Probity and ethics in Healthcare: Practice with Integrity

Patient First: Ethical Problem-Solving for Healthcare Professionals

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Probity and ethics in Healthcare: Practice with Integrity

What You Will Learn!

  • Probity
  • Dishonesty
  • Medical practice
  • Medical council

Description

KINDLY DO NOT FORGET TO EXPLORE SIMILAR THEMED COURSES OFFERED BY OUR ACADEMY AT AFFORDABLE RATES.



  • Self reflection and insights for healthcare professionals


  • Confidentiality and communication- healthcare professionals


  • Ensuring a similar mistake/misconduct wont happen for a HCP.


  • Mastering Person-centre Communication and Behaviour for HCPs


  • How to avoid a complaint or investigation for HCPs ?


  • Consent and shared decision-making for healthcare profession


  • Documentation & Record Keeping for Healthcare Professionals


  • Effective communication for healthcare professionals

  • Improving your listening skills as Dr/Nurse with evaluation

  • Probity and ethics for healthcare professionals


  • Consent & shared decision-making for Healthcare Professional

  • Master Communication Strategies for HCPs with evaluation

  • The ultimate guide to Ethics and Ethical standards for HCPs




In healthcare, probity refers to the quality of being honest and trustworthy. It is essential for healthcare professionals to maintain probity in their practice to ensure the safety and well-being of their patients. Dishonesty, on the other hand, refers to the act of being deceitful or fraudulent. When healthcare professionals engage in dishonest behavior, it can have serious consequences for their patients, their colleagues, and the healthcare system as a whole.

The importance of maintaining probity in healthcare cannot be overstated. Patients rely on healthcare professionals to provide them with accurate information, safe treatments, and compassionate care. If healthcare professionals act dishonestly, they can undermine patient trust, compromise patient safety, and cause harm. Furthermore, dishonest behavior can also damage the reputation of the healthcare profession and the healthcare system as a whole.


This particular course has been designed for healthcare professionals such as doctors, dentists, nurses, midwives, pharmacists, osteopaths, chiropractors, psychologists, physiotherapists, and others. The program focuses on providing specialized training courses in Probity and Ethics to these professionals. Clinicians attend these courses either for professional development or for appraisal/re-validation purposes, or if they are facing any investigation or proceedings with regulatory bodies such as the GMC, GDC, NMC, GPhC, GOSC, GCC, MPTS, or any other.


The courses are conducted by experienced facilitators who have worked in both the NHS and private healthcare sectors. The facilitators are well-versed with the processes of GMC investigations and the MPTS, which helps build insight, reflection, and remediation if clinicians are facing any complaints or investigations in their respective departments or with regulatory bodies.


The course aims to enhance the knowledge and understanding of probity and ethics, as well as the professional and ethical standards expected from healthcare professionals. It also helps clinicians learn what to do in case of a breach and avoid situations of misconduct and fitness to practice.


Moreover, the organisation also arranges face-to-face (via video-link) courses on a personal basis. The topics covered in the courses include Probity, Ethics, and Professionalism, the standards of which are expected from healthcare professionals by regulatory bodies such as GMC, GDC, NMC, or HCPC. The course content also highlights the importance of ethics, probity, and professionalism in healthcare practice and includes case examples of healthcare professionals who have had cases with their respective professional bodies, which provide valuable lessons to learn from.


Finally, the course delivery is focused on clinicians who are facing any investigation, hearing, or case in their departments or with regulators such as GMC, GDC, NMC, HCPC, or other healthcare regulatory bodies. The aim is to ensure that clinicians are meeting the expectations of regulatory bodies, avoid situations of misconduct, and demonstrate that any similar mistake or misconduct will not be repeated in the future.


Who Should Attend!

  • Nurse
  • Physician
  • Healthcare professionals
  • Physiologist

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Tags

  • Medical Billing

Subscribers

56

Lectures

18

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