Senior Critical Care ECHO Fellow | Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
| Dyddiad hysbysebu: | 23 Chwefror 2026 |
|---|---|
| Cyflog: | Heb ei nodi |
| Gwybodaeth ychwanegol am y cyflog: | £73,992 per annum |
| Oriau: | Llawn Amser |
| Dyddiad cau: | 25 Mawrth 2026 |
| Lleoliad: | Oxford, OX3 9DU |
| Cwmni: | Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust |
| Math o swydd: | Cytundeb |
| Cyfeirnod swydd: | 7797057/321-CSS-MS-7797057-S6 |
Crynodeb
This program provides a unique opportunity for the appointee to achieve:
1. Independent practitioner-level accreditation with the British Society of Echocardiography (BSE) in critical care echocardiography (ACCE).
2. Consultant-level specialist skills and knowledge in critical care echocardiography.
3. Expertise in the delivery and organisation of critical care echo services.
4. The opportunity to publish with an established group of critical care clinician-echocardiographers.
For the clinical component of the fellowship, the successful applicant will work as part of the intensive care medicine senior registrar team on an 80% WTE basis.
The Oxford Critical Care Echo service (OCCES) is co-run by Dr Colebourn (governance lead) and five other consultant team members, all accredited to Level II with the BSE and all alumni of the program.
The Oxford Critical Care Echo Service is the UK’s first accredited non-departmental echo service.
1. Dr Graham Barker leads POCUS Fellowships in Oxford and was the past Advanced Critical Care Echo lead for the BSE.
2. Dr David Garry is the national lead for Level I for the BSE and trains Level II candidates weekly on his outpatient list.
3. Dr James Day runs the pre-operative assessment service. Dr Day developed the use of echo within this service, including incorporation into CPET assessment; he also developed and co-chairs the High-Risk Anaesthetic Meeting (HRAM) with Dr Nikant Sabharwal, consultant cardiologist.
4. Dr Toby Thomas trains Level I and II echocardiographers on his weekly outpatient list.
5. Dr Clare MacEwan is a renal physician and clinical echocardiographer contributing to the inpatient critical care echo service
Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trustis one of the largest NHS teaching trusts in the country. It provides a wide range of general and specialist clinical services and is a base for medical education, training and research. The Trust comprises four hospitals - the John Radcliffe Hospital, Churchill Hospital and Nuffield Orthopaedic Centre in Headington and the Horton General Hospital in Banbury.
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Fellowship is delivered in the ICUs at the John Radcliffe Hospital, the Churchill hospital, and the outpatient echocardiography department. The appointee will be given a protected day of echo session per week under the direct supervision of the faculty. In addition, the appointee will be expected to attend weekly cardiology echocardiography imaging review meetings and practice echo techniques daily in the intensive care unit. The adult intensive care department has state-of-the-art mobile echocardiography equipment at the John Radcliffe and Churchill sites.
The appointee who completes six months of satisfactory progress on clinical and the echo fellowship domains will be given an interim competency assessment at a time to suit their rate of skills development. Successful completion of this assessment will allow the appointee to contribute to the in-house critical care echo service currently in place, supported by the senior team. Supervision for this is always immediately available.
The appointee will sit the written component of BSE accreditation ACCE at the end of year one.
Please contact Dr Claire Colebourn (Critical care echocardiography fellowship program lead;
Claire.Colebourn@ouh.nhs.uk ) or Dr Raja Jayaram (Director of Oxford critical care fellowships;
raja.jayaram@ouh.nhs.uk ) for further details and to be put in touch with alumni of the program.
This advert closes on Sunday 15 Mar 2026
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