Unconscious Bias within the workplace affects us all
The Paediatric Infectious Diseases team at University College London Hospital are hosting this training for the networks of people who care for Unaccompanied Asylum Seeking Children: Support/ Key workers, foster carers, social workers and members of Looked After Children teams. The aim of the training is to inform you why we carry out infectious screening, how our service works, and how you can support our service. Cademy will send you a link for the Teams meeting once you have registered. Please disseminate these events in your networks. For more information and queries please contact Joanna Martin, Specialist Nurse: joanna.martin8@nhs.net.
This course is specifically for Sunbelt Rentals team members. This module covers the requirements for TExT and how to carry out the Thorough Examination and Test process for on-tool dust extraction machines. To complete the training you will need a working knowledge of machinery and have operated or completed Combined Inspections and Tests (PAT) on machines.
Sharing and networking session to discuss this year's campaigns & events plans for Light up a Life (or name used) plans for appeals, switch-on events, services, and marketing. Session aimed at those working in individual giving, in-memory, events, and marcomms roles.
In this webinar, Bev Clough and Laura Pritchard-Jones will introduce their new edited collection, Mental Capacity Law, Sexual Relations, and Intimacy (Bristol University Press). Questions as to the mental capacity of an individual to consent to sex are an increasingly important aspect of legal scholarship and professional practice for those working in care. The Supreme Court judgment in Re JB added new layers of complexity, requiring that a person must be able to understand that the other person needs to consent and can withdraw that consent. While this has been welcomed for asserting the importance of the interpersonal dynamics of sex, it has significant implications for practice and for the day-to-day lives of people with cognitive impairments. We will give an overview of what prompted the collection, and reflect on the themes that emerge through the chapters. We will also reflect on how law has developed since the decision in Re JB and some of the remaining problems this poses.