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Faculty of Liaison Psychiatry Annual Conference 2025 programme

Venue: RCPsych London/livestream
Date: Wednesday 14 – Friday 16 May 2025

Conference highlights

Use the tabs to see the highlights for each day or download the full programme below.

Wednesday 14 May

Alcohol care across the lifespan, neurodiversity and developmental disorders in acute hospitals, ethics and reality of assisted dying, acute hospital psychopharmacology, and Faculty updates from the Devolved Nations.

12.00pm 

Registration and lunch (in-person) 

1.00pm 

Welcome 

Dr Alex Thomson, Faculty Chair 

 

Plenary 1: Alcohol across the lifespan, neurodevelopment and endocrine 

Chair: Dr Raja Badrakalimuthu 

1.00pm 

Fetal alcohol spectrum disorder 

Dr Raja Mukherjee 

1.30pm 

Better care and treatment for alcohol dependence and withdrawal 

Professor Julia Sinclair  

2.00pm 

Alcohol related brain damage 

Dr Kaanthan Jawahar 

2.30pm 

Neurodiversity in acute hospital care 

Dr Jessica Eccles  

3.00pm 

Break 

Plenary 2: Ethics of assisted dying policy 

Chair: Dr Amrit Sachar 

3.30pm 

Ethics of assisted dying 

Professor Julian Hughes 

4.00pm 

Physician-Assisted Death in Eating Disorders: Clinical, Ethical, and Policy Considerations   

Chelsea Roff 

4.30pm 

Psychopharmacology in liaison psychiatry 

Dr Siobhan Gee 

5.00pm 

 

Devolved Nation Chairs Updates 

 

Thursday 15 May

Improving quality and integrating mental health services in acute hospitals, service development and clinical care for persistent physical symptoms, management of suspected feigning and factitious disorder, and recent research and service innovations for patients who have attended the ED frequently.

08.30am 

Registration and refreshments  

 

Plenary 3: Developing liaison psychiatry services 

Chair: Dr Janet Butler 

9.00am 

Clinical challenges at the interface of mental health and acute hospitals' 

Dr Janet Butler, Ex-Chair, PLAN AG 

9.30am 

Partnership between the mental health service and acute hospital 

Dr Duncan Murray (Acute Hospital) 

Dr Amanda Thompsell (NHSE) 

Dr Girish Kunigiri 

10.30am 

Break 

 

Plenary 4: Medically unexplained symptoms 

Chair: Dr Annabel Price 

11.00am 

Stories of Mind, Body and the Public: Communicating about liaison psychiatry 

Dr Alastair Santhouse 

11.30am 

Persistent physical symptoms in outpatient care: RCP and liaison psychiatry Interface 

Dr Theresa Barnes 

12.00pm 

What can paediatrics tell us about persistent physical symptoms? 

Dr Benjamin Baig 

Dr Sreena Das 

Dr Joanna Begent? 

1.00pm 

Lunch  

 

Plenary 5: Factitious disorder: are we doing more harm than good? 

Chair:  tbc

2.00pm 

Specialist assessment of suspected feigning 

Dr Derek Tracy 

2.15pm 

Differential diagnosis of suspected feigning 

Dr Alex Thomson 

2.30pm 

Lived experience presentation 

Dr Emma McAllister 

 

2.45pm 

 

The assessment and management of factitious disorder  

Dr Sara McNally and Dr Chris Bass 

3.15pm 

Q&A 

 

3.30pm 

Break 

 

Plenary 6: High intensity service use 

Chair:  tbc

4.00pm 

The FUSED study 

Professor Else Guthrie  

4.30pm 

Identifying & prioritising High Intensity Users – findings from the NWL HISS programme 

Dr Peter Greengross 

4.45pm 

Frequent ED attendance as a prognostic marker and the value of advance care 

Dr Asha Katwa 

5.00pm 

An overview of the type of work done by HIU team 

Dr Difna Bandaralage, Harshal Goswami, Simon Josha and Sala Salih  

5.15pm 

Q&A 

Friday 16 May

New drug therapies including ketamine for depression and novel therapies for Alzheimer’s disease, women's health in medical care, new research presentations, parallel workshops, and clinical and service updates on paediatric liaison psychiatry.

08.30am 

Registration and refreshments  

 

Plenary 7: Psychopharmacology in medical treatment 

Chair: Dr Sri Sira-Mahalingappa 

9.00am 

Ketamine treatment of resistant depression.  How might it work in acute hospitals? 

Dr Rupert McShane 

9.30am 

New therapies for Alzheimer’s disease – the implications for liaison psychiatrists 

Dr Mohan Bhat 

10.00am 

Women’s health in liaison psychiatry 

Dr Rachel Jones 

10.30am 

Break 

 

Plenary 8: The next generation 

Chair: Dr Liz Sampson and Dr Nida Munawar 

11.00am 

New Research Presentations 

11.40am 

The value of the Psych Star Scheme 

Sabine Tromp 

11.55am 

Move to workshops 

12.00pm 

Workshop 1a (training) 

 

Simulation training part of the ALSG APEx Paeds version 

Dr Virginia Davies, Dr Mark Buchanon? 

Sinead Kay, Dr Sarah Davies and Beth Rodgers? 

 

Workshop 1b (clinical practice) 

 

Dementia assessment in Liaison Psychiatry- Barriers, Facilitators and what represents a Formal Diagnosis? 

Helen Croft, Dr Kaanthan Jawaher and Dr Simon Thacker 

Workshop 1c (service development) 

 

Functional neurological disorder in the emergency department 

Dr Mohammad Arbabi 

1.00pm  

Lunch 

2.00pm 

Workshop 2a (training) 

Respond multiagency mental health simulation training – Crisis in the Emergency Department 

Dr Oriana Bezzina and Steve Baker 

Workshop 2b (clinical practice) 

Teaching acute hospital colleagues about delirium 

Dr Debbie Bull and Dr Janet Butler 

 

Workshop 2c (service development) 

What do medical students want from their liaison psychiatry placements? 

Sabine Tromp, Lauren Griffiths and 

Shailpriya Nand, PSYCH STARs 

3.00pm 

Break 

 

Plenary 9: Paediatric liaison psychiatry 

Chair:  

3.30pm 

Treatment of mental health problems in children with long term physical ill health in paediatric settings 

Dr Isobel Heyman 

4.00pm 

Paediatric liaison psychiatry 

4.30pm 

Prizes and closing remarks 

Dr Alex Thomson 

Upholding College values

To encourage open dialogue, scientific discovery and enrich learning, we provide our delegates with the opportunity to hear from a diverse range of views and presentations. All the speakers, panellists and participants views and comments are their own and not the established views of the College. Speakers should expect probing questions and healthy debate.

The College expects all content of event programmes, and the behaviour of the speakers and the delegates, to be professional, respectful and to uphold the College values.

The College does not endorse any programme content or behaviour displaying any form of prejudice or discrimination.

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