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Programme - Making Scotland a Healthier Place

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Conference <strong>Programme</strong>Heads up for Public HealthInspiration, Integration & InnovationHeads up for Public HealthInspiration, Integration & Innovation<strong>Programme</strong>On behalf of the Faculty of Public Health I would like to welcomeyou to Crieff Hydro Hotel for the Scottish Annual Public HealthConference.The conference theme is ‘Heads Up for Public Health: Inspiration,integration and innovation’.You will see from the programme that the theme has stimulateda wide range of papers and posters reporting on research andinnovation across all the domains of public health practice.In the continuing financial restraint within the public sector,it is important that the public health community remains atthe forefront of new ways of thinking and working to improveoutcomes in the health of the population. The economiccircumstances of today might inhibit taking the longer viewand it is vital that the benefits of preventive approaches areemphasised. The conference hopes to stimulate this approachand I hope this will be achieved through what I believe is anoutstanding programme based around a range of stimulatingplenary speakers. I would especially thank the members of theCommittee without whose hard work, energy, innovation andenthusiasm this event would not happen.We would also like to thank our sponsors and exhibitors for theirsupport this year, for which we are very grateful, especially as wefind ourselves in difficult economic times. I am also delighted thatwe have been successful in attracting new sponsors. Please usethe opportunity to talk to them and your colleagues from aroundthe country.I hope that you will not only enjoy this year’s event and thecharming setting in Crieff but I hope the event will provideyou with new information and contacts to strengthen yourcontribution to improving public health in <strong>Scotland</strong> over thecoming year.Edward CoyleChair of Conference Steering CommitteeDay 1 Thursday 8 November 201209:30 – 10:15 Registration and Coffee10:15 – 10:25 Welcome and Introduction10:25 – 10:45 Plenary 1: Ministerial AddressChair: Emilia Crighton, Faculty of Public HealthMichael Matheson, Minister for Public Health, ScottishGovernmentDay 2 Friday 9 November 201108:30 – 09:00 Registration and Coffee09:05 – 09:10 Welcome and Introduction09:10 – 09:45 Plenary 5: FPH Annual Lecture/DARE LectureChair: Lindsay Davies, Faculty of Public HealthGerry Hassan, Writer, Commentator, Policy Analyst andResearcherFurther information/queriesIf you require any further informationplease contact:SHSCEventsNHS National Services <strong>Scotland</strong>Scottish Health Service CentreCrewe Road SouthEdinburgh EH4 2LFTel: 0131 275 7748Fax: 0131 623 2525Email: publichealth@shscevents.co.uk10:45 – 11:30 Plenary 2: ‘The Third Healthcare Revolution’Chair: Eddie Coyle, NHS FifeMuir Gray, Director, Better Value Healthcare Co-Director,NHS QIPP <strong>Programme</strong>, Rightcare Workstream11:30 – 12:00 Refreshments, Exhibitions & Poster Displays12:00 – 12:30 Plenary 3: ‘Genetic research on diseases of public healthimportance: what has been achieved in the last 5 years?’Chair: Margaret Burns, NHS Health <strong>Scotland</strong>Harry Campbell, Professor of Genetic Epidemiology andPublic Health, University of Edinburgh12:30 – 13:30 Lunch/Exhibitions and Poster DisplaysAGM – Specialist Registrars13:30 – 15:00 Parallel Session A15:00 – 15:30 Refreshments/Exhibitions & Poster Display15:30 – 16:30 Parallel Session B16:30 – 17:00 Plenary 4: ‘Diabetes: New Insights, New Responses’Chair: Harry Campbell, University of EdinburghHelen Colhoun, University of Dundee17.30 Conference Close17:15 – 18:15 AGM – Committee of the FPH in <strong>Scotland</strong>19:00 – 19:30 Conference Reception19:30 Conference Dinner & Networking/Entertainment09:45 – 10:15 Plenary 6: ‘A Heads-up for Health Protection – lookingforward while learning from the past’Chair: Eddie Coyle, NHS FifeRoland Salmon, Director, Communicable DiseaseSurveillance Centre, Public Health Wales10:15 – 10:45 Refreshments, Exhibition & Poster DisplaysPlenary 7: Arts & Health/Designing for HealthChair: Catriona Bhaita, Scottish Borders Council10:45 – 10:55 ‘Public mental health – population approach, deprivation,best-buys, evidence based approaches including creativityand engagement in innovative approaches’Karen Adam, Consultant in Public Health Medicine,NHS Tayside10:55 – 11:30 ‘Creating environments for positive wellbeing and involvingpeople in designing them’11:20 – 11:40 ‘Creativity and well proven benefits for wellbeing andconnectedness in Art Angel, engagement through creativity.Example of setting up a wellbeing space in a deprivedcommunity in Stobswellbeing – Unit 16’Rosie Summerton, Project Officer, Art Angel11:40 – 11:45 Questions11:45 – 12:45 Parallel Session C12:45 – 14.00 Lunch, Exhibition & Poster DisplayFringe Meeting – Scottish (Managed) Sustainable HealthNetwork14.00 – 14:30 Plenary 8: Generation <strong>Scotland</strong>: applying genetic researchto public healthChair: Peter Donnelly, University of St AndrewsBlair Smith, Professor of Population Science, University ofDundee14:30 – 15:30 Parallel Session D15:30 – 15:45 Short Comfort Break15:45 – 16:15 Plenary 9: ‘Violence – The Disease we Ignore’Chair: John Raine, NHS BordersJohn Carnochan, Head of Violence Reduction Unit (VRU),Strathclyde Police2This year’s conference is being held at the Crieff Hydro Hotel www.crieffhydro.comThe Conference provides the opportunity for those involved in protecting and improving health in <strong>Scotland</strong>to meet, learn, debate and address some of the key health challenges faced in <strong>Scotland</strong>. The Conferencecomprises of keynote speeches from leading opinion formers and decision makers and parallel sessions andposter displays. The format also provides an opportunity for fringe sessions and meetings of related groups.The organisers reserve the right to alter theprogramme as necessary without prior notificationwww.fphscotconf.co.uk16:15 – 16:45 Chief Medical Officer’s Keynote AddressChair: Eddie Coyle, NHS FifeSir Harry Burns, Chief Medical Officer, ScottishGovernment16:45 – 17:00 Closing Remarks and Presentation of Prizes for theBest Posters3


Conference <strong>Programme</strong>Parallel Sessions Day One Session ATHURSDAY 8 NOVEMBER 2012: 13:30-15:00A1Title Author OrganisationHealth Improvement 1 – Inequality ReductionA fundamental cause of health inequalities? Social class and cause-specific mortality in Gerry McCartney NHS Health <strong>Scotland</strong><strong>Scotland</strong> over a 50-year periodDumfries and Galloway Health and Wellbeing: Innovation in health improvement and tackling Elizabeth Smart NHS Dumfries and Gallowayhealth inequalities.Trends in breast cancer inequalities in incidence and mortality following introduction of the Louise Flanagan NHS Lanarkshirenational screening programmeComparing trends in health inequalities by educational attainment in England & Wales with Louise Flanagan NHS Lanarkshire<strong>Scotland</strong> and Europe<strong>Making</strong> a positive difference to the health and well-being of older people Sandra Cairney East DunbartonshireCommunity Health PartnershipSpeed Integrating health within placemaking: who should do what? Lorraine Tulloch Scottish GovernmentA2 Public Health Development through Innovation 112-month weight-loss outcomes for the Counterweight Low Energy Liquid Diet (LELD) and Mike Lean University of GlasgowWeight-Loss Maintenance <strong>Programme</strong>, delivered in Scottish primary care.Anticipatory Care Pathways – Integrating & Innovating to Achieve Sustainability Pippa Walls NHS BordersSpeedA3A4Getting the 'whole package' right Rachel Ormston ScotCenHorizon Scanning to Inform Regional Planning Decision <strong>Making</strong>: <strong>Making</strong> a Difference?Equally Possible – what we learned in the Equally Well test site in Templehall, FifeAre <strong>Scotland</strong>'s Fast-Food outlets ready for a trans-fat ban? Canvassing the views of localstakeholders.Pip Farman &Sarah TaylorNeil Hamlet &Jackie BarbourJohn MooneyNorth of <strong>Scotland</strong> PublicHealth Network (NoSPHN) &NHS ShetlandNHS FifeScottish Collaboration forPublic Health Research andPolicy (SCPHRP)Health Improvement 2 – AlcoholMonitoring and Evaluating <strong>Scotland</strong>’s Alcohol Strategy: Research to inform policy making Clare Beeston NHS Health <strong>Scotland</strong>Consumption, price and affordability of alcohol: insights from Monitoring and Evaluating<strong>Scotland</strong>’s Alcohol StrategyInequalities in the distribution of the costs of alcohol misuse in <strong>Scotland</strong>: A cost of illnessstudyA review of the validity and reliability of alcohol retail sales data for monitoring populationlevels of alcohol consumption: a Scottish perspectiveThe Buchan Alcohol Project – A multiagency response to the local culture that youngpeople's use of alcohol is a rite of passage and is the lesser of two evils.Neil CraigMarjorie JohnstonMark RobinsonKim PenmanNHS Health <strong>Scotland</strong>University of Aberdeen/NHSGrampianNHS Health <strong>Scotland</strong>NHS GrampianHealth Improvement 3 – Childhood ObesityExploring Nutritional Quality of 'Out of School' Foods Popular with School Pupils Fiona Crawford Glasgow Centre forPopulation HealthThe prevalence of morbid obesity in Glasgow schoolchildren and the impact of a school Anne Gebbie- University of Glasgowbased interventionDibenFun, Fit Tayside: a primary school based intervention aimed at promoting healthy weight and Taryn Young NHS Taysidean active lifestyle.Effectiveness of a school-based obesity prevention programme in Lothian primary schools Rachel Callaghan University of Edinburgh"I thought they had to go out before they go up": A qualitative study of parental perspectivesabout child overweight and obesity, and weight management interventions intended toaddress it.Flora DouglasUniversity of AberdeenHeads up for Public HealthInspiration, Integration & InnovationTitle Author OrganisationA5 Public Health Development through Innovation 2SpeedSurvival after chemotherapy for metastatic breast cancer: using the chemotherapy prescribingdata.Comparison of Scottish Morbidity Record (SMR)01 data with clinician-based case notereviews in determining co-morbidities of patients with chronic kidney diseaseEstimating the resources needed for chemotherapy in metastatic breast cancer.Implementing best practice in data governance to enable health improvement through highquality research.David MorrisonMartin SooCatrionaMilosevicCorri BlackWest of <strong>Scotland</strong> CancerSurveillance UnitUniversity of AberdeenNHS LanarkshireUniversity of AberdeenChanging perceptions of risk-taking behaviours: Links to adulthood and gender. Helen Popple University of St AndrewsHow sexual health drop-ins are becoming more integrated with holistic health issues to tacklerisk taking behavioursA6 Public Health at the Boundaries 1Experiences of knowledge brokering for evidence-informed public health, policy and practice:three years of the Scottish Collaboration for Public Health Research and PolicyKirstenKernaghanRuth JepsonNHS LothianScottish Collaboration forPublic Health Research andPolicyThe role of Participatory Budgeting in promoting localism and mobilising community assets Chris Harkins Glasgow Centre forPopulation HealthInterventional public health law: the Licensing (<strong>Scotland</strong>) Act 2005 and the assessment of Jim Sherval NHS Lothianoverprovision in EdinburghThe validity of hospitals' ethnicity data recording and an ethnicity analysis in four Scottish Andrew Millard NHS Health <strong>Scotland</strong>Health Boards: Acute Myocardial Infarction and Coronary Heart DiseaseHow can we translate economic evidence on population health interventions into policy and Neil Craig NHS Health <strong>Scotland</strong>practice? Lessons from the review of ACE PreventionSpeed Keep Well in Community Pharmacies in NHS Fife Andrea Smith NHS FifeA7 Public Health Screening 1First-trimester Down's syndrome screening in Ayrshire and Arran: pregnant women'sexperience and factors affecting screening uptake.Implementing the Scottish Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm Screening <strong>Programme</strong> within NHSHighlandRegina McDevittRob HendersonNHS Ayrshire & ArranNHS HighlandHow many extra breast cancers can be detected and lives saved if breast screening uptake Rosemary Millar NHS Taysiderates are increased in deprived communities?Diabetic retinopathy screening- reasons for non attendance Sheila Wilson Directorate Public Health andHealth Polcy, NHS LothianA Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of the Evidence for Flexible Sigmoidoscopy as aScreening Method for the Prevention of Colorectal CancerChris LittlejohnNHS GrampianA8 Public Health Development through Innovation 3GP led Walk-in Centre in Sheffield and Rotherham; Another way of urgent health careMubashir Arain The University of SheffieldprovisionFife's Hospital at Home Service: the Patient, Carer and Staff Experience Alice Wright University of St AndrewsBarriers to accessing eye care services for communities at particular risk of avoidableHelen Lee RNIBsightlossType D: the missing link? Michael Ross NHS Greater Glasgow andClydeSustainability within <strong>Scotland</strong>: Opportunities and limitations to adopting a National approachto monitoring and reducing the carbon footprint of NHS DentistryBrett DuaneScottish ManagedSustainable Health Network(SMaSH)4www.fphscotconf.co.uk5


Conference <strong>Programme</strong>Parallel Sessions Day One Session BTHURSDAY 8 NOVEMBER 2012: 15:30-16:306Title Author OrganisationB1 Arts, Design & Public Health 1The role of natural environments in health and wellbeing Kevin Lafferty Forestry Commission <strong>Scotland</strong>ADD-ART Promoting Sustainable Recovery Michelle Hunt NHS Greater Glasgow & ClydeThe Relationship between Quilting and Wellbeingwww.fphscotconf.co.ukEmily Stevenson &Jacqueline AtkinsonSpeed Life after death by PowerPoint – can information design help revive our audiences? Philip Conaglen NHS FifeB2University of GlasgowHealth Improvement 4 – Adult ObesityObesity in <strong>Scotland</strong>: Are we all in it together? Elaine Tod NHS Health <strong>Scotland</strong>Tackling Male Obesity: the ROMEO (Review Of MEn and Obesity) study Daryll Archibald Health Services Research Unit(HSRU), University of AberdeenScottish Obesity Action Resource 2 Liz Smart Scottish Public Health Network(ScotPHN)Speed Promoting healthy eating messages in Black and minority ethnic communities in <strong>Scotland</strong> Arma Sayed NHS Health <strong>Scotland</strong>B3B4Health Improvement 4 – Alcohol Brief InterventionChanging practitioners' behaviour to implement alcohol brief interventions Catriona Loots NHS Health <strong>Scotland</strong>An innovative project to build the evidence base and research capacity in publichealth settings: evaluating alcohol brief interventions (ABIs) in wider settingsUniversity spirit: An experimental trial exploring the experience and efficacy oftransdermal alcohol monitoring at a Scottish universityHealth Improvement 5 – Mental Health and WellbeingDoes increasing physical activity levels improve mental health and wellbeing among atrisk groups?Mainstreaming Mental Health Improvement in Ayrshire and ArranWhat can the Scottish Health Survey tell us about the mental health of <strong>Scotland</strong>'schildren and young people?Ruth JepsonFergus NevilleDavid AlexanderAndrew Pulford & ChrisO’SullivanLisa RutherfordScottish Collaboration for PublicHealth Research and PolicyUniversity of St AndrewsNHS GrampianNHS Ayrshire & Arran/MentalHealth FoundationScotCen Social ResearchSpeed Health improvement – isn’t that what the Health Promotion Department does? Lynda Brown NHS Health <strong>Scotland</strong>B5SpeedHealth Improvement 6 – Behaviour Change & Young PeopleEvaluation of an innovative behaviour change intervention for looked after young Hannah DaleNHS Fifepeople through a partnership between Health Psychology and Public Health.Okay to Ask ' A youth suicide prevention film for dissemination via social networking Ruth Donnelly NHS Greater Glasgow and ClydeGlass of 2012: Alcohol consumption, attitudes and social norms at a Scottish university Damien Williams University of St AndrewsImproving health and wellbeing in partnership with Helm (a charity working with verydisadvantaged young people) – delivering a HelmHealth RoadshowCarol BarnettNHS TaysideB6 Pubic Health at the Boundaries 2A mixed methods evidence synthesis of incentive interventions for smoking cessation Pat Hoddinott University of Stirlingin pregnancy.The Cessation in Pregnancy Incentives Trial (CPIT) David Tappin University of GlasgowSpeedB7SpeedAlcohol and drug exposure in infants born to mothers prescribed methadone duringpregnancy.Development of an Integrated Teenage Pregnancy Pathway based on currentevidence, covering early education to post pregnancy health & social supportLaura McGloneChristine WallisYorkhill HospitalNHS LothianHealth Improvement 8 – Smoking Cessation"Evidence into Practice" Tobacco Projects Fiona Moore NHS Health <strong>Scotland</strong>A National Survey of Smoking Cessation Provision in all Colposcopy Clinics in<strong>Scotland</strong> and a model for best practiceImplementing Tobacco HEAT Targets/Smoking Cessation Services in a Rural SettingA Feasibility Study of price incentives to increase the uptake of <strong>Healthier</strong> Meals inScottish Workplaces.Alexis RumblesDawn Tuckwood & JillSmithJohn MooneyNHS LothianNHS Grampian/Aberdeenshire CHPScottish Collaboration for PublicHealth Research and Policy (SCPHRP)Heads up for Public HealthInspiration, Integration & InnovationB8SpeedTitle Author OrganisationHealth Protection 1 – Environmental ProtectionPeople, Environment, <strong>Place</strong>s and Health, linking science and policy in <strong>Scotland</strong> Hilary Cowie Institute of OccupationalMedicineNew Zealand's worst maritime environmental disaster' The Public Health response to thegrounding of the MV Rena off the coast of the Bay of PlentyJim Miller Toi Te Ora – Public HealthServiceThe Long-term Legacy of Industrial Environmental Contamination: Assessing the PublicHealth RiskDaniel Chandler NHS Dumfries & GallowayFife Council's Air Quality Strategy – "Inspiration, Innovation and Integration in Environmental Kenny Bissett Fife CouncilHealth"B9 Late-Breakers 1LatebreakerLatebreakerChallenges of implementing urban horticulture: a growing public health issue Jenny Wares NHS FifeHow to Use Complexity Theory (Simple Rules) to unlock Innovation and Improvementpotential to improve public health – lessons from Equally Well approachesParallel Sessions Day One Session CFRIDAY 9 NOVEMBER 2012: 11:45-12:45Karen GrieveThe Scottish GovernmentTitle Author OrganisationC1 Health Protection 2Invasive Group A Streptococcus in <strong>Scotland</strong> – a worsening problem? Sarah Couper Scottish Prison ServiceThe introduction of HepC Blood Spot testing for 'hard to reach' groups in a rural Scottish Tim Patterson NHS Bordershealth boardAudit of implementation of Community Pharmacy Infection Control Guidelines Val Reilly NHS Greater Glasgow andClydeC2 Public Health at the Boundaries 2Health and social care needs assessment of older people – epidemiological findings Oliver Harding Scottish Public HealthNetwork (ScotPHN)Community Engagement within an HIV Prevention Needs Assessment of Men who have Sex Colin Morrison TASC (<strong>Scotland</strong>)with Men (MSM)Will they tell us what they think? Seeking views from sexual health service users in order toimprove service qualityDonna Milne NHS Lothian, Public HealthDepartmentSpeed The Asset Based Approach in Clackmannanshire Aileen Schofield Clackmannanshire CHPC3C4Health Improvement 9 – Road SafetyIs escaping road traffic accidents a postcode lottery? Hui Hui E University of EdinburghA study into the effectiveness of traffic-calming measures in residential and school zones inEdinburghAccident location and affluence in children: can improved data collection help to highlightroad traffic accident hotspots?Health Improvement 10 – Wider SettingsMartin MacdonaldGrahamMackenzieUniversity of EdinburghNHS LothianPrison Health in NHS Greater Glasgow & Clyde: A health needs assessment Michelle Gillies NHS Greater Glasgow andClydeImpact of Welfare Reform – findings and development of national guidance for NHS Boards Phil Mackie Scottish Public HealthNetwork (ScotPHN)The ethics of sobriety testing in criminal justice Christine Goodall University of GlasgowSpeed Increasing Staff Engagement in a Primary Care Money Advice Project Carol Orr Eastbank Conference andTraining Centre7


Conference <strong>Programme</strong>Parallel Sessions Day One Session CFRIDAY 9 NOVEMBER 2012: 11:45-12:458Title Author OrganisationC5 Public Health Screening 2Does ultrasound screening for AAAs in males aged 65 and over improve their outlook? Sasha Thrumurthy University of AberdeenImproving Breast Cancer Screening Uptake in NHS LanarkshireThe impact of screening on clinicopathologicaldeterminants of outcome in colorectal cancer in the West of <strong>Scotland</strong>C6 Public Health at the Boundaries 3Socio-economic deprivation further increases the effect of winter on admissions to hospitalwith COPDPatterns of multiple health behaviours and associated disease outcomes amongst Scottishadults: a latent class regression approachTasmin Sommerfield& Karen McGuiganYasmin GrantDavid McAllisterDamilola OlajideNHS LanarkshireUniversity of GlasgowUniversity of Edinburgh/ NHSFifeUniversity of AberdeenDiverging trends in morbid obesity in pregnant women and children in Grampian Steve Turner University of AberdeenSpeed Inequality and equality: two sides of the same coin Pauline Craig NHS Health <strong>Scotland</strong>C7C8Health Improvement 11 – Learning from PracticeIllustrating asset based approaches for health improvement: a multiple case studyinvestigation (Abstract 2 of a set of 2)Valerie McNeice Glasgow Centre forPopulation HealthEvaluation of the <strong>Healthier</strong> <strong>Scotland</strong> Cooking bus Claire Hislop NHS Health <strong>Scotland</strong>Impact of fluoride varnish on dental caries among five year olds in <strong>Scotland</strong> Neil P. Anand NHS Health <strong>Scotland</strong>Health Improvement 12 – EngagementEngaging Communities – Changing Lives Jackie Doe Perth and Kinross CommunityHealth PartnershipEngaging for Public Health Paul Teedon Glasgow Caledonian UniversityThe barriers and facilitators in moving to an outcomes approach by community planningpartnersGarth ReidNHS Health <strong>Scotland</strong>Speed Talk to your baby.....and listen too Liz Scott NHS Greater Glasgow & ClydeC9 Late-Breakers 2Safety is Elementary John Sleith Falkirk CouncilLatebreakerLatebreakerLatebreakerLatebreakerPublic Health Response to an outbreak of Legionnaires’ disease (LD) in Edinburgh,<strong>Scotland</strong>,UKExploring the association between Old Firm derbies and incidents of community anddomestic violence within GlasgowParallel Sessions Day One Session DFRIDAY 9 NOVEMBER 2012: 15:00-16:00Simone ThorneDamien WilliamsNHS LothianSt Andrews UniversityTitle Author OrganisationD1 Health Protection 3Legionnaires disease associated with a Cruise Ship. Gordon McLaren Department of PublicHealth, NHS FifeDetection and management of a hepatitis A outbreak in a multinational inner-city nursery Kathy Li West of <strong>Scotland</strong> RegionalVirology CentreGeneralists and Health Protection: Staying Resilient Gordon McLaren Department of PublicHealth, NHS FifeHeads up for Public HealthInspiration, Integration & InnovationTitle Author OrganisationD2 Health Improvement 13 – Maternal & Child InequalitiesWomen and children last? Comparing early-years experiences in <strong>Scotland</strong>, England and Martin TaulbutNHS Health <strong>Scotland</strong>three city-regionsDeveloping an integrated approach to addressing child poverty James Egan Glasgow Centre forPopulation HealthDelivering on the child poverty agenda – the role of midwives and health visitors James Egan Glasgow Centre forPopulation HealthSpeed More questions than answers – the role of incentives around childbirth Heather Morgan University of AberdeenD3 Public Health Development through Innovation 4Public Health Intensive Care: The case of smoking in prisons Andrew Fraser NHS Health <strong>Scotland</strong>SpeedInnovation in smoking cessation: the impact of quit4u on take up and smoking quit rates ina deprived areawww.fphscotconf.co.ukAnne LudbrookUniversity of AberdeenMandatory electronic carbon monoxide recording at antenatal booking: the impact Brenda Friel NHS Greater Glasgowand Clyde SmokefreeServicesMoving from a bureaucratic tick box exercise to a dynamic evidence informed planning Debbie Sigerson NHS Health <strong>Scotland</strong>process - using evidence in impact assessmentD4 Development by Public Health Innovation 5The Scottish Health Survey – Equalities groups Julie Ramsay Scottish GovernmentSpeedBuilding Healthy Communities : Holistic Self Help Long Term Conditions <strong>Programme</strong> Thomesena Lochhead Public Health, Dumfriesand GallowayGetting Knowledge into Action to support healthcare quality improvement in NHS<strong>Scotland</strong> Alison Winning Healthcare Improvement<strong>Scotland</strong>Exploring the benefits of a person-centred approach to the investigation of concerns aboutpossible environmental causes of ill-healthJenny WaresSt Andrews University &NHS FifeD5 Public Health and the Boundaries 4Language delay and social/emotional problems in infancy: results from a universal health Fiona SimUniversity of Glasgowvisitor contact at 30 monthsExposure to maternal methadone in utero: visual and developmental outcomes at 6 months. Laura McGlone Yorkhill HospitalReferral pathways from paediatric to adult services: exploring clinicians’ perspectives oftransition for people with cerebral palsyAlice WrightUniversity of St AndrewsD6 Development by Public Health Innovation 6Which questions in the 2009 National Inpatient Survey for NHS England are most predictive Jospeh Malone Imperial College Londonof overall patient satisfaction, 3 months post discharge?The KnowFife Dataset: a web-based public health intelligence tool Mike Ghattas NHS FifeSpeedScottish Health Survey results – Health Board level analysis Julie Ramsay Scottish GovernmentTo what extent is health information accessible for and inclusive of visually impairedpeople?D7 Health Protection 3To undertake a staff survey on use of and attitudes towards influenza vaccination in a ruralScottish health board using an online survey toolHealth Protection in the Workplace: A 'global-scope' of literatureThe influence of lighting and clock changes on the incidence of road traffic casualties inEdinburghMichael TornowTim PattersonVirginia Amen Paul-EbhohimhenGraham Mackenzie &Emma CarrNHS Health <strong>Scotland</strong>NHS BordersOHSAS, NHS FifeNHS LothianD8 Development by Public Health Innovation 7UK Public Health On-line Resource for Careers, Skills & Training (PHORCaST) www. Wilma ReidNHS Health <strong>Scotland</strong>phorcast.org.ukHMP Kilmarnock’s Health Promoting Prison Damien Shannon NHS Ayrshire and ArranA Career and development framework for Health Protection Nursing- a new approach Chris Faldon Health Protection NurseSpecialist Network9


Conference <strong>Programme</strong>Sustainable EventsThe Faculty of Public Health Annual Scottish Conference 2012 iscommitted to running a sustainable event and has put in place thefollowing environmental policies and procedures.Recycled PaperAll event documentation is printed on recycled paper.RecyclingAll leftover delegate materials will be recycled after the conference.Delegate BagsNo delegate bags will be provided this year. Delegates are insteadprovided with a recyclable cardboard folder.VenueCrieff Hydro are committed to protecting the environment throughthe management of those processes associated with the runningof the business which may have an overall negative environmentalimpact. As an integral part of this the hotel is committed tocontinually improving their environmental performance through:• Improved waste handling, storage and disposal including theminimisation and recycling of wastes where appropriate• Forming close relationships with suppliers to encourage theadoption of best environmental practices• Minimising the environmental impacts associated with energy,water and fuel use wherever possible• Ensuring the environmental risks associated with the site areminimised as far as possibleTransportAll participants are encouraged to consider their own personalcontribution to ‘carbon saving’. Therefore, we are asking all thoseattending the conference to consider, for example, sharing transportor using the public transport service.There will be many other ways that you can contribute to carbonsaving and we hope that you will undertake to do so whereverpossible and practical.Bus Pick-up from Train StationBuses will run from Dunblane train station (this is the bestconnected station in the area) to the hotel. If you would like toregister your demand for this service please see the conferenceregistration desk.10www.fphscotconf.co.ukConference organisationThis year’s annual Scottish Public HealthConference is being organised by the Facultyof Public Health in partnership with the Southof <strong>Scotland</strong> NHS Boards and comprises thefollowing planning group members:Eddie Coyle, NHS Fife (Chair)Emilia Crighton, Faculty of Public HealthKaren Tidy, Faculty of Public HealthTim Patterson, NHS BordersSue Payne, NHS LothianLucy Denvir, NHS Dumfries & GallowayJulie Cavanagh, NHS TaysidePhil Mackie, ScotPHNCheryl Goff, SHSCEventsRichard Snowden, SHSCEventsLiz Nightingale, Faculty of Public HealthPeter Donnelly, University of St AndrewsThilo Kroll, University of DundeeHarry Campbell, University of EdinburghVideoconferenceVideo conferencing is available andprovides access to all sessions (includingparallel sessions) held in the main room.If you would like further informationplease speak to a member of staff at theconference reception desk.Heads up for Public HealthInspiration, Integration & InnovationPoster Competition VotingThis year the Conference Steering Group decided to holda poster competition for the best poster. There are twocategories in which all delegates have the opportunity to vote.Category 1Delegates are asked to vote for a poster taking intoaccount its visual impact, clarity of content and thecontribution to public health.33Category 2In recognition of the ScotPHN’s ethos of joint workingacross NHS Board areas and organisations involvedin driving forward health improvement and services,delegates are asked to vote for a poster whichdescribes a piece of work that successfully involvedseveral organisations.The winning posters will be announced on Friday 9thNovember during the Closing Remarks and a prize will beawarded to the posters which receive the most votes. Pleaseuse the voting form in your conference folder or speak to amember of the Events Team.CPD AccreditationAcknowledgementsThe Faculty of Public Health no longer accredits attendance at events for CPD purposes.The conference organising groupappreciate the contributions made fromthe The Faculty of Public Health, NHSHealth <strong>Scotland</strong>, NHS Health Protection<strong>Scotland</strong>, The Copyright LicencingAgency, NHS Greater Glasgow & Clyde(<strong>Healthier</strong> Wealthier Children Project),Trellis <strong>Scotland</strong>, Weight Watchers, PulseCommunity Healthcare and The ScottishGovernment.As the Faculty is unable to quality assure every event, the Faculty advises individuals to assess the content of external eventsin relation to their personal development plan and make a judgement about its value. Participants are now required to logtheir attendance of an event in their CPD log and write a reflective note on the learning gained from attending the event. Onehour of the event equals one CPD credit. More information can be found on the Faculty website www.fphm.org.uk/prof_standards/cpd/accreditation/default.aspFACULTY OFPUBLIC HEALTHFPH is the leading professional body for public health specialists in the UK. It aimsto promote and protect the health and wellbeing of the population, and improvehealth services by campaigning on key policy issues, maintaining professional andeducation standards, and providing practical information and guidance for publichealth professionals.Registered charity no 26389411


Conference <strong>Programme</strong>Faculty of Public HealthCommittee of the Faculty of Public Health in <strong>Scotland</strong>AcknowledgementsThe conference organising group appreciate the contributions from the Faculty of Public Health, NHS Health<strong>Scotland</strong>, NHS Lothian, NHS Borders, NHS Fife, NHS Tayside, SCOTPHN, University of Edinburgh, Universityof St Andrews, University of Dundee and The Scottish Government.NHS Lothian provides a comprehensive range of primary,community-based and acute hospital services for the populationsof Edinburgh, Midlothian, East Lothian and West Lothian. Ithas the second largest residential population in <strong>Scotland</strong> –circa 800,000 people. It employs nearly 28,000 staff, includingapproximately 15,000 nurses and midwives and around 2,700medical staff. The region, which covers some 700 square miles,has long been recognised as having an outstanding naturalbeauty, complemented by a culture that is as cosmopolitan asit is inspiring. Lothian NHS Board is responsible for investingapproximately £1 billion a year in health care services. Its mainrole is to protect and improve the health of the people of Lothianand plan services for the local population.The Region of Fife is bounded in the north by the Firth of Tay, in theeast by the North Sea and in the South by the Firth of Forth. TheRegion spans an area of 130,700 hectares and has a populationof over 360,000. There is a highly developed agricultural sector inthe east and north-east Fife, and in the west there is an extensivecross section of highly skilled and scientifically orientated industry.The largest towns are Dunfermline , Kirkcaldy and Glenrothes. StAndrews is the seat of <strong>Scotland</strong>’s oldest university.The University of Edinburgh currently hosts around 30,000students who study across humanities and social science,science and engineering and medicine and veterinary medicine.The University attracts the greatest minds from across the globe,reflecting its position as one of the world¹s leading universities.Since it’s foundation more than 400 years ago, our people andtheir achievements have rewritten history time and again. They’veexplored space, revolutionised surgery, published era-definingbooks, paved the way for life-saving medical breakthroughs andintroduced to the world many inventions, discoveries and ideasfrom penicillin to Dolly the sheep. They have believed that anythingis possible. Our experts continue in that tradition, consistentlystriving to uncover the unknown, transforming science fiction intofact, and unveiling new possibilities for future generations.NHS Borders provides primary care, community services andacute hospital care (in the Borders General Hospital) to a widelydispersed population of 111,430 across an area of 1831 squaremiles. Two-thirds of the population live outside settlementsof 10,000 people, compared to 28% for <strong>Scotland</strong>. Hawick,Galashiels, Peebles, Kelso and Selkirk are the largest towns with apopulation of over five thousand. Sheep outnumber humans by 10to 1, so agriculture is still an important part of the local economy.The once dominant textile industry is now much smaller, howeverlocal business has diversified of late, although Scottish Borders isstill a low wage economy. The area has a rich historical traditionfrom the Borders Reiver days and contains a great variety ofbeautiful countryside, which stretches from the North Sea coastat Eyemouth to the Tweedsmuir Hills close, to the borders withLanarkshire and Dumfries & Galloway.Situated in the east of <strong>Scotland</strong>, Tayside has a population ofaround 394,000. The area is a mix of both urban and rural settingsand comprises Dundee city, Angus and Perth and Kinross. NHSTayside’s vision is to provide the highest quality care in the bestenvironment, to reduce health inequalities and to improve andprotect population-health. We strive to continually improve anddo this with the commitment of our 14,000 staff, our CommunityPlanning Partners, our service users and the public.Founded in the fifteenth century, St Andrews is <strong>Scotland</strong>’s firstuniversity and the third oldest in the English speaking world. Teachingbegan in the community of St Andrews in 1410 and the University wasformally constituted by the issue of Papal Bull in 1413. The Universityis now one of Europe’s most research intensive seats of learning – overa quarter of its turnover comes from research grants and contracts.It is one of the top rated universities in Europe for research, teachingquality and student satisfaction and is consistently ranked among theUK’s top five in leading independent league tables produced by TheTimes, The Guardian and the Sunday Times.The University of Dundee has a long history dating back to 1881when University College, Dundee was founded in associationwith the University of St Andrews, gaining independent universitystatus in 1967. The University has consistently provided pureand applied research and teaching at international levels ofexcellence, particularly in health and medicine, and is currentlyranked 140 among the world’s top 200 universities in the TimesHigher Education World University Rankings. The University isalso in the top ten UK Universities for teaching and learning in theTimes Higher Education Student Experience Survey of 2010. Overhalf of the University’s research is achieving ‘world leading’ or‘internationally excellent’ standards according to the most recentResearch Assessment Exercise. The Universities reputation isbuilt upon this strive for excellence and in 2010 became the firstapproved Cancer Research UK Centre in <strong>Scotland</strong>. With majortraining and research centres in clinical medicine, population andpublic health, nursing and dentistry, the teaching and research inhealth related areas is the major contributor to the Universitiescurrent standing. The university also has a reputation for itscollaborative approach to research with initiatives such as theSocial Dimensions of Health Institute (SDHI) in St Andrews, whichprovides a vehicle for innovative and cross disciplinary research.The Scottish Public Health Network (ScotPHN) is hosted by NHSHealth <strong>Scotland</strong> and is accountable to the Scottish Directors ofPublic Health collectively. It was created in 2006 as a collaborativenetwork which would add value to the work of Public HealthDirectorates and agencies across <strong>Scotland</strong>.Its formal remit is to:• undertake prioritised national pieces of work where there is aclearly identified need;• facilitate information exchange between public healthpractitioners, link with other networks and share learning;• create effective communication amongst professionals and thepublic to allow efficient co-ordination of public health activityand• support and enhance the capabilities and functionality of theScottish Directors of Public Health Group.Most recently, the first element of ScotPHN’s remit, that ofundertaking nationally prioritised projects, has been extendedto ensure any issues identified as nationally important by NHSBoards, Scottish Government and the National Planning Forumare undertaken and that these national public health priorities areundertaken in a co-ordinated manner across <strong>Scotland</strong>.12NHS National Services <strong>Scotland</strong>Scottish Health Service CentreCrewe Road SouthEdinburgh EH4 2LFTel: 0131 275 7748Fax: 0131 623 2525Email: publichealth@shscevents.co.ukwww.fphscotconf.co.uk

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