RT Journal Article SR Electronic(1) A1 Kiat-Floro, Joy A1 Ashour, Rasha A. A1 Janahi, Mohammad A1 Labib, AhmedYR 2021 T1 Effective continuing interprofessional healthcare education to improve sepsis care in a tertiary children and women’s hospital in the State of Qatar “Culture of think sepsis” JF Journal of Emergency Medicine, Trauma and Acute Care, VO 2021 IS 2 - Qatar Health 2021 Conference abstracts OP SP 40 DO https://doi.org/10.5339/jemtac.2021.qhc.40 PB Hamad bin Khalifa University Press (HBKU Press), SN 1999-7094, AB Background: Sepsis is a medical emergency and a global economic and health burden. It is one of the leading causes of death worldwide with 1 death every 2.8 seconds and represents 20% of all deaths worldwide1,2. Sidra Medicine, the only pediatric tertiary care centre in the State of Qatar, in collaboration with Qatar’s Ministry of Public Health, Hamad Medical Corporation (HMC), and Hamad Healthcare Improvement Institute (HHQI) share the national goal of reducing mortality due to sepsis and septic shock through an increase in healthcare provider compliance to the sepsis six bundle of care from 0% to 95% by the end of 2022. Methods: A multifaceted, interdisciplinary, comprehensive education and training program was designed and provided to healthcare practitioners across Sidra and comprised: • Pre-implementation education • Multidisciplinary education sessions and workshops • Train-the-trainer nurse educator workshop • Bedside interdisciplinary simulation-based education • Sepsis case discussions during morning reports, academic activities, grand rounds, and morbidity and mortality meetings • Annual Qatar National Sepsis Symposium • September Sepsis-Awareness Month • Pediatric and women sepsis e-learning module • National Patient Safety Collaborative (NPSC) training sessions and storyboards in collaboration with the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) and HHQI  In addition, sepsis pathway posters, think-sepsis booklets and pocket cards, antibiotic preparation and administration cards, and family education materials in Arabic and English were produced and utilized. Results: Improved sepsis awareness and education was observed. 95% of providers successfully completed the e-learning module (Figure 1). Compliance to the sepsis six bundle of care subsequently reached 81%. Sepsis mortality rate was 1.8% in the first two quarters of 2020 which is well below international mortality rates. Conclusion: Since 2018, Sidra Medicine embraced sepsis education and care through a national evidence-based sepsis guideline for early recognition and treatment 3 which is positively reflected in low sepsis mortality rates for 2020., UL https://www.qscience.com/content/journals/10.5339/jemtac.2021.qhc.40