Post by Denise on Aug 20, 2010 10:01:24 GMT
Human rights and health and social care
22 September
This one day course aims to demonstrate how human rights principles and standards can be used in practical ways to support the delivery of improved, more person-centred care and strengthen existing work on equality and diversity. It will share learning from the national project ‘Human Rights in Healthcare’, led by the Department of Health in partnership with BIHR and five NHS Trusts, which has been testing the assumption that human rights can lead to improved standards of care since 2006. For a full course brief and agenda please visit:www.bihr.org.uk/events/training/human-rights-and-health-and-social-care
'Very good, informative and practical. I feel I can use it to great effect in my work. One of the best courses I’ve been on.'
Previous participant
For further information regarding this course please follow the link above, or contact me via email or phone call. And please feel free to disseminate this information to any colleagues, networks and contacts of yours whom you think would find this course of interest.
This session is the first of four human rights training courses delivered by BIHR this autumn. The other three courses are:
Human rights and policing 20 October
Using human rights to tackle poverty 10 November
Human rights at home: transforming services, changing lives 7 December
BIHR's Director, Katie Ghose, recently wrote an article in the Guardian concerning how human rights can help to tackle the current spending cuts, which you may find of interest:
www.guardian.co.uk/society/2010/jul/07/human-rights-spending-cuts-people
BIHR also delivers in-house human rights training sessions for Public Sector and Voluntary / Charitable Sector organisations. To find out more please follow this link:
www.bihr.org.uk/training-and-consultancy
With Best wishes,
Ed Wilcox
Training and Consultancy Assistant
British Institute of Human Rights
7th Floor, Melbourne House
46 Aldwych
London WC2B 4LL
Main: 020 7848 1818 | Direct: 020 7848 1816 | Fax: 020 7848 1814
ewilcox@bihr.org.uk
http://www.bihr.org.uk
22 September
This one day course aims to demonstrate how human rights principles and standards can be used in practical ways to support the delivery of improved, more person-centred care and strengthen existing work on equality and diversity. It will share learning from the national project ‘Human Rights in Healthcare’, led by the Department of Health in partnership with BIHR and five NHS Trusts, which has been testing the assumption that human rights can lead to improved standards of care since 2006. For a full course brief and agenda please visit:www.bihr.org.uk/events/training/human-rights-and-health-and-social-care
'Very good, informative and practical. I feel I can use it to great effect in my work. One of the best courses I’ve been on.'
Previous participant
For further information regarding this course please follow the link above, or contact me via email or phone call. And please feel free to disseminate this information to any colleagues, networks and contacts of yours whom you think would find this course of interest.
This session is the first of four human rights training courses delivered by BIHR this autumn. The other three courses are:
Human rights and policing 20 October
Using human rights to tackle poverty 10 November
Human rights at home: transforming services, changing lives 7 December
BIHR's Director, Katie Ghose, recently wrote an article in the Guardian concerning how human rights can help to tackle the current spending cuts, which you may find of interest:
www.guardian.co.uk/society/2010/jul/07/human-rights-spending-cuts-people
BIHR also delivers in-house human rights training sessions for Public Sector and Voluntary / Charitable Sector organisations. To find out more please follow this link:
www.bihr.org.uk/training-and-consultancy
With Best wishes,
Ed Wilcox
Training and Consultancy Assistant
British Institute of Human Rights
7th Floor, Melbourne House
46 Aldwych
London WC2B 4LL
Main: 020 7848 1818 | Direct: 020 7848 1816 | Fax: 020 7848 1814
ewilcox@bihr.org.uk
http://www.bihr.org.uk