Location: West Midlands
Venue: The ICC, Birmingham
Date: 1st and 2nd November 2011
1 – 2 November 2011
The ICC, Birmingham
Broad Street
Birmingham
B1 2EA
www.napcannual.co.uk
Overview
With primary care at the heart of the new NHS structure, working effectively with other sectors is vital.
This conference is the call to action for everybody seeking clarity on the rapidly evolving healthcare policy revolution in the NHS.
Embrace the new role as drivers of NHS reform and get the mechanisms in place to ensure success.
Why attend?
• Make a success of clinical commissioning
• Identify key priorities for primary care in 2012
• Be ready for CQC inspection
• Prepare for tougher QOF targets
• Meet the challenges of the QIPP agenda
• Collaborate with secondary care
• Develop whole-systems approaches to delivering local care
• Collate and use information successfully
Who should attend:-
• GPs and practice managers and GP registrars
• Consortium staff
• Local authority staff, public health leads, directors of social care
• Health managers and PCT cluster staff
• Secondary care clinicians
• Community service staff, including nurses, pharmacists and opticians
*Book before 30 September and get £35 off*
Further Information
Web: http://www.napcannual.co.uk/
NAPC Annual Conference 2011
Location: West Midlands Venue: The ICC, Birmingham Date: 1st and 2nd November 2011
October 20, 2011 in Events
More from Community Care
Related articles:
Featured jobs
Workforce Insights
- Working with perpetrators of domestic abuse: training social workers to have challenging conversations
- Extending support: the importance of reflective supervision beyond the ASYE
- ‘It’s hopeful work’: social work in an adults’ mental health team
- Podcast: supporting adults with learning disabilities and autism post-pandemic
- ‘There aren’t many roles where you get to take a child on holiday’: the benefits of residential care work
- Workforce Insights – showcasing a selection of the sector’s top recruiters
Community Care Inform
Latest stories
Finley Boden: professionals should have protected baby murdered by his parents, review finds
Regulator calls for consistency of support for NQSWs as DfE develops children’s early career framework
Leadership training programme launched for PSWs, AMHP leads and principal OTs in adults’ services
Kent ‘extremely close to capacity’ to care for unaccompanied asylum-seeking children
Comments are closed.