Skip to content
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

99NICU

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.

Stefan Johansson

Administrators
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Country

    Sweden

Blog Entries posted by Stefan Johansson

  1. I would just like to share a new document by the World Health Organization, WHO.
    In a report that come out the other week, WHO present its key findings from an upcoming publication "Survive and thrive: transforming care for every small and sick newborn."
    While we commonly think about neonatal care and preterm infants in high-resource settings, there is really a lot of public health work to be done when it comes to improve neonatal care in low-/mid-resource contexts. In fact, the world will not achieve the global target to achieve health for all unless it transforms care for every newborn.
    What I specifically like is that this documents really acknowledge the power of family-based care.
    To save newborns, the report recommends:
    Providing round-the-clock inpatient care for newborns Training nurses to provide hands-on care  Harnessing the power of parents and families Providing good quality of care Counting and tracking every small and sick newborn Naturally, countries need to allocate the necessary resources. While we (in the rich world) may think that a LOT of money is needed, WHO estimates that an additional investment of US$ 0.20 cents per person can save 2 of every 3 newborns in low- and middle-income countries. IMHO, that's a small investment for the best of benefit.
    Click here to find the report on the WHO web site.
    And click here to find "Social media tiles" illustrating the key findings, which I also share below.
     








  2. My colleague Ewa Henckel defended her thesis at Karolinska Institutet on "Cellular consequences of preterm birth : telomere biology, immune development and oxidative stress" last week, including four projects on 
    telomere length, inflammation and lung function viral respiratory infections and cellular aging  immune system development and environmental exposures hyperoxia-induced lung damage and the capacity to counter-act surfactant inactivation with a novel antioxidant A great thesis, available for download here: https://openarchive.ki.se/xmlui/handle/10616/46531
    For the table seating at the dissertation party, her husband had made clever and funny personal drawings for all guests. I translate mine for you below, it is on the spot 
    Best regards from Mr Conference Organiser
    PS. BTW, hope to meet up with you at the next "Future of Neonatal Care" conference in Copenhagen. Click here to find out more.

     
  3. Since the October issue of Neonatology Today, I and @Francesco Cardona will alternate in writing a column where we will share bits and pieces from the 99nicu community, mixed with more general reflections. This column is the start of a extended partnership between 99nicu and Neonatology Today. 
    In case you don't know, Neonatology Today is a peer-reviewed monthly newsletter that is available free of charge, and has a mission to provide timely news and information the care of newborns and the diagnosis and treatment of premature and/or sick infants. Subscribe here!
    Maybe you have already read my first column in (here on page 46-47), but I also want to share my text here, on why 99nicu has a great future despite that there is "an app for everything"  
    - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 
    "As a starting point, I would like to share some background for those who are not familiar with 99nicu. The online community 99nicu.org started off with a few colleagues in my kitchen in late 2005. This was a time before the social web was on everyone’s fingertip. Instead, Internet-savvy people gathered on so-called Bulletin Boards or Discussion Forums, often niched to specific topics or interests and managed by enthusiasts. Being an active member of a computer forum, I got the idea to bring neonatal staff together online. After plenty of hours, fiddling with software and web stuff, we opened the 99nicu web site on May 11, 2006. But what did the “99” stand for? That people would gather to discuss 99% of neonatology, and 1% of everything else
    Since the launch in 2006, I think we have reached the main purpose: to create an international neonatal community for sharing experience and expertise, not restricted by geographical boundaries. We now count more than 7.000 registered members. Although the majority are doctors, members represent all neonatal staff categories. Moreover, our server gets a lot of traffic! During the latest 3-month period, there were 42.000 pageviews, from all over the world (Fig 1.)
    What’s the future of online forums, when there’s an app for everything? Will 99nicu be out-competed by the big players of the social web? Services like WhatsApp and Twitter do offer great tools for discussions in closed and open groups. But still, I believe that niched forums will outlive social media platforms when it comes to professional content. For two principal reasons. First, I assume that professionals will want to keep out of the business model of the social media companies, where free-of-charge turns users into data-for-sale (“if it is free online, you are the product”). Second, social media companies, despite smart algorithms, will not bring enough focus to your feeds. If you are primarily interested in neonatal medicine, your content will still be diluted with images of pets and food plates. On the contrary, “old-school” communities are comprehensible and focused. You know why you are there, you know why other people are there, and you know what content to expect.
    While 99nicu gravitates around the website, we have also realized the potential in meeting up IRL. Getting to know each other online is fantastic, but personal meetings will always be very powerful for networking and sharing. That is why we are now preparing our third conference “Future of Neonatal Care.” At our previous conference in Vienna, we had 150 delegates from 33 countries. When we meet up in Copenhagen, 7-10 April 2019, we hope to bring more than 250 people together, from an even larger number of countries.
    Interested in joining us in Copenhagen? Keep updated on 99nicu.org!

    Figure 1 The geographical distribution of 42.000 pageviews on 99nicu.org during 1 July – 30 Sept 2018. The color coding represent the number of pageviews.
  4. We now have 13 confirmed speakers for the Copenhagen Meetup 7-10 April next year!
    Generally, we'll stick to the successful format we have had at the previous meetings: 45 min slots split into a 30 min lecture and a 15 min discussion. We'll continue to use the sli.do smartphone app to facilitate the discussion and allow every delegate to share questions and comments.
    In addition to the lecture program 7-9 April, we are also planning workhops and mini-symposia on the 10th of April. We'll share more info about those soonish, but if you want ONE cliff-hanger... we plan one symposium about the infant microbiome etc-etc  
    Confirmed topics and speakers
    Neonatal transports - safe and easy, Morten Breindahl (Sweden) Treating pain in neonates, Karel Allegaert (Belgium) How to improve quality on the NICU, Joseph Kaempf (US) Hyperglycemia - how to manage and why, Kathryn Beardsal (UK) Why we should rehearse simulated scenarios, Ruth Gottstein (UK) Go with the (high) flow, Brett Manley (Australia) News in the updated ESPGHAN guidelines, Nadja Haiden ( Austria) Prevention of BPD, Christian Poets (Germany) The many inotropes - what to use when, Yogen Singh (UK) Cord Clamping, 1.0 and 2.0, Ola Andersson (Sweden) When NEC rates persist , despite everything done “Right”, Ravi Patel (US) Outcomes in infants surviving at the limit of viability, Ulrika Ådén (Sweden) Ethical decision making around the limit of viability, Gorm Greisen (Denmark)
  5. I just want to share some brief news about our next Meetup, 7-10 April 2019 at Rigshospitalet in Copenhagen/Denmark.
    We (i.e myself, @Francesco Cardona @RasmusR @Christian Heiring , Gorm Greisen and Morten Breindahl) are currently working on the program lectures and workshops.
    I just want to share the first five confirmed speakers and their topics:
    Morten Breindahl: Neonatal transports – how to do them safe and easy Ola Andersson: Cord Clamping, 1.0 and 2.0 Ravi Patel: How to explain when NEC rates persist – even when a NICU does everything “Right” Ulrika Ådén: Infants surviving at the limit of viability, what are the outcomes? What shall we do? Gorm Greisen: Ethical decision making around the limit of viability- lessons from Scandinavia I'll update you all with more names and topics as they are confirmed
    Looking forward to meet up in Copenhagen!
  6. As you know, our conference the Future of Neonatal care in Vienna is approaching!
    When we went through the registrations yesterday, it struck us that delegates will come from all corners of the world. There are already delegates coming from 21 countries!
    Just to visualize, we marked the countries on the map below.
    It will be great to meet up with all of you coming! And, although we will represent many different context, I also believe it is a very good example of how a great diversity of people are sharing common questions and problems. My personal reflection is that not only infants are similar around the globe, neonatal staff also share a passion of doing great things for the tiny ones.
    And yes, we still have vacant chairs in the lecture hall. Be mostly welcome to register for the meeting, regardless if you already have colleagues from your country attending
     

  7. The Society for Evidence-Based Neonatology (EBNEO) had its 4th International Conference in Hyderabad, India, last November. Although being baised, as the chairman of EBNEO, the conference was a huge success, thanks to that the EBNEO was held in association with Indian Association of Pediatrics Neonatology Chapter. Without the IAP/NEOCON committee led by Dr Srinivas Murki, we would not have managed to set this conference up, that counted many hundreds of national delegates from all regions of India.
    A set of lectures by Barbara Schmidt, Ashok Deorari, Sourabh Dutta, Courtney Wusthoff, Roger Soll and many others, are now available on Youtube. 
    You can also view my lecture on Fetal Programming
    Enjoy!
     
  8. Our every-day job is to meet parents and their preterm infants. We have our professionalism, skills and family-centered care strategies. But how do we understand the large gap those families need to bridge, and how parenthood evolves when a child arrives too early?
    For myself, music has always been important (even essential!) in my own reflections about wider scopes. When it comes to parenthood, I can strongly recommend the record Mother Tongue by Rebekka Karijord, a Norwegian composer and singer.
    Mother Tongue is a beautifully strong and moving record about parenthood complicated by a preterm delivery, about experiencing a cesarean section far too early ("...this is a riot of blood and steel/bending me open, violently..."), and how a tiny infant still could "weigh more than...the universe, to me". The lyrics, as I interpret, is also about parenthood in a deeper sense. The music itself is so delicate and precise, and yet powerful at the same time.
    This is a record we should listen to. Get it on CD. Or on vinyl if you still play such records, like I do . And bring it to your next staff meeting. And of course, Mother Tongue is also available on Spotify.

  9. Swedish Dads FTW!

    The photographer Johan Bävman is touring around the world with a photo exhibition about "Swedish Dads". The exhibition shows fathers on parental leave.
     Swedish newspapers recently wrote about the reactions in Sydney, Australia (see exhibition before 26/9).  A (female) columnist in Sydney Morning Herald referred to the exhibition like "porn for stressed moms". I wouldn't agree on that headline but the column itself is interesting, and the reasoning about how the society could/should become more equal.
    The photos are nothing but fantastic! See some below and visit Bävmans web site to see them all here.
    I touched upon this topic long ago, in a short blog post here in 2012, that "it's not all about motherhood in the maternity wards and NICUs". Our family-centered neonatal care includes all parents, i.e. expect the father to be as present and care-giving as the mother.
    For myself, being a "Swedish Dad", I never considered NOT taking parental leave when we had our children. When our son was born in 1996, it was more easy as I was a pediatric fellow. But even in 2011 when our daughter was born, going off work during ~6 months was a natural thing to do for me despite being a consultant neonatologist. We work such a lot during our life-time, and we don't have too much ice-cream with our little ones (but it's great when we do )  
    I am well aware that many countries have less generous systems for parental leave (especially regarding the amount of time funded but welfare systems). But, I strongly recommend all father to take leave with children, and manage the household while the mother is going back to work. It is an investment for life.
    Have a look at the video about the photo project below and enjoy some of the photos, embedded with permission from Johan Bävman.
    If you visit Stockholm later this year, the "Swedish Dads" exhibition comes to Galleri Kontrast in Stockholm (30/9 - 29/10).

     
  10. Science Showcase

    I subscribe to the small Youtube channel Science Showcase curated by Andrew Maynard, a very enthusiastic researcher!
    Science Showcase collect video clips with scientific content aimed for a broader (public) audience. There is a contest going on and the best video will win 2000 USD.
    Just wanted share two interesting clips that are sort of relevant for neonatal staff. The first video is about epidemiology and its basic concepts. As you know, there are tons of clinical studies in neonatal medicine based on observational data, many of which suffer from major limitations as researchers did not really grasp some basic concepts how to handle their data... In the first video, there is one mistake though - the illustration of confounding is not entirely correct, instead the video illustrates mediation which is different thing. Small mistake though, as the error in the video is rather that the arrow is flipped 180 degrees. See and find out what I mean  
    The second video is about Big Data, a coming major thing in neonatal research as we get access and collect more and more data. The video is about genetic data, but the same principal idea ("so much data you don't know how to handle it") applies to health register data, and the richness of data that could be tanked down from from our monitors, ventilators etc.
    Enjoy!
     
     
  11. First of all, my sincere thanks to everyone involved in the 99nicu Meetup, delegates for attending, speakers for giving great lectures, and partners for support!
    Despite a lower number of delegates than we had planned for (we did not pick the perfect dates for the Meetup...), I think we managed very well. We needed to downsize and slimline a lot, including changing the venue. But, content was king thanks to great lectures, and all interactions and networking.
    Given the great feedback we had from delegates, we are committed to continue with this IRL forum for the 99nicu members. Stay tuned for information about the next Meetup, preliminary scheduled for April 2018 in Vienna.
    Almost all lectures were videorecorded and they will be added over the summer on the Meetup page here: https://99nicu.org/meetup2017/ 
    Right now you can see David Sweet lecturing about RDS management and Rebeccah Slater lecturing about pain in preterm infants.
    The only downside was the financial results, not yet definite but estimated to be a loss of ~5000 USD. Despite "the pain to open the purse" and our original plan to raise funds for IT work for this web site, I believe we shall regard this first meeting as an investment for future Meetups.
    We will also be trying to crowd-fund to cover some of the deficit. Those who value the videos as a learning experience are able to make a small donation.
    That was all my reflections for now. Until we meet in Vienna, see you here on 99nicu.org  

     
     
     
  12. 24 hours to go...

    There is now only 24 hours until until the 99nicu Meetup starts. The roll-up arrived in time
    Today, I and @Francesco Cardona are printing and packing delegate folders, preparing USB-sticks and getting snacks for the welcome reception tomorrow night. 
    We are very excited to meet some of you tomorrow IRL, it will be a great meeting!
    Now back to our work here in the HQ's!

  13. There's a lot going in at the 99nicu Headquarters right now, as we prepare for the 99nicu Meetup starting on Monday 12/6.
    USB-sticks and lanyards in preparation
    Really looking forward to the meeting.
    Depending on how things run, we may twitter semi-live, and we will also video-record as many lectures as our memory cards allow. It won't be pro-quality but good enough to view and learn.
    Ciao for now! Stefan


  14. During final preparations for the 99nicu Meetup (yes, there are still empty seats, so you can still register ), we have discussed how to think out-of-the-box for future Meetups.
    Is it really the best idea for us to run by the classic conference format and setup? Given the experience for this years Meetup, maybe not. Especially since regular meetings are connected to larger financial risks, and 99nicu is still an project that runs on philanthropic fuels.
    One idea is that the 2018 Meetup would be a more crowd-sourced event, and much much cheaper, like #FOAMed but IRL. In addition to one or two high-profiled keynote speakers, the program would include lectures by attending delegates, who volunteer to give talks on a subject they suggest themselves. I have heard so many great lectures by fellows and young consultants and believe we should get a fantastic program with a great variety of topics.
    However, as you know there is no free lunches, a small fee to cover lunches  would still be needed. But without any real budget work, I think a full three day CME-accredited meeting should be possible to run for ~150 euros/USD. Delegates contributing with a lecture should of course be coming free of charge. And naturally, all delegates would need to cover and arrange their own travels and accommodation.
    Just some thoughts from the 99nicu HQs! Please share feedback below.
  15. For the 99nicu Meetup, not only the venue but also the budget is down-sized  So, there won't be funding for the kind of web cast we originally planned. 
    Instead we plan to use Periscope, the live streaming service that (I think) is a Twitter-owned service.
    It seems from the Periscope test run below, that the image quality from using a smartphone is not superb (despite having the latest model!) but if you plan coming to the 99nicu Meetup and are experienced with Periscope Producer, please drop me a PM or an email.
    PS. The video is cropped... go to here https://www.periscope.tv/w/1ynJOWYbnaWJR to view it with the full width
  16. Maybe we were a bit too optimistic about the 99nicu Meetup, when we booked a big and fancy venue
    However, we will not be 200 people on the meeting, or at least, we cannot take the risk NOT becoming 200 people.
    While you will still be able to book accommodation at the Clarion Hotel, we will run the conference in a smaller aula for 80 people at "my hospital". The aula (i.e. our hospital) is within 1200 meter walking distance from Clarion Hotel.
    So, in short, the same great program in a place that will allow great interactivity!
    What about our plans to make a web cast of the meeting... well, we plan to use some service like Periscope. Or some other DYI solution. Simple, free!
    See you in Stockholm!
     
  17. As you may have noticed, we have opened the registration for the 99nicu Meetup 12-15 June. I hope many of you will be able to come! Click here for more infor!
    We got some feedback from a member in an African country about the fee for the meeting, which is 5600 SEK (excl VAT) corresponding to ~630 USD, and whether we had plans to add a differentiated lower fee for members coming from middle- and low-income countries.
    I really wished we could offer a reduced fee but to with a limited number of seats and to cover the costs for the venue, lunches, speakers' travels etc-etc, we need to charge this fee as the general cost level is this high in Sweden. Further, 99nicu is still a project based on volontary work and without funds (and viable business model, but that's another story...). In other words, we have none backing our budget in case of a deficit, and are pressed to go break-even financially.
    The better news are though that we plan to video-record all lectures and will make those available through 99nicu.org. Given funding, of course!
  18. As planned before the end of 2016, we have completed the program for the 99nicu Meetup in June 2017. You can find the program on this page, where we will also post the registration link around the 20th of January 2017. However, we have already the first two members registered who wanted to spend remains of educational funds for 2016  
    I look forward very much to this meeting, the program is great and it will be a joy to meet you IRL!
  19. I know - many of us want less emails... But the emails from Evidence Updates are great!
    Evidence Updates (a collaboration project by the BMJ Group and McMaster University) assists your reading of new research by grading articles by "Relevance" and "News-worthiness". For example, this trial on D-vitamin supplementation of preterm infants showed up in an email alert, an article I had missed otherwise.
     
    1. You need to Register (here!)
    2. Choose your clinical interest ("Pediatric Neonatology", I guess)
    3. Set a minimum score for new articles you want to read about (set a higher minimum score to get fewer emails )
    4. Watch your inbox!
     
    Link to like: Evidence Updates.

  20. I am waiting to board the flight from Stockholm to Philadelphia, to attend the 3rd Evidence-Based Neonatology (EBNEO) conference. Although being biased (as part of the organizing committee), I think the meeting will be great! You can follow the meeting on www.ebneo.org, on the hashtag #ebneo2015
    And, I think the EBNEO Society, the principal organizer of the conference, has an important mission: to increase the knowledge about evidence-based neonatology, and how to apply its principals in neonatal medicine. That also includes understanding of the pitfalls, that "evidence" is not binary, and that we can and need to do much more research and development to further improve care.
    I recently wrote a column about diagnostic testing in the Swedish Medical Journal (Swe. Läkartidningen).
    http://lakartidningen.se/Opinion/Reflexion/2015/09/Simtur-i-diagnostikens-djupa-vatten/#comments
    I got a comment in English implying that EBM is in conflict with the old-school notion of being a good doctor. That is not the case, def not in neonatal medicine where the caring for babies and families, from a humanistic point of view is central in our daily practise.
  21. I write this while waiting at the Istanbul airport, on my way home to Stockholm.
    Still full of impressions from the 2nd EBNEO conference that ended earlier today.
     
    The conference was originally planned to be held in Cairo, Egypt, but in the last minute we took the decision to change to a venue in Istanbul. We worried about that the current social and political instability in Egypt could interfere with the conference. Although such a risk was probably very small I think most speakers and delegates had understanding for our precautions.
     
    The venue for 2nd EBNEO was the Gonan Hotel in Istanbul, a very nice hotel close to the Ataturk international airport.
     
    During 2.5 intense days, we could hear in lectures covering a wide range of topics. Naturally, the focus of the conference was evidence-based clinical care of newborn infants, but we also learned more about the basic science of preterm brain damage and got new insights the fetal-neoantal transition. Importantly, we also heard about follow-up care and long-term outcomes of high-risk infants. As we put so much efforts and resources after delivery, we have an equally strong obligation to put efforts and resources in follow-up care.
     
    The 2nd EBNEO conference was not broadcasted on the web as the 1st conference (still available here), but we did our best to live-tweet the most important content. Take a look at the @ebneo twitter feed!
     
    Before I finish (and board the plane to Stockholm) I would like to, on behalf of the EBNEO Founding Board, to thank:
     
     
    Hesham Abdel-Hady and Abdel-Rahman El-Mashad, for being President and Secretary General for the 2nd EBNEO conference ICC, the conference agency, for all practical work and not the least for taking a great financial responsibility for all arrangements all speakers and all delegates for coming and for sharing expertise, comments and questions  
     
    The EBNEO project will now travel across the Atlantic. Professor Haresh Kirpalani will be the president for the 3rd EBNEO conference, and it will be held in Sept 2015 in Philadelphia/USA. I am already confident that the 3rd EBNEO will be as succesful as this conference in Istanbul.
     
    Subscribe to get future updates about the details of the 3rd EBNEO conference!

  22. Although there are still things to polish on 99nicu.org, I am relieved that the web site is back on-line again.
     
    With time, the technology became out-dated and we came to a point where we had to do something to vitalize and update 99nicu.
     
    I am certain that the new software we use for 99nicu will improve your experience.
    However, as content is king, the vitality of 99nicu will rely on activity by all members making up this community.
     
    Our move to a more solid ground, technology-wise, will be followed by other initiatives too. For example, we plan some educational activities, new EBNEO conferences, and new collaborations with other professional partners.
    For a bright future of 99nicu, we also need look into a models for funding of maintenance and development.
     
    That's all for now

  23. Back in the early Internet days, Portals with link collections were hot and big business. Today, we use search engines and "google" whatever we need to know. And, we have learned the URLs to the sites we use most often by heart.
     
    But, there are still a some really good web based resources that is worth to be promoted and high-lighted. That's my idea with a series of posts with "Links to like"
     
    First out is neonatalresearch.org, a professional and yet personal blog by professor Keith J. Barrington, neonatologist and clinical researcher in Canada.
     
    Keith J. Barrington is writing about and commenting neonatal research. By subscribing to his new posts* on the or following the blog on Twitter, you will feel up-to-date and enlightened.
     
    Link to like... http://neonatalresearch.org
     
    *how to subscribe: visit the web site and submit your email address in the "subscribe" widget in the left sidebar

  24. If you need to show images of common and less common physical findings, the "Link to like" is the photo gallery compiled by MD Janelle Aby, at the Stanford School of medicine. Perfect for teaching of students and fresh fellows.
     
    I used it myself today when we discussed nose deviations of the newborn, and I could illustrate differences between a nose septal dislocation and the much more common septum deviation due to the fetus having the nose "stuck" in the uterine wall.
     
    The photo gallery is "semi-closed": you will be asked to submit your email address to view images, and then await the email with an URL that gives you a 24h access to the photos.
     
    Link to like: Photo gallery, Newborn nursery @ LPCH / Stanford

Account

Navigation

Search

Search

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.