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SAPC North 2020

CHAMPIONING THE KNOWLEDGE WORK OF PRIMARY CARE

Join us at this year's SAPC North first ever on-line conference to celebrate all that we do so that we can optimise the impact of our work. 

It is nearly a year since members of SAPC North met in Preston to share work, ideas and stories. Despite all that has happened since, our community have continued to champion scholarship at the heart of excellent primary care. Delivering innovation and best practice in teaching, research, quality improvement and clinical practice to ensure that primary care continues to serve as the bed rock of the NHS.

This is the knowledge work of primary care: developed, delivered and applied by all of us working in primary care - academics, clinicians, students, leaders. Knowledge work refers to how we discover, create, apply and teach the distinct knowledge of primary care to develop and sustain continuous, comprehensive, coordinated, accessible, person-centred community healthcare.

The Academy of Primary Care at Hull York Medical School is delighted to be hosting this year’s Northern SAPC Conference. Our goals this year are to:

  • raise the profile of the knowledge work that you do
  • help you connect with other people working in primary care - researchers, educators, and clinicians
  • help boost the impact of our work

As we're meeting on line this year, this gives us opportunities to try out new ways of working. We want to create a space for as many people as possible to meet together, share your work and so start conversations that  can continue beyond the time we spend together on-line. There will be a dedicated conference website which will provide the platform from which we can meet on the day and share our conversations. We will then use the website as a tool to publicise your work and our expertise beyond the meeting - a 'digital brochure' of work across SAPC North that we will send out to key stakeholders. 

All our sessions are designed to welcome everyone interested in primary care scholarship. Whether you are an educator, researcher or clinician – at the beginning (student or early career), middle or later stages of your career, there is something here for you.

Features of this year’s meeting:

  • Share your work to start a conversation: themed oral presentation sessions using an elevator pitch format to celebrate what you have been doing and help you get in touch with other people doing similar work; with opportunity to contribute to a post-Conference 'brochure' to let wider audiences know about your work
  • Writing a Research Question Masterclass: the first steps in any research and often the hardest. One of the commonest requests we heard when setting up the WISE GP programme was from people asking for help with getting started and writing a good research question. Colleagues from across our academic community – educators and researchers, and at all career stages – continue to grapple with this most difficult of tasks. In this session, we invite 3 people/groups to bring their fledgling ideas to a Masterclass session with a panel of experienced researchers from across our discipline. Join us to see how they get on, and consider how this might help you get your project idea up and running.
  • Shape the future of our discipline: Join a panel, including Professor Helen Stokes-Lampard, to consider Do we still need Academic Primary Care in the 21st Century? Primary Care is evolving rapidly, so how do we as an academic discipline need to change too to ensure that we stay at the heart of driving the changes urgently needed? There are many discussions about the Future Doctor, but what about the future academic? It is almost ten years since SAPC last examined the sustainability of academic primary care careers. Much has changed since – in primary care, and in the academic world too. So is APC still relevant, more relevant, or has it been superseded? And with what implications for career development for researchers, educators, clinicians and students? 
  • Building your career: find out more about the array of opportunities to be found in academic work happening across the primary care community. Whether you are a student just starting out, or an academic/clinician on route, join us to find out more about options, and how SAPC and our community of primary care academics can help you.
  • Planning next year’s conference: there will be opportunities on the day, and following on, to help us consider what we’re learnt from this year’s celebrations – and what we want to include in next year.

We hope you’re as excited by the possibilities as we are, and we look forward to seeing you in November.

Joanne

Prof Joanne Reeve, on behalf of the Academy of Primary Care Conference team: Dr James Bennett, Dr Paul Whybrow, Dr Puja Verma, Pam Parkinson, Ali Waring, Matthew Kempson

WHO SHOULD ATTEND

Northern SAPC is a celebration of primary care scholarship happening across our region. We welcome everyone working in and interested in developing and delivering excellent primary care:

  • Educators
  • Researchers
  • Clinicians
  • Students

WHY YOU SHOULD ATTEND

Whether you are an established primary care academic or clinician, or a student just starting out… SAPC North offers to you an opportunity to

  • Hear about cutting edge developments in research, education and clinical practice
  • Share your work – tell people what you’ve been doing
  • Meet new people - make new connections and collaborations
  • Learn new skills and ideas in our masterclass
  • Explore career opportunities in academia as well as portfolio clinical careers

HOW YOU CAN TAKE PART

PRESENT YOUR WORK - SUBMIT AN ABSTRACT

We aim to accept all abstracts that describe work to support and improve primary care/general practice through scholarship (education and research).

We will invite you to present your work in themed sessions using 1 slide (poster format), with 2 minutes to describe the essence of your work. The goal of your abstract and presentation is to convince someone that they need to come and find out more about your work.

We will be asking for electronic posters that the audience can download and take away. The focus for your oral pitch will be to persuade the listener to find out more - to download your poster and to contact you beyond the conference. We will send guidance on preparing both of these.

To submit an abstract, please email APC@hyms.ac.uk by deadline midnight on Wednesday 7th October with a word document containing the following:

Presenting author: name, affiliation and contact details (including email, twitter handle)
Co-authors: name, affiliations and email addresses
Title of your work

Abstract (max 300 words) using the following headings

  • THE PROBLEM: What is the problem/issue/challenge that your work  is tackling
  • YOUR APPROACH: what are you doing to explore/understand/address the issue – what methods are you using?
  • THE LEARNING: what are you finding, noticing, learning from the work?
  • WHY IT MATTERS: why does an SAPC North attendee need to find out more about your work?

All abstracts will be assessed for eligibility by the conference team. Confirmation of acceptance will be sent by October 14th with full details of how to prepare your poster and oral presentation.

All accepted speakers will need to register for the Conference.

 

SUBMIT A WORKSHOP

We have the possibility of offering limited slots for running workshops at the Conference, and so invite expressions of interest in hosting a one hour workshop.

We will prioritise workshops that are interactive, and include specific plans for dealing with the additional opportunities and challenge of using Zoom.

Proposals should be submitted in the form of a 400 word (max) abstract outlining

  • Title (not included in word count)
  • Workshop goals: what will attendees gain from attending this workshop
  • Format: what do you plan to do, and how will this meet your goals. How will you actively involve your audience
  • Audience: who is the workshop aimed at
  • Speakers: who will run the workshop

Email your outline to APC@hyms.ac.uk by the deadline of midnight on Weds October 7th.

 

APPLY FOR OUR MASTERCLASS

Writing a good research question is recognised to be one of the most important but also  challenging parts of any research project – whether you are just starting out, or an experienced researcher.

Whatever type of research – education, clinical, health services, quality improvement – and however big or small (pilot studies, your first piece of research, through to large scale projects) – getting the question right shapes the whole project.

The SAPC North Masterclass will provide an opportunity to bring your project idea to an experienced panel of researchers who will work with you on developing your idea into a focused question.

Each project will have 20 minutes with the panel. You will be invited to give a 3 minute pitch describing what you’re planning to do, and what you want to consider with the panel.

To take part, you will need to email us an outline of your ideas. Send a word document to APC@hyms.ac.uk which outlines, in no more than 300 words:

  • What is the problem you are tackling (or thinking of tackling)?
  • Why/how do you think research can help with the problem and what is your draft question?
  • Where are you stuck – what do you hope to get from  the panel?

The Conference team will chose a maximum of 3 to reflect the diversity of suggestions put forward.

PRIZES

We will be awarding a number of prizes including:

  • Best Champion: to the person who best champions why academic primary care matters through their poster, pitch, and discussions
  • Best Poster
  • Best Student Project
  • Mystery Prize (to be announced at the opening session)

HOW TO REGISTER

Registration will open shortly. Details will be posted on the SAPC website and sent out via SAPC networks.

Fees will be

  • £25 for staff
  • £10 for undergrad students, and postgrad students on a stipend (non-salaried postgraduate students)

(People on funded fellowships will need to register for the full fee)

If you would like to go on our mailing list to receive details about registration and the meeting, please email APC@hyms.ac.uk

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SAPC ASM 2022 Wednesday 6th July, keynote during the joint session SAPC/ASME 11.00-12.40

Presentation: Today’s doctor is a generalist: opportunities and challenges for academic practice

 

 

Health Education England declared “The future doctor is a generalist”. But it is today’s doctors who battle with the growing levels of whole person (generalist) problems – multimorbidity, treatment burden, problematic polypharmacy, persistent physical symptoms, and the list goes on... Barriers to delivering generalist care identified by my research include problems with both the evidence and education we offer to clinicians, and health services, to support the complexity of their daily knowledge work – the processes by which they make sense of illness. My work focuses on addressing those gaps. I’ll use examples from current projects (WISE GP, TAILOR, CATALYST) and others to describe the gaps, offer suggestions for “recovery and innovation”, and consider the benefits and challenges we might anticipate. I will conclude by inviting you to join me planning how we “future proof…our practical wisdom” as we work towards “recovery and innovation”

 

Biography

Joanne is an inner city GP and professor of primary care at Hull York Medical School, internationally known for her research and scholarship on medical generalism. She leads the national WISE GP partnership, is Chair of the SAPC Heads of Departments Group, and Director of the Academy of PC at HYMS where she also leads the flagship CATALYST programme. Her book, Medical Generalism Now, will be published by Taylor Frances in 2023.

Further details

My work tackles two of the biggest challenges facing modern health care systems. Namely, finding primary care solutions for the growing burden of chronic, complex illness; and building capacity for high quality, meaningful primary care scholarship to support the necessary changes.

The primary care approach is defined by a person-centred model of care. As a clinical academic, I lead an international collaboration to develop, implement and evaluate the provision of the individually tailored model of care that is expert generalist practice. My work is underpinned by expertise in the fields of complex interventions research, action research, and translational scholarship. As recent past Chair of the Society for Academic Primary Care, I lead work to enhance the capacity for advancing primary care through education and research; supporting quality improvement through the shared application of the skills of scholarship.

All of which is supported and sustained by my role as a non-principal GP in a busy inner city Practice in Hull.

 

Information for mentees

Hello!

I am Joanne – an academic GP working in Hull. I have benefited from being a mentee from early in my clinical career and in turn, enjoyed being a mentor for a number of years.

I am Professor in Primary Care Research at Hull and York Medical School (HYMS) . My research is in the area of primary care re-design based on person-centred/expert generalist principles. I have described the development of a new basic science of generalism, and now use implementation research and scholarship approaches to apply this work to tackling key challenges of today’s primary care (including multimorbidity, polypharmacy, mental health care and acute care). I work with clinical, academic and patient colleagues in the UK and internationally (including a Special Interest Group on Generalism within NAPCRG).

I have been a member of SAPC Executive since 2011 – initially as early career rep and communications lead. From 2013-2016, I was SAPC Chair. I am now co-opted on the Exec leading work on developing academic General Practice and GP Scholarship and chair of the Heads of Department group (HODs).

My own career has been an entertaining path of twists and turns. I have succeeded and failed in getting NIHR fellowships, grant funding, papers published, abstracts accepted… I have enjoyed and been challenged by development and leadership roles in local NHS, SAPC and RCGP.

I believe that we need strong academic primary care at the heart of a vibrant primary care community – scholarship leading and delivering innovation and improvement. So I’m delighted that you are developing your career in academic primary care too. And I would welcome working with you to help describe and achieve your career goals.