rcpch how to manage child mental health event
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programme and speakers for RCPCH How To Manage Child Mental Health EventTRANSCRIPT
©2012 Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health 5-11 Theobalds Road, London, WC1X 8SH The Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health is a registered charityin England and Wales (1057744) and in Scotland (SCO38299)
TIME SESSION
9.00 am Registration
9.30am Introduction
9.45am Mental health in paediatric outpatients
10.30am Adherence
11.15am Break & Networking
11.30am Patient involvement
11.45am The disruptive child on the ward
12.30pm Lunch & Networking
13.15pm Case study based discussion
1.45pm
3 workshops available-Delegates choose one to attend:
A Paediatric management of eating disordersB Attachment in the clinic room C Psychiatric liaison work in general paediatrics- how it works
2.45pm Break & Networking
3.00pm
3 workshops available-Delegates choose one to attend:
A Paediatric management of eating disordersB Attachment in the clinic room C Psychiatric liaison work in general paediatrics- how it works
4.00pm Perplexing presentations - beyond FII
4.30pm Plenary
4.45pm Close
PROGRAMME
how tomanage
Mental Health in General Paediatrics
08 October 2012, RCPCH London
How to Manage Mental Health in General Paediatrics
CHAIR:
Dr Max Davie, MB MChir MA MRCPCH
Dr Max Davie is a consultant community paediatrician, covering the London borough of Lambeth. There, he runs a clinic for developmental problems in the over-5s. Max is also currently the deputy convenor of the British Paediatric Mental Health Group, a group which aims to promote and support the mental health work of paediatricians.
SPEAKERS
Dr Anthony Crabb, BHB MBChB MRCPsych
Dr Anthony Crabb is a consultant child and adolescent psychiatrist who is the clinical lead for the Paediatric Liaison (CAMHS –PL) service at Southampton General Hospital. His specialist interests include the assessment and management of mental health conditions as they present in, or result from, physical illness. The acute management of behavioural disturbance in the paediatric setting is one of his key roles within the Paediatric department and he has given presentations at national conferences on this topic.
Dr Peter Heinz, BSc MBBS DM FRCPCH LFHom
Peter Heinz is a paediatrician based in Cambridge where he has been leading acute and general paediatrics for 6 years. His desire to become a practitioner with profound general paediatric experience has taken him and his long-suffering family around the globe. He trained and worked in Germany, Switzerland, Australia and Wales before taking up his current position.
Clinical expertise comprises paediatric emergency medicine and general paediatrics; areas where mental health issues are encountered but often not well managed. As chair of the British Association of General Paediatrics he is looking forward to enhancing the kudos of general paediatrics and establishing it as a specialty in its own right.
Professor Elena Garralda
Elena Garralda is Emeritus Professor of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at Imperial College London and Honorary Consultant Child and adolescent Psychiatrist with CNWL Foundation Trust. Her research and clinical interests include the interface between physical and mental health in children. She has researched psychiatric disorders as they present in general practice and paediatric clinics, documented the psychiatric adjustment of children and young people with both chronic and acute critical physical illness, and been involved in the development of psychiatric interventions appropriate for the medical setting.
Dr Danya Glaser, MB BS, DCH, FRCPsych, Hon FRCPCH
Danya Glaser is an honorary consultant child & adolescent psychiatrist at Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children in London, and a visiting professor at UCL. She is currently working on the early recognition of fabricated or induced illnesses. Previously a developmental paediatrician, at Great Ormond Street Hospital she was the named doctor for child protection and for many years headed an integrated child
protection service working respectively with the identification and treatment of emotional abuse; providing multidisciplinary assessments for Children Act proceedings as an expert witness and a post protection team working with children who have been seriously maltreated and their current, often new carers. She was a member of the Family Justice Council for 6 years and chaired the Development Group for the NICE Guideline ‘When to Suspect Child Maltreatment’. Dr Glaser has taught, researched and written widely on various aspects of child maltreatment including sexual and emotional abuse, fabricated or induced illness; and the effects of child maltreatment on the developing brain. She is updating her co-authored book on the evidence base on Attachment and Attachment Disorders. Dr Glaser is the past president of ISPCAN and has until recently chaired Coram adoption panel.
WORKSHOP LEADERS
Dr Lee Hudson
Lee Hudson is a general paediatrician with an interest in adolescent health and underweight and overweight in children and young people. His interest in the medical aspects of eating disorders began when he worked in a paediatric team which cared for children and young people with eating disorders in Melbourne, Australia. He is now the paediatrician to the eating disorders team at Great Ormond Street, and has published papers highlighting the important medical aspects of these disorders for paediatricians. Dr Hudson works at Great Ormond Street Hospital, and is also a consultant at St Mary’s Hospital and University College London Hospital. He is also a research fellow at the UCL Institute of Child Health.
Dr Peter Hindley
Dr Peter Hindley is a consultant in paediatric liaison psychiatry, at St Thomas’ Hospital, London. From 1991- 2005 Dr Hindley developed a national service for deaf children with mental health problems, liaising with audiologists, audiological physicians, schools and voluntary organisations. His job entails all aspects of acute hospital work from psychiatric emergencies, through medically unexplained symptoms to psychiatric consequences of chronic conditions. Dr Hindley is also chair of the UK and Ireland Paediatric Liaison Interest Group, a member of the executives of the RCPsych Child and Adolescent and Liaison Psychiatry Faculties and a board member of the European Association of Psychosomatic Medicine.
Dr Jacqui Stedmon
Jacqui Stedmon works as a Consultant Clinical Psychologist in paediatrics at Derriford Hospital, Plymouth, and is an Associate Professor at Plymouth University where she contributes to the doctoral training programme in clinical psychology. During 25 years of clinical practice she has experience of a wide range of illness conditions associated with variable levels of mental health and psychological well-being in children. She is a qualified family therapist and co-founded a local charity, Jeremiah’s Journey, providing bereavement support for younger people. She is interested in how family attachment styles influence illness narratives and care giving behaviour, particularly in relation to medically unexplained symptoms. Publications include an edited a book on Reflective Practice in Psychotherapy and Counselling.