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Risky Practice ConferenceSaturday, March 3, 2012 from 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM (GMT)London, United Kingdom |
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Event Details
Saturday, March 3, 2012
Conference fee: £110
Key note speeches from:
Red wine? Explorations of Different Concepts of Risk - Professor Stephen Tyreman
Stephen Tyreman is Dean of Osteopathic Education Development at the BSO and course leader for the Professional Doctorate in Osteopathy programme
How safe are we? – What sort of serious adverse events happen in UK osteopathy, and what should we be telling our patients? - Steve Vogel
Steve Vogel is Vice Principal (Research and Quality) at the BSO. He is currently the principle investigator on the “Clinical Risk, Osteopathy and Management (CROaM)” project funded by the General Osteopathic Council.
*JUST CONFIRMED* Patient safety incident reporting and learning -Haymo Thiel
Haymo Thiel is Vice-Principal and Associate Professor at the Anglo-European College of Chiropractic. His research interests are on the subjects of patient safety incident reporting, clinical risk management and treatment outcomes related to manual therapies of the cervical spine and he has developed the Chiropractic Patient Incident Reporting and Learning System
Positive complaints – how to establish an effective patient complaint system - Pippa Bark
Pippa Bark teaches at UCL, running the patient safety module and the masters dissertation programmes
How to manage patient expectations and treatment reactions - Tom Mars
Tom Mars is a practicing osteopath. Working as a research assistant at Queen Mary’s Barts and the London he has recently completed a published systematic review on adverse events in manual therapy.
Keeping out of trouble – the legal guide - Andrea Rasmussen
Andrea is a Solicitor and Team Leader of the Professional Negligence Department. Before qualifying as Solicitor in 2004, Andrea practised as an Osteopath for 11 years, running her own practice
With workshops on:
Preparing for revalidation – Fiona Browne
Fiona Browne is the Head of Professional Standards at the General Osteopathic Council, she previously worked at the General Medical Council (GMC) where she worked for eight years in regulatory functions including education and revalidation
Communicating risks and benefits effectively with patients – Pippa Bark
Pippa Bark teaches at UCL, running the patient safety module and the masters dissertation programmes
Promoting your practice and the ASA – Celia Champion
Celia Champion is Director and Business Coach at Painless Practice which helps complementary health practice owners bring simple business principles to their practices, and treat more patients as a result.
*JUST CONFIRMED* Risk and treating the cervical spine – Roger Kerry
Roger Kerry is the Associate Professor in the Division of Physiotherapy Education, University of Nottingham, specialising in cervical arterial dysfunction; risks and adverse events of manual therapy; neck pain and headache and clinical reasoning
A certificate will be provided to delegates for 7 CPD hours from this conference. The cost to attend is £110, with discounts for members of BSO faculty and alumni. Bookings can be made on this site or by visiting www.bso.ac.uk/cpd
If you have any queries or would like any further information about the conference, please don’t hesitate to get in touch. Please do also check our website (www.bso.ac.uk) for further information about CPD courses and conferences coming up.
When & Where
British School of Osteopathy
275 Borough High Street
SE1 1JE London
United Kingdom
Saturday, March 3, 2012 from 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM (GMT)
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Hosted By
British School of Osteopathy (BSO)
The British School of Osteopathy (BSO) is the UK’s oldest and largest school of osteopathy. Located at the heart of central London’s cultural and commercial life, the BSO is easily accessible via major transport networks. In 2010, the BSO was shortlisted in the Charity of the Year (income £1m+) category of the Charity Times awards.
Since 2008 the BSO has offered a Master of Osteopathy degree – an integrated undergraduate master’s programme validated by the University of Bedfordshire. The course has recognised qualification status which allows graduates to apply for registration with the General Osteopathic Council, a legal requirement for anyone practicing as an osteopath in the UK.
The BSO also has a pioneering osteopathic research department supporting research at all levels, including undergraduate. It houses one of the best osteopathic libraries in the world, consulted by health care practitioners worldwide.