Nov
16
to 17 Nov

3rd International Research Seminar: AIIHPC and EAPC Reference Group on Public Health and Palliative Care

  • Assembly Buildings Conference Centre (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

The third international seminar on Public Health Research in Palliative Care is being organised in partnership with the All-Ireland Institute of Hospice and Palliative Care (AIIHPC) and EAPC Reference Group on Public Health and Palliative Care. The theme of the seminar – A Human Rights based approach to Palliative Care: Towards Solutions for Public Health Palliative Care- is highly relevant as 2023 marks 75 years since the United Nations Declaration of Human Rights was proclaimed by the United Nationals General Assembly in Paris on the 10th December 1948. This was recognized as a milestone document in the history of human rights, and paved the way for many human rights treaties applied globally. This does, however, raise a number of questions for palliative care: To what extent has Palliative Care enabled a human rights based approach? What is the contribution of a public health approach to palliative care? What lessons can be learnt and subsequent future considerations for research? The COVID-19 pandemic was one of the most significant public health crises many of us will experience. This November seminar will present a key opportunity for researchers to come together to discuss public health palliative care research and debate some of these questions considering the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

For more information about this event, click here.

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Jul
10
to 11 Jul

Compassionate Cities Conference, Birmingham July 10th and 11th

Compassionate Cities Conference, Birmingham July 10th and 11th

Hosted by Compassionate Communities UK

An inspiring conference, bringing to light how people undergoing the experiences death, dying, loss and care can be supported as part of our culture, where everyone helps and everyone feels supported. Whilst compassionate cities have been in existence for over 15 years, this is the first conference to be dedicated to the different practices of how this can be implemented. Communities, workplaces, educational institutions, places of worship and other sectors can all come together to provide support and help to all involved. Palliative and end of life care services have an important role integrating with and supporting the development of these initiatives. The conference will highlight a wide array of fantastic practices of how this is done and how it benefits those involved. It will be a conference of inspiring working examples, not focussing on academic evaluation but rather on hearing the many ways in which support can be given. The conference is for those working in the field of palliative and end of life and those with personal experience alike.

Compassionate cities and compassionate communities are the major practice methods of public health palliative care. It can be difficult to see how palliative care practice can truly be for everyone, not excluding people by diagnosis, ethnicity, gender, homelessness, and other forms of structural inequity. The domination of a service provision perspective can inhibit the imagination of what is possible when death, dying, loss and caregiving becomes everyone’s responsibility.

The Compassionate City Conference brings to light what is possible into clear view. The aim of the conference is to demonstrate practice examples of the principles of compassionate cities, seeing how people’s experience of death, loss and care can be transformed through the support from the cities and communities in which they live.

The conference has internationally respected keynote speakers and breakout sessions of workshops and talks. Keynote speakers include Professor Allan Kellehear who started the field of public health palliative care. Always inspiring and fascinating to hear, Allan’s talk sums up the practice of compassionate cities – Everything, Everywhere, All at Once. Christian Ntizimira, a highly respected palliative care physician from Rwanda, will talk about Ubuntu, the African philosophy and practice of ‘a person is a person through others’, and its relationship to compassionate cities. This is particularly timely as Ubuntu features in the recently published The Lancet Commission on The Value of Death. Panels will be held on Equity, Diversity and Inclusion, on challenges and successes of compassionate cities and an international panel on global best practices of compassion.

The breakout sessions are packed with extraordinary examples of what is possible. Workshops include community support for grief and loss, the role of creativity, compassionate city programmes and many others.

Imagining support for everyone experiencing death, dying, loss and care can be challenging, but it is possible and transformative when the practice examples are done well. Alongside loss there is love, courage, and the building of friendships that can last for life.

We look forward to seeing you there!

Attendence at the conference is in person. On line attendance is possible and streaming will be from the main room alone.

To book, here.

Dr Julian Abel

Director Compassionate Communities UK and chair of organising committee

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May
31
12:00 pm12:00

EAPC Webinar: The Case for Public Health Palliative Care

The EAPC Reference Group on Public Health and Palliative Care are presenting this free webinar on 31 May 2023. The webinar will start at 2pm (CEST) / 12 p.m. (GMT).

‘The Case for Public Health Palliative Care’ will feature presentations from Julian Abel (UK), Julia Verne (UK and Phil Larkin (Switzerland).

You can register to attend this event by clicking here.

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May
3
10:00 am10:00

Compassionate Connectors Program – A distinct form of end-of-life volunteering

May 3, 2023, from 6 to 7:30 a.m. ET

The Compassionate Connectors Program is a volunteer-led initiative designed to enhance the social networks of families living with chronic or life-limiting illnesses. Specially trained volunteers supported existing members of the families’ networks and also enlisted the support of community members, Caring Helpers, to address the social and practical needs of these families thus contributing to building the capacity of the community. This webinar will explore the research completed by The South West Compassionate Communities Network in Western Australia in partnership with the health service.

This session, co-hosted by Public Health Palliative Care International, will describe the development, implementation and evaluation of this distinct form of volunteering, the outcomes and effectiveness analysis, the feedback from Connectors, supported families and referring healthcare providers and the translation into practice and policy. We encourage you to review the open-access research papers linked below.

Compassionate community connectors: a distinct form of end-of-life volunteering

‘The more you give, the better it is for you. You know the reward is greater than the effort’: the Compassionate Communities Connectors’ experience

The Compassionate Communities Connectors model for end-of-life care: implementation and evaluation

Presenters:

Professor Samar Aoun

Perron institute Research Chair in Palliative Care, University of Western Australia and Perron Institute

Adjunct Professor La Trobe University

Chair, South West Compassionate Communities Network.

Adjunct Professor Bruce Rumbold

School of Psychology and Public Health at La Trobe University.

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Dec
19
2:00 pm14:00

5th COCO Seminar - The Value of Death

Please click on the below flyer to be taken to the registration page for this event.

Please note the starting time of 3:00 p.m. Central European Time (2:00 p.m. Greenwich Mean Time)

The VUB Compassionate Communities centre of expertise (COCO) is pleased to invite you to their 5th open seminar. This seminar is entirely dedicated to the Lancet Commission's 2022 report on the Value of Death.

Death, dying, and loss are universal human experiences, but the contention of the Lancet Commission is that they have become unfamiliar, disconnected, and unbalanced.

The story of dying in the 21st century is a story of paradox. COVID-19 has meant people have died the ultimate medicalised deaths, often alone in hospitals with little communication with their families. But in other settings, including in some lower income countries, many people remain undertreated, dying of preventable conditions and without access to basic pain relief. The unbalanced and contradictory picture of death and dying is the basis for the Lancet Commission on the Value of Death. Drawing on multidisciplinary perspectives from around the globe, the Commissioners argue that death and life are bound together: without death there would be no life. The Commission proposes a new vision for death and dying, with greater community involvement alongside health and social care services, and increased bereavement support.

In this seminar, we invite Lancet Commission members Dr. Libby Sallnow (UK) and Dr. Afsan Bhadelia (US) to guide us through the implications of their report and engage in discussion with us about the implications and value of death and end of life in our own disciplines, fields of work or sectors of society.

The seminar will take place on Monday 19 December 2022, from 15h to 16h30 (CET). It will be held digitally via Zoom. Participation is free, but registration is obligatory. There are 100 slots available. Those interested in joining can register via this link.

Ahead of this seminar, you can listen to our speakers’ recent appearance on the Public Health Disrupted Podcast episode on ‘Dignity, decency and dying’.

Please pass this on through your networks!

PS: The report of the Lancet Commission on the Value of Death can be consulted here.

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Jul
7
9:30 pm21:30

The Lancet Commission on the Value of Death: bringing death back into life

Over the past 60 years, dying has moved from the family and community setting to become primarily the concern of health systems. Bringing together experts in health and social care, social science, economics, philosophy, political science, theology, community work, as well as patient and community activists, the Lancet Commission on the Value of Death analysed how societies around the world perceive death and care for the dying, providing recommendations to policy makers, governments, civil society, and health and social care systems. This webinar will explore the realistic utopia described for how death and dying could be in the future and will help participants understand the relevance of the recommendations for their own context.

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Compassionate Communities Sustainability Guide - strengthening an initiatives' sustainability to achieve their desired impact
Feb
17
2:30 pm14:30

Compassionate Communities Sustainability Guide - strengthening an initiatives' sustainability to achieve their desired impact


This session will provide a look inside the guide covering topics like; social change, overview of best practices, and how to use the guide. The session will include an interactive section where participants will interact with the guide to address current barriers.


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Compassionate Communities Index and Death Literacy Index: Tools to increase your understanding
Nov
22
3:00 pm15:00

Compassionate Communities Index and Death Literacy Index: Tools to increase your understanding

Webinar: July 7, 2022
from £0.00

The Lancet Commission on the Value of Death: bringing death back into life

Description: Over the past 60 years, dying has moved from the family and community setting to become primarily the concern of health systems. Bringing together experts in health and social care, social science, economics, philosophy, political science, theology, community work, as well as patient and community activists, the Lancet Commission on the Value of Death analysed how societies around the world perceive death and care for the dying, providing recommendations to policy makers, governments, civil society, and health and social care systems. This webinar will explore the realistic utopia described for how death and dying could be in the future and will help participants understand the relevance of the recommendations for their own context.

Presenter: Dr. Libby Sallnow

Date: Thursday July 7th, 2022

Time: 4:30pm (Ottawa),

9:30pm (London),

6:30am Brisbane


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Learnings from two Compassionate Community initiatives on either side of the pond: Plymouth UK and Deva Nation US
Jun
23
7:00 am07:00

Learnings from two Compassionate Community initiatives on either side of the pond: Plymouth UK and Deva Nation US

In this webinar, two Compassionate Community initiatives at different stages will share their learnings. They will cover topics such as how they got started, what models they are using, how they engage key stakeholders, what their initiatives are currently doing and some key learnings.

The two initiatives are: Plymouth Compassionate City, UK and Deva Nation, USA

If you would like to attend this webinar, please register as there are only 50 spots available.

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Webinar: Dr. Libby Sallnow - Understanding and Evaluating Compassionate Community Initiatives
Nov
20
12:00 pm12:00

Webinar: Dr. Libby Sallnow - Understanding and Evaluating Compassionate Community Initiatives

Title: Understanding and Evaluating Compassionate Community Initiatives

Presenter: Dr. Libby Sallnow: Senior Clinical Lecturer, UCL, UK

Consultant in Palliative Medicine CNWL, London and Honorary Senior Clinical Lecturer, UCL

Theme:  Measurement and Evaluation

Audience: Compassionate Community initiatives

Date: November 20th 2018

Time: 12h00-1:30 London, UK

This webinar will cover ideas on how to understand and evaluate your Compassionate Community/City initiative. The techniques covered in this webinar are designed for initiatives who are using tools or frameworks to achieve Health Promotion Palliative Care,  such as the Compassionate City Charter. There will be time after the presentation for Dr. Sallnow to take questions as well.

To register, please click on the title of the webinar.

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