The conference also offers a choice of 50+ workshops, boasting the widest possible range of subject matter - from useful practical advice to dynamic debates. Workshop leaders include plenary theme speakers, other UK-based professionals, Medsin-UK representatives, and local students.
Four main workshop sessions will last 1h each. They will be conducted in small groups to encourage discussion and debate.
Our workshop timetable is now up! There are four workshop sessions, two each day of the conference. Please click on the sessions below to see the available workshops, and use your emailed link to log on to your account and select your preferences!
Log in now to choose your workshops
Medical Justice- working with refugees
Role of missionary hospitals
NGOs- how to do more good than harm
Access to water- a human right?
Medicine and the world bank
The ethics/challenges of clinical trials in developing countries
Prenatal screening for gender in China
Processing and developing Malaria films
Keep the NHS public campaign
Malaria in a resource-poor setting
Rape as a weapon- consequences and implications
TB- drug resistance and new challenges.
Why HIV programs are failing
Working with Merlin
Working with MSF
Working with Red Cross
Crash course in sign language
Forensic psychiatry
Sex education for children with special needs
Water Purification
Running an effective campaign
Brain Drain- world impact and how to tackle the problem
Epidemics and disaster relief
International Aid
Depression
Mental Health "Power,
imperialism and the globalization of Western mental health approaches:
whose voices count? "
HIV and female empowerment
Socially Responsible electives
Mental health among BME communities - overcoming stigma, prevention, and
support. Speaking both from work with international students at Oxford and
work with community groups.
HIFA2015 - increasing access to health information for health care workers in
developing countries
Cultural sensitivity when working with BME communities living with HIV/AIDS in
the UK
The needs of people living with HIV/AIDS in the UK and their experience of
stigma and discrimination






