The 2022 UKPHR Annual Practitioner Conference will be held on Wednesday 5 October as a virtual event. You can take a look at the programme here.
The UKPHR Annual Practitioner Conference 2021 was run over two days in April and we were delighted to welcome friends and colleagues from across the UKPHR community. The theme for Day One focused on Covid-19 challenges and how public health practitioners responded. Day Two looked at the future after COVID and what happens next.
Click here to view the programme from Day 1 – 22nd April
Click here to view the programme from Day 2 – 29th April
Watch the on demand sessions below
Day One
Click on each presentation below to download a pdf copy:
Supporting our Public Health Heroes: Creating a campaign to promote practitioner registration: Liz Bell, PR Consultant
Looking after your own and your colleagues’ mental health and wellbeing: Nike Arowobusoye, Consultant in Public Health, Richmond and Wandsworth Councils
The resources available to support you in your work: Em Rahman, Head of Public Health Workforce Development Programmes, HEE Wessex & Deb Lear, Head of Public Health Workforce Development Programmes, Health Education England, working across the south west
Why some communities are more at risk from COVID-19 than others: Jenny Douglas, Senior Lecturer in Health Promotion in the Faculty of Wellbeing, Education and Language Studies, Open University, and UKPHR Board Member
Day Two
Click on each presentation below to download a pdf copy:
A look back at public health planning in Scotland: Tim Andrew, Organisational Lead for Strategy &
Change, Public Health Scotland
What’s happening in England with the changes to its public health system: Maggie Rae, President of
the Faculty of Public Health
Ambition, drive and values, how we will help improve health and wellbeing and tackle inequalities : Christina Marriott, Chief Executive Officer, Royal Society for Public Health
Attitudes of employers to practitioner registration: Professor David Evans, University of West England and UKPHR Board member
Modern communications skills including how to address “fake news”: Patrick Burns, former BBC West Midlands Politics Editor
Public health workforce planning: David Kidney, former CEO, UKPHR
Preparing for the severe threat, pandemic, climate crisis or other: Tim Sims, International Programme Director, team coach, facilitator for UNICEF