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1.
Perspect Public Health ; 144(3): 130-131, 2024 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38757940

Subject(s)
Public Health , Humans
3.
J Public Health (Oxf) ; 45(2): e215-e224, 2023 Jun 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36309802

ABSTRACT

In 2021, during a drug-related death crisis in the UK, the Government published its ten-year drugs strategy. This article, written in collaboration with the Faculty of Public Health and the Association of Directors of Public Health, assesses whether this Strategy is evidence-based and consistent with international calls to promote public health approaches to drugs, which put 'people, health and human rights at the centre'. Elements of the Strategy are welcome, including the promise of significant funding for drug treatment services, the effects of which will depend on how it is utilized by services and local commissioners and whether it is sustained. However, unevidenced and harmful measures to deter drug use by means of punishment continue to be promoted, which will have deleterious impacts on people who use drugs. An effective public health approach to drugs should tackle population-level risk factors, which may predispose to harmful patterns of drug use, including adverse childhood experiences and socioeconomic deprivation, and institute evidence-based measures to mitigate drug-related harm. This would likely be more effective, and just, than the continuation of policies rooted in enforcement. A more dramatic re-orientation of UK drug policy than that offered by the Strategy is overdue.


Subject(s)
Public Policy , Substance-Related Disorders , Humans , Public Health , Substance-Related Disorders/prevention & control , Government , United Kingdom
4.
J Public Health (Oxf) ; 43(3): e425-e426, 2021 09 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32249304

Subject(s)
Morals , Humans
9.
South Med J ; 99(6): 665-70, 2006 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16800438

ABSTRACT

This document discusses training for hospital and healthcare chaplains in the light of different UK standards applied by various interested parties. It considers the different standards and concludes that there is no single applied standard for training for National Health Service (NHS) hospital chaplains across the UK. Those models that do exist take differing approaches, with some basing their systems on normatively defined views of what a chaplain needs to be effective on functional (NHS managerial) or interpersonal (clinical pastoral) levels, while others take a more hybrid approach blending these approaches with doctrinal concerns. Equally, there is wide variation across different denominations and employers. This document seeks to identify where there is common ground on domains of competence for chaplaincy training and suggest some progress for training which fits into NHS structures and systems.


Subject(s)
Chaplaincy Service, Hospital/standards , Clergy/standards , Education, Professional/standards , Pastoral Care/education , Humans , Models, Educational , Professional Competence , State Medicine/standards , United Kingdom
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