chemistry journal.

Clare Komugisha, RN, MPH - Clare is a nurse and researcher supervisor, currently working with a team from Canada and Uganda to implement an innovative program for improving post-discharge care for children treated for sepsis in resource-limited settings. 

Jaclyn Robinson, BSc, RN - Jaclyn is a public health nurse with over 15 years experience within the Provincial Health Service Authority and Vancouver Coastal Health. She is a recent COVID 19 survivor and current Clinical Nurse Specialist for the provincial Post-COVID-19 Interdisciplinary Clinical Care Network.

John Boyd, MD - John is an investigator at the Centre for Heart+Lung Innovation (HLI) and Intensivist at St Paul's Hospital ICU, where he is currently establishing the first Sepsis Survivorship Clinic at St Paul's Hospital.

Nardia Strydom, MBChB, CCFP - Head, Dept of Family Medicine, Providence and VCH. She was instrumental in setting-up the post-COVID care pathway in BC.


  • Community Engagement Event

First Nations land acknowledegement

Action on Sepsis operates on the traditional, ancestral, and unceded territory of the Coast Salish peoples — xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), and Səl̓ílwətaʔ/Selilwitulh (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations. We invite everyone to reflect on the traditional territories and land that they currently work and live on.


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