Please read the latest coronavirus advice before visiting any of the hospice sites.
The sessions
Our bite size sessions focus on particular end of life care topics or aspects and will give you the opportunity to refresh or expand your knowledge. The sessions are video presentations typically between 15 to 30 minutes in length delivered by St Christopher’s and Greenwich & Bexley Community Hospice Subject Matter Experts or guest speakers.
The sessions are delivered on the St Christopher’s Online Learning Platform can be accessed on demand throughout your 3 month enrolment period.
Enrolment
Once you have purchased your place, you will receive access to the courses typically within one working day. Once you have received your access email, you will have a 3 month period of access to the Online Learning Platform.
At the end of the 3 months you can renew your package for £45 to extend your access to the Online Learning Platform.
Virtual Learning
Virtual learning is a style of learning designed to recreate your classroom experience online. St Christopher’s virtual learning environment offers mixed methodologies to learning online, from full interactions, engaging bite-size presentations, quizzes and resources. Each of our courses is designed and led by leading experts in end of life care, helping to bring flexibility and variety to your virtual learning experience.
Organisational bookings
If you wish to purchase places for a group of learners, please email education@stchristophers.org.uk
Bite size session topics include:
This package of bite size sessions has been designed for:
Our sessions are delivered by St Christopher’s and Greenwich & Bexley Community Hospice Subject Matter Experts or guest speakers.
Liz Bryan has a background in palliative care nursing, counselling psychotherapy, inter-professional education and education evaluation. For 12 years she lectured part-time at the Florence Nightingale Faculty of Nursing and Midwifery at Kings College London, supporting the delivery of evidence-based palliative and end of life care academic education. This is a role she relinquished in order to focus full time on leading, as Director of Education and Training at St Christopher’s, the design of the ‘Learning Hub’ building and concept.
Liz is committed to driving local, national and international development of palliative and end of life care. Her particular focus is on designing and evaluating programmes of learning that have sustained impact on practice. She also believes in the importance of consistency and quality of accredited work-based training for the whole workforce including support staff, volunteers and family carers, who provide the bulk of the care to people approaching the end of life. Liz designed the QELCA© Programme which is now being delivered by satellites in the UK and abroad.
Sarah is a Clinical Doctoral Research Fellow at King’s and St Christopher’s Hospice, funded by the National Institute of Health Research. Sarah specialises in palliative and end-of-life care and its interface with older age, frailty and multimorbidities.
Her interests are around enabling access and choice for older people and their families; facilitating informed decision-making around how people wish to live and be cared for in their last years of life; and building workforce capacity to improve end-of-life care for all. Her doctorate, Conversations on Living and Dying, aims to facilitate advance care planning for cognitively able, community-dwelling older people living with frailty.
Anne trained at Kings College Hospital London in 1986. She commenced working at St Christopher’s in May 1991. Anne worked in the in-patient unit as staff nurse then ward manager until May 2000. Over this time she undertook a palliative care nursing degree at King’s College London University.
Anne transferred to the community palliative care team as a clinical nurse specialist in the Croydon area from 2000 until September 2005. Over the next 18 months as part of a small team advancing nursing practice within the inpatient unit at St Christopher’s also developing skills by undertaking a non-medical prescribing course at Kings College London University.
In April 2007 Anne became Nurse Manager for the St Christopher’s community team in the Lambeth and Southwark area. She is currently undertaking her Master’s degree in palliative care advanced nursing practice In January 2011 Anne became Matron at St Christopher’s.
Jess started her career in finance where she learned about numbers, strategy and leadership. She then switched focus, using a degree in psychology as her lever. That started her on a new career facilitating and coaching others, which she now combines with writing and programme delivery.
She works with a variety of organisations including healthcare, FMCG, banking, consulting, creative, education, manufacturing, publishing and engineering industries as well as the public and not-for-profit sectors. Her clients appreciate her approach which is warm, challenging and rooted in positive psychology. And her skill lies in enabling others to quickly get to the heart of complex and opaque issues so that they can rapidly find solutions.
She is a Fellow of Harvard’s Institute of Coaching and currently specializes in:
She is also a regular contributor to The Times of London. Jess lives in the UK but works all over the world.
Helen graduated from London Southbank University with a BSc(Hons) in Nursing studies and consolidated her training at The Nightingale School at St Thomas’ hospital on the cardiothoracic unit. After 4 years on the bone marrow transplant unit at University College Hospital she studied at The Royal Marsden Hospital for the Oncology Nursing Certificate. Following this she moved to Guys & St Thomas’s Trust to help establish the peripheral blood stem cell programme as CNS and Transplant coordinator.
During her 10 years there she was did a postgraduate diploma in healthcare ethics and was a founder member of the UKEBMT NAP group. More recently Helen has been a clinical educator at Trinity Hospice and a visiting lecturer at Kings, City and Kingston Universities. She is currently project manager for Cascade at St Christopher’s Hospice.
Helen is an Independent Nurse Lecturer specialising in palliative care, end-of-life care and dementia care. Before that she was a Palliative Care Nurse Lecturer and a Practice Development Clinical Nurse Specialist in the Care Home Project Team at St Christopher’s Hospice, London.
Previously, Helen was the Editor of End of Life Journal, the British Journal of Nursing and was Managing Editor of the International Journal of Palliative Nursing.
She is co-founder of a theatre-in-education group ‘Stories That Speak’, which provides communication skills training for people working in palliative care, end-of-life care and dementia care, via drama, role play and personal narratives.
Maaike graduated from the KATHO (Roeselare, Belgium) in 2002 as a general and mental health nurse. She started her professional career working on mental health A&E units in Belgium and then moved to Aruba (Caribbean) where she worked on a mental health A&E unit and the local prison. After working there for 3 years she moved back to Belgium and continued working in A&E and Nursing Homes. Maaike moved to the UK in 2006 and has since worked in Nursing Homes and the Greenwich & Bexley Community Hospice where she developed a palliative care service for care homes and then also developed and established an education department. Maaike has experience of working in palliative care, mental health, dementia, prison, care homes and education and has completed various post graduate education including a PGCert in Higher Education and a MA in Education.
Maaike has previously been seconded to the University of Greenwich as a senior lecturer and is now seconded to develop an education partnership between the Greenwich & Bexley Community Hospice and St Christopher’s Hospice.
If you have any questions about this or any of our other courses, please contact the Education team who will be happy to help
At St Christopher's, a registered charity, it is important for us to maximise any surpluses to reinvest in the objectives of the charity.
Unfortunately, the manner in which we undertake our training currently means we are not able to invest as much of our surplus as possible, therefore from the 1 December 2017, St Christopher’s Education Centre will charge VAT at the standard rate on our training courses, the reason for this change in pricing is twofold:
i) We want to be able to reinvest any surpluses made from training back into all of our charitable objectives rather than only Education
ii) We want to be able to reclaim the VAT on costs relating to developing and running the training courses