IReSH is a network that that brings researchers, health practitioners and community stakeholders together to collaborate on research in sexual health and blood borne viruses in Scotland. The network includes researchers, NHS clinicians and health promotion practitioners, policymakers, third sector organisations and community groups. Through our events and online presence, we aim to share our research and practice in order to identify and respond to existing sexual health and BBV inequalities and challenges and to promote wellbeing in Scotland.
Month: December 2019
Sex, Drugs and Scotland’s Health: Call for Submissions
IReSH and HIV Scotland are proud to announce that Sex, Drugs and Scotland’s Health – a national conference on Scotland’s Sexual Health and Wellbeing – will take place in Dundee on 3-5 June 2020.
Where do we go next for sexual health in Scotland? Organised by a cross-sector partnership, this conference will be used to highlight new and emerging research, support workforce development and connect communities and those working within the SHBBV field in Scotland, the UK and internationally. At its heart will be discussion and debate around sexual health and blood-borne viruses in Scotland.
The conference will bring together researchers, third sector organisations, and healthcare professionals who are committed to improving and supporting inclusive sexual health and wellbeing in Scotland.
Abstract Submission for the conference is now open! Please follow this link to the page to find out more and to submit your abstract. The Submission Guidelines are linked here.
Please use this form to submit your proposals for talks, panel discussions, creative and performance contributions. Abstracts should be submitted by 31 January. We will aim to contact you with the outcome of your proposal(s) by the middle of February 2020.
If you have any questions at this point, please contact conf@hiv.scot
Interested in the conference, and want to keep up to date with news? Register your interest here for all conference updates.
What are IReSH Events?
One of the main aims of IReSH is to bring its members together to meet each other, share ideas and research, and to spark collaborations in relation to sexual health and BBV research. Over the past few years, we’ve run a number of different events to help make this happen.
We run conferences for IReSH members to present on research and practice, and to engage with and across the sector. Continue reading “What are IReSH Events?”
Beyond 2020: Reflecting on Scotland’s SHBBV Framework
IReSH members Nicola Boydell and Sally Brown reflect on the Scottish Government’s meeting ‘Beyond 2020 – Refreshing Scotland’s Ambitions in relation to Sexual Health and Blood Borne Viruses’ held in Perth in July.
What should the Scottish Government’s Sexual Health & Blood Borne Virus look like beyond its current 2020 remit? This was the subject of a day-long consultation that took place in the summer. A mix of NHS clinical or clinical related staff, third sector representatives and academics were brought together to discuss key issues and concerns about how to take things forward.
The meeting began with a keynote address from the Minister for Public Health, Joe Fitzpatrick where he announced the Scottish Government’s aim to eliminate Hepatitis C in Scotland by 2024. However, the overall focus of the meeting was to discuss how to make progress around the five outcomes of the SHBBV Framework; cafe style discussions with facilitators took place on each table, and key points and messages from all of these were noted.
Many of the discussions were focussed on particular sectors or clinical interests, framed around questions such as:
- How can services and the third sector support people to remain engaged with HIV care and treatment?
- What will be the key challenges and barriers to achieving HepC elimination by 2024?
- How can we best target outreach testing?
There were also questions with a broader scope, such as:
- How can we promote good sexual health across the population?
- How can we better use our data to track impact and support change?
- What are the inequalities in SHBBV facing Scotland’s diverse communities?
There was considerable discussion and dialogue on these issues. An emerging theme across these topics was the acknowledgement that sexual health and wellbeing is not solely a biomedical or clinical issue. It is influenced and affected by the wider social determinants of health, social contexts, and people’s understandings of risk. We were encouraged that discussions about how to identify key sexual health issues and deliver an effective strategy focused on the need for more research, more data, and better collaborations.
In light of this, we were encouraged that IReSH – as a network – could continue to make a valuable contribution to discussions about the next strategy and more generally to Scottish sexual health and wellbeing in our ongoing research collaborations and interdisciplinary discussions with clinical, community and policy partners. The current Framework is outcomes based and makes clear recommendations for NHS Boards, Local Authorities, Third Sector agencies and other stakeholders around particular approaches and ‘deliverables’ that support outcomes to be achieved. Where the current Framework outcomes focus on aspects of service provision and policy, we suggest that including research-related recommendations to both processes and outcomes would not only send a clear signal of the importance of research involvement but also facilitate cross-sector, interdisciplinary research collaborations that would ultimately help to achieve its goals.
We plan to continue our discussions and collaborations with partners across Scotland. Given the turn-out of attendees from Grampian, Fife and Highlands as well as Glasgow and Edinburgh, we plan to run events outside the central belt in future. We welcome contact from clinical, community and research partners within and outside of the central belt to continue these conversations and collaborations. Please get in touch if you would like to find out more and get involved in our IReSH network activities.
Making the Case for HIV Literacy
With developments in self-testing for HIV and STIs, the expansion of drugs used for prevention and treatment and an increase in apps and digital technologies, sexual and reproductive health and wellbeing is rapidly changing. This means that the information people need to know about good sexual and reproductive health, where they can get it and how they can use it, is becoming more complex. It’s also not clear how people – and wider communities – can be best supported in accessing, understanding and using this information.
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