Skip to main content
Cross discipline image

Dr Sian Jaggar

Consultant anaesthetist

Dr Sian Jagger is a consultant anaesthetist based at Royal Brompton Hospital. 

Specialty
Critical care and anaesthesia
Spoken Languages
English

Biography

Dr Sian Jaggar specialises in adult and paediatric cardiothoracic anaesthesia and pain relief. She has a particular interest in education as a tool to enhance understanding between different working groups.

As part of her training, Dr Jaggar spent a year at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto, Canada, as a paediatric intensive care unit (PICU) international fellow.

Teaching 

Dr Jaggar is the Royal College deputy regional advisor for the North West Thames region, and also the lead for less than full-time trainees in this region.  She is also the deputy regional advisor and less than full-time training advisor for Imperial School of Anaesthesia, London.  

She regularly hosts international fellows - most recently training a student from Tanzania. She is also currently an examiner for primary Fellows of the Royal College of Anaesthetists (FRCA).

At Royal Brompton Hospital, she is the coordinator for the management training programme for senior trainees, coordinator for the governance training programme, and a member of the SPRinT multidisciplinary training team. 

Dr Jaggar is a regular speaker for the Specialists in Pain International Network (SPIN) group, which organises travel to less developed countries, or those countries facing healthcare challenges, for conferences in association with the Royal Society of Medicine and local groups in the field of pain and analgesia. She regularly teaches abroad as part of the pain education charity and in 2013, she travelled to conferences in Kenya and Rwanda to teach multidisciplinary groups there.

 "Most events take place in less developed European countries and aim to improve dialogue between different regions on the subject of education in pain relief."

Publications

Dr Jaggar is editor of Core Topics in Pain for Cambridge University Press, is a regular reviewer for the Journal of Clinical Monitoring and Computing and has written chapters for several books. Most recently she co-edited An Introduction to Clinical Governance and Patient Safety (Oxford University Press, 2010).

She regularly writes for various publications in the fields of pain relief and cardiothoracic anaesthesia.