# Be-SNAP: the Belgian Sepsis National Action Plan

**Authors:** Annelies Mondelaers, Febe Van de Voorde, Harlinde Peperstraete, Ken Dewitte, Jan De Waele, Ilse Malfait, Patrick Van de Voorde, Erika Vlieghe

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2025.1575502 · Frontiers in Public Health · 2025-07-01

## TL;DR

Belgium is developing a national sepsis action plan to address the high incidence and impact of sepsis through evidence-based recommendations.

## Contribution

The paper introduces Belgium's first comprehensive national sepsis action plan, Be-SNAP, based on multidisciplinary collaboration and tailored recommendations.

## Key findings

- Belgium experiences over 40,952 sepsis cases annually, resulting in thousands of premature deaths and significant economic costs.
- A multidisciplinary working group developed seven key topics for sepsis prevention and care, including awareness, prevention, and surveillance.
- The Be-SNAP document was externally reviewed and aims to reduce the sepsis burden through implementation in diverse healthcare settings.

## Abstract

Sepsis represents a significant healthcare challenge in Belgium with an estimated 40,952 cases annually (95% CI 31,938–54,451). This life-threatening condition leads to approximately 7,675 premature deaths per year (95% CI 6,421–9,089) and a loss of 38,106 quality-adjusted life years. The economic impact is substantial with annual costs ranging from €277 million to €4.3 billion. Despite this impact, Belgium lacks a national sepsis plan until present date. Following requests from diverse professional and patient organizations yielding public and political attention, the federal minister of Health requested a scientific advice to be written (November 2023–May 2024), as a basis for a national sepsis plan. This article describes Belgium’s approach to developing a National Sepsis Action Plan, highlighting evidence-based and contextualized key recommendations aimed at reducing the sepsis burden by building on existing initiatives. A multidisciplinary working group was established, including representatives of healthcare workers and professional societies representing relevant disciplines in first, second and tertiary health care settings, home care and long-term care facilities. In addition, input was sought from public health actors and experts (e.g., surveillance, vaccination programs) and patient organizations. A Haddon matrix was made and seven key topics were specified: (1) awareness, (2) prevention, (3) early warning, (4) patient management, (5) post-sepsis rehabilitation, (6) advanced care planning and (7) surveillance and research. For each item, core group members were defined. Each group conducted literature reviews and developed recommendations tailored to the Belgian healthcare system, with consensus achieved during plenary sessions. The final document was externally reviewed by national and international experts. This is the first document addressing comprehensively sepsis prevention and care in Belgium, in its diverse presentations across the community and healthcare system. The next critical steps will involve the establishment of an implementation team and design of a detailed implementation plan.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Sepsis (MESH:D018805)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

206 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12259572/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12259572