Introduction to Humanitarian Healthcare Course

Free course developed in partnership with UK-Med.

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Introduction To Humanitarian Healthcare Course

Introduction to Humanitarian Healthcare Course - FREE ACCESS ONLINE

As an organisation dedicated to supporting the professional development of those working within humanitarian healthcare, we are offering free access to our course for a limited period of time.

Register for free below, log into your RCSEd account and submit the registration form.

Register here
Introduction To Humanitarian Healthcare Course

To access this course, you will need an account with RCSEd. If you do not have an account, please create one here.



Purpose of the Course

The content of the course will help you identify and explore the key elements and agencies in Humanitarian Healthcare and their place within the humanitarian response framework. You will learn how best to adapt your clinical skills to the humanitarian environment and what you need to do to be ready to deploy to a humanitarian emergency as a health professional. Covering introductory material in an online format will allow for deploying agencies to focus more time and attention on key training required for deployment that may be delivered face to face or virtually.


Who is the Course for

This course is aimed at those who are interested in commencing or developing a career, paid or voluntary, in humanitarian healthcare. Our desired outcome is to help those who are interested to make an informed decision as to their suitability by clearly outlining the realities and complexities of working in the field. As well as providing a suitable framework for reflecting on previous deployments.

In addition, by offering this course as part of the FRRHH membership benefit it is hoped that you will engage with the opportunity to join a wider humanitarian community in what we hope will become a professional home for humanitarian, remote and rural healthcare professionals that will improve the preparation and suitability of working in these environments.

The experience and skills set of humanitarian healthcare have many lessons to pass on to the wider medical community and we welcome engagement from all corners of the healthcare world. For example, the NHS Nightingale North West in Manchester drew from experiences of the UK-Med response to Ebola in West Africa.


Overseas humanitarian deployments can provide unparalleled exposure to the management of large-scale emergencies, which will inform and strengthen our preparedness and planning at home.

Professor Tony Redmond, OBE, Founder of UK-Med, Emeritus Professor of Emergency Medicine, Keele University and Professor of International Emergency Medicine, University of Manchester

Tony Redmond

Course Feedback 2021

Introduction To Humanitarian Healthcare Course Feedback 2021

Course Modules

The Introduction to Humanitarian Healthcare course is divided into four modules. Click below to learn more.

Each module has a set of learning objectives and accompanying resources for you to explore; including book chapters, reports, journal articles and video material. The resources are divided into Need to know and Nice to know to help you understand those which are key to your understanding and those that will provide additional information should you wish to explore a subject in more depth. You are encouraged to expand your study resources with your own additional reading – and use references from within the resources to further explore a subject area that particularly interests you. You may also find these resources helpful in the future, to reference back to, if and when you find yourself deployed.

The modules have all been developed by practitioners with field experience which has been brought to the module content with real life examples from situations they have faced during deployments to countries across the globe. By the end of the course it is hoped you will feel inspired to further explore the Humanitarian Health sector. The course includes details of key organisations involved in humanitarian health responses for you to approach if you are considering deploying either in the short or longer term.

At the end of each module there is an assessment of your understanding and recollection of some of the key messages. This is not a pass/fail exercise and no marks will be awarded - one or more of the answers may be correct. After you select your response, you will see an explanation of what we consider to be the correct response. Where appropriate, there will also be a reference to the relevant section in the course content or to further reading. When you have worked through all module content and completed the short assessments, you will be eligible for a Certificate of Completion of the course.

One of the biggest challenges for any health professional – which ever discipline you come from - is to take your skills and training and adapt these to unfamiliar situations. The challenge is even greater during a disaster, when you are under pressure to respond very quickly, and often on a massive scale. The more you can do to think through how you will respond now, ahead of deployment; the greater will be your ability to respond effectively when the time comes.

This Introduction to Humanitarian Healthcare course is intended to be enjoyable and while it might raise questions for you it should also provide answers and further options for research and learning.


Assessment, Evaluation and Certificates



Acknowledgments

The Faculty of Remote, Rural and Humanitarian Healthcare and UK-Med would like to thank the following subject matter experts for their contribution to the development of this course:

  • Professor Tony Redmond OBE
  • Dr Najeeb Rahman
  • Michelle Hanegaard
  • Dr Anisa Jafar

If you have any issues or questions, please do not hesitate to contact frrhh@rcsed.ac.uk or call 0131 527 1648.

For more information on the course, see our FAQ guide.