This July, our Practice Case Reviews SIG is meeting, with presentations from Diane Rhoden and Joanne Harrison, to discuss local perspectives and experiences after the tragic death of Arthur Labinjo-Hughes in 2020.
Diane Rhoden (Director of Nursing And Quality at NHS Birmingham and Solihull CCG) will share her experiences in regard to the Arthur review from a Solihull perspective. And Joanne Harrison (Assistant Director of Nursing) will give a wider system view.
We also welcome Dr Ruth Skelton, Consultant Paediatrician, Designated Doctor for Child Protection, Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust to give a local perspective on the Star Hobson case.
Ticket Type | Price | Cart |
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Members - Practice Case Reviews SIG - Arthur: Local Perspectives and Experiences | £0.00 | |
Non Members - Practice Case Reviews SIG - Arthur: Local Perspectives and Experiences | £15.00 |
Director of Nursing And Quality at NHS Birmingham and Solihull CCG.
Joanne Harrison is the Assistant Director for Safeguarding at NHS England and NHS Improvement, Midlands; as well as a Doctoral candidate at the University of Nottingham, School of Health Sciences.
She has a BSc in Community Nursing (Public Health - Health Visiting), a MSc in Health Care Education, holds a Post Graduate Diploma in Education and is a qualified in workplace coaching.
Joanne joined NHS England in August 2013, initially with the East Midlands Midwifery and Children’s Strategic Clinical Network before taking the position of Head of Quality in the Central Midlands Nursing and Quality Directorate in May 2015. Joanne commenced the role of Head of Safeguarding in October 2016 and with this took over the chair ship of the Looked After Children’s subgroup of the National Safeguarding Steering Group until 2021.
With a background of 30 years’ experience of working within the NHS, Joanne originally qualified as a Registered General Nurse, Midwife, Health Visitor and Practice Educator, she has worked clinically across the East and West Midlands areas and has worked latterly as a children’s community services provider manager. Joanne has undertaken work with the Department of Health, being the author of the Department of Health’s National Framework for Commissioning, Education and Clinical Practice of Practice Teachers. With experience in service development and project management, she has led/been part of large scale service / health system redesign programmes and reviews.
Joanne’s PhD is focusing on professional regulation in nursing, specifically nurse’s perceptions and experiences of the Nursing and Midwifery Council Revalidation approach, engaging with the neo-Weberian approach to sociology of professions as the theoretical framework.
I think Child Abuse Review has gone from strength to strength and is of a consistently high standard. We have held numerous events that have been inspiring and enabling, such as the most recent Congresses and the Trainer's conference and award ceremony, the seminars to disseminate lessons from Serious Case Reviews. As resources get ever tighter, professionals have fewer and fewer opportunities to come together to exchange ideas and to learn together. We move more and more into silos because of work pressures. This is not the way to keep children safe. Association of Child Protection Professionals is needed to bring people concerned about child protection together to learn, to think, to shape policy and practice and to disseminate research. No-one else does this.