Martin W. Dünser is vice-director of the Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine of the Kepler University Hospital in Linz, Austria. He was trained in anesthesia, intensive care and emergency medicine and worked as an intensive care consultant in Bern (Switzerland), Salzburg (Austria) and London (United Kingdom). He is a pre-hospital emergency physician for the Austrian Red Cross and worked for London’s Air Ambulance. In addition to his clinical work, Dr. Dünser is interested in medical work in low- and middle-income countries and has been involved in field work in Africa and Asia. He was co-founder and chair of the Global Intensive Care working group of the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine (ESICM). He serves as co-chair of the Sepsis in Resource-Limited Nations initiative of the Surviving Sepsis Campaign. He was deputy chair and chair of the Trauma and Emergency Medicine section and is a past member of the Research as well as the Congress Committeeof the ESICM. Dr. Dünser is a reviewer for numerous journals and author of over 180 scientific articles.
Daniel Dankl is consultant at the Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine of the
Paracelsus Medical University
in Salzburg/Austria. He was trained in internal medicine, intensive care medicine, emergency medicine and anaesthesia in Rheine/Germany, Wels/Austria and Salzburg/Austria. He also worked as a pre-hospital emergency physician for the Austrian Red Cross. Daniel has a special interest in the physical and ultrasound examination of the critically ill patient and renal replacement techniques in intensive care.
Sirak Petros is director of the Medical Intensive Care Unit and the Center of Haemostaseology at the University Hospital of Leipzig in Leipzig/Germany. After graduating in medicine from the Gondar College of Medical Sciences in Gondar/Ethiopia, he completed his residency in internal medicine at the University Hospital of Leipzig. Dr. Petros was trained in gastroenterology, intensive care medicine, emergency medicine, and haemostaseology. Since then he has worked as a consultant both in intensive care medicine and haemostaseology; he also served as director of the Comprehensive Hemophilia Care Center at the University Hospital of Leipzig. Mervyn Mer, MBBCh, Dip PEC (SA), FCP (SA), Pulmonology subspecialty, M Med (Int Med), Cert Critical Care (SA), FRCP (London), FCCP (USA), PhD, is a Principal Specialist in the Department of Medicine, Divisions of Critical Care and Pulmonology at the Charlotte Maxeke Johannesburg Academic Hospital and Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa. He is a specialist physician, pulmonologist and intensivist. Dr. Mer is a hands-on-clinician as well as being involved in various aspects of clinical research. He is the immediate Past President of the Critical Care Society of Southern Africa (CCSSA), having served three terms, current vice-President of the Southern African Society of Thrombosis and Haemostasis, and recently appointed Chairperson of the Global Intensive Care Working Group of the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine (ESICM). He has lectured widely on a global level and is a reviewer for several journals. Mervyn has been the recipient of several awards, amongst others, the Phillip V. Tobias and Convocation Clinical Award for Distinguished Teaching (highest teaching award offered by the Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand), the President’s Award of the Critical Care Society of Southern Africa (highest award offered by the CCSSA for outstanding contributions to Critical Care), and the Sam Naidoo Award for the best clinician, conferred by the Southern African Society of Thrombosis and Haemostasis. More recently, he was the first recipient of the Hilda Datnow Jacobson award (awarded to the most competent, caring and capable doctor in the profession, irrespective offield of interest).