Homeless and Inclusion Health Network Meeting

Homeless and Inclusion Health Network Meeting

Free online network meeting organised by The QICN for healthcare professionals working in the homeless and inclusion health sector.

By The Queen's Institute of Community Nursing

Date and time

Thu, 8 May 2025 07:00 - 08:30 PDT

Location

Online

About this event

  • Event lasts 1 hour 30 minutes

The QICN's Homeless and Inclusion Health Network meetings are an opportunity for people working within the sector to come together monthly to connect and give service updates on what’s happening around the country. Nurses working with the homeless population, asylum seekers, refugees, and the GRTBS (gypsy, roma, traveller, boater, and showman) communities are welcome to join.


It is a place to share good practice, challenges, ideas for innovation, discuss looking at policy, hear/give presentations, etc. and get advice and support from others. We welcome anyone working in the sector.


Sign up to this meeting for an engaging discussion featuring Sarah Jarvis, a clinical lead in substance misuse and a vital member of the Health in Justice Community of Practice. Sarah will share valuable insights from her extensive experience, highlighting the key components that make a community of practice effective. Additionally, we will hear from Caitlin McCullen, a lead nurse who will discuss her initiatives to upskill mental health nurses through physical health examination techniques, ultimately enhancing patient care.


Explore all QICN events: www.qicn.org.uk/news-and-events/events/


Any questions? Please email us at hih@qicn.org.uk


Organised by

The Queen’s Institute of Community Nursing is a registered charity dedicated to improving the nursing care of people in the home and community.

We promote excellent nursing care for everyone, where and when they need it, provided by nurses and their teams with specific skills and knowledge.

The QICN is the oldest professional nursing organisation in the UK and believed to be the oldest nursing charity in the world*.

The charity was originally founded to organise the training of District Nurses and this was its core function until the 1960s, in a model that was copied across the world. It was instrumental in developing a comprehensive, highly-skilled service to meet the healthcare needs of millions of people every year and is one of the pillars of the National Health Service.

Find out more: www.q