This is an exciting opportunity for an enthusiastic trainee to gain experience and develop clinical skills in Paediatric Immunology & Infectious Diseases that could contribute to Paediatric Infectious Diseases SPIN competencies. Leeds Childrens Hospital hosts more specialities under one roof than any other Childrens Hospital in the UK bar Great Ormond Street Hospital, including PICU, paediatric neurology and neurosurgery (including non-syndromic craniofacial surgery), paediatric cardiology and cardiothoracic surgery, paediatric hepatology and nephrology, including liver and renal transplants, paediatric gastroenterology, paediatric haematology and oncology, including bone marrow transplantation for malignant and non-malignant haematology, paediatric respiratory medicine, paediatric rheumatology, paediatric general surgery including thoracic surgery, orthopaedics including spinal surgery and regional major trauma centre designation, paediatric ENT, level 3 neonatology including neonatal surgery, paediatric endocrinology, paediatric allergy, and busy general paediatrics. The range of infection issues generated by this breadth of specialities presents fantastic PIID learning opportunities. The current Paediatric Infectious Diseases service provides inpatient consultations, regional telephone advice, weekly TB clinics, fortnightly HIV clinics, weekly general infection clinics, with input into the Childrens Hospital infection prevention and control team, and trust wide antimicrobial stewardship group. We have a clinical nurse specialist in paediatric HIV, and there is a quarterly young adult HIV clinic. Paediatric immunology covers inpatient consults, support for children and young people post BMT in Newcastle, support and training for CYP receiving subcutaneous immunoglobulin therapy, and a monthly multispeciality primary immunodeficiency clinic, supported by adult immunology and visiting consultants from our supraregional quaternary paediatric immunology centre in Newcastle. Children with recurrent infections without strong suspicion of primary immunodeficiency are also seen in the general infection clinic. Two clinical nurse specialists support the service.