Grants & Awards
John Snow Anaesthesia Intercalated Awards
Applications and submission details on https://www.niaa.org.uk/john-snow-anaesthesia-intercalated-awards
Previous years’ awards from NACCS
- 2025- Zainab Alani (University of Glasgow) awarded £2000 – Investigating the Creation and Validation of Dynamic Prediction Models in the Traumatic Brain Injury Domain
- 2024 – Morven Minns (University of Glasgow) awarded £2000 – A Clinical Investigation into the Variation of Paediatric Intracranial Pressure Waveforms in Traumatic Brain Injury Patients
- 2023 – David Crane (Queen Mary University of London) awarded £2000 – Mode of anaesthesia and blood pressure variability after mechanical thrombectomy
- 2022 – Amarah Saeed (University of Glasgow) awarded £2000 – A Clinical Evaluation of Variation in Paediatric Intracranial Pressure Waveforms
- 2021 – None
- 2020 – None
- 2019 – Nika Cujkevic-Plecko (University of Edinburgh) awarded £1000 – Hypothesis: Targeted temperature management (TTM) improves outcomes by preventing pyrexia, however TTM is associated with changes in cerebral blood flow which could be detrimental
- 2019 – Clare Hannon (University of Leicester) awarded £1000 – An Investigation into the use of Transcranial Doppler as an intra-operative neuromonitoring technique during cardiopulmonary bypass in paediatric congenital heart surgery


The Society for Neuroscience in Anesthesiology and Critical Care (SNACC) offers an award for the highest ranked abstract submitted to the SNACC annual meeting by a medical student, graduate student, resident, or fellow each year who is a member of NACCS. The opportunity for special recognition at the SNACC annual meeting and receive a non-monetary award goes to the author who presents their work in-person at the meeting
To qualify, candidates should be either a medical student, resident, graduate student, clinical fellow or post-doctoral fellow at the time of the annual meeting and must be the presenting author of an abstract accepted for presentation at the SNACC annual meeting.