Children Social Care courses
Through specialist training, Bond Solon helps health and social care professionals provide better care and support to children at risk, by ensuring they have the correct knowledge and skills to meet their legal and safeguarding duties.
See below for our full range of Children Social Care courses in Wales:
- Collecting and Presenting Evidence
- Safeguarding Children
- Deprivation of Liberty for Children
- MCA for 16-17 year olds
- Continuing Care for Children and Young People
- Mental Health Act
- Continuing Handling and Investigation
Collecting and Presenting Evidence courses
Safeguarding courses
Safeguarding is about protecting people’s health, well-being and human rights, enabling them to live free from harm, abuse, and neglect. It is fundamental to health and social care.
Health and social care professionals have a duty to apply safeguarding legal frameworks in daily practice to protect individuals they work with.
Bond Solon offers safeguarding courses to help health and social care professionals identify, escalate, investigate, and prevent harm or abuse.
Deprivation of Liberty for Children related courses
MCA for 16-17 year olds related courses
Continuing Care courses
Continuing Care involves assessing and determining the needs of children and young people whose complex needs require an additional package of support when their needs cannot be met by universal or specialist health services.
Understanding and applying the relevant legal framework, the case law and the National Framework for Children and Young People’s Continuing Care 2016 to identify a child’s continuing care needs can be complex and difficult to navigate.
Bond Solon’s Children and Young People’s Continuing Care training ensures professionals fully understand the decision support tool and the correct process from end-to-end, so they can confidently apply that knowledge back in the workplace and achieve better outcomes for those children with continuing care needs.
Mental Health Act courses
The Mental Health Act 1983 preserves the legal rights of those deprived of their liberty in psychiatric hospital. Such a detention can only take place when someone is suffering from a mental illness or mental disorder of a nature or degree which makes such a detention for treatment appropriate; when the risks to the person’s health or safety, or the safety of others, is so great that it is necessary for them to be deprived of their liberty for treatment, and when such treatment is available.
As can be seen, working with patients detained under the Mental Health Act is often legally complex, especially where the patient’s situation makes it necessary to consider other legal frameworks, such as the Mental Capacity Act and the Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards.
Bond Solon offers a range of courses which enable health and social care professionals to safely and legally help patients navigate their way through the mental health system, from initial mental health assessment to discharge from hospital and beyond.