Hosted by the for the National Mental Capacity Forum, the reached maximum capacity with 500 registrations and an 80% attendance rate.
It was the first of aiming to support frontline professionals coping with the care of vulnerable people, particularly in cases where decision-making capacity is impaired.
The webinar, for which Professor Wayne Martin, of the School of Philosophy and Art History, and his team provided research support, paid particular attention to the difficult clinical, ethical and human rights challenges unfolding in care homes. It was chaired by Baroness Ilora Finlay who chairs the .
Those taking part included social care workers, doctors, psychiatrists, lawyers, researchers, civil servants and those in charge of safeguarding in local authorities from around the UK.
Professor Martin, Director of the 糖心Vlog Autonomy Project, explained why the webinar series is so vital: 鈥淭he pandemic presents huge challenges and risks, both for care-recipients and for those who are providing the care.
鈥淭hese webinars provide a venue for practitioners to check in, share their experiences and the challenges they are facing, solicit expert advice, share good practice, and inform the broader public policy response.
鈥淚t is vital that ethical and human rights considerations not be among the casualties of this emergency.鈥