Faculty of Public Health Committee of the Faculty of Public Health in Scotland

Public Health in Scotland Transcending Boundaries Thursday 2 & Friday 3 November 2017 MacDonald Aviemore Resort

Conference Programme #ScotPublicHealth www.fphscotconf.co.uk Public Health in Scotland Transcending Boundaries

Humanity faces health challenges on a scale not previously encountered in the modern era and trans-disciplinary working will be increasingly required to develop resilient and sustainable solutions. Scotland is not impervious to the threats posed by global climate change, peak oil, air and water pollution, global economic crises, new and emerging diseases, artificial intelligence and automation, and rising inequalities and exclusion but new technologies, social communications and change offer opportunities to advance health. Spanning boundaries is what good public health practice is about. People working in public health have always had to transcend boundaries to practice effectively. Our approach to this is becoming increasingly important and we need to be seen to be leading change. Boundaries are a defining characteristic of the moment. Everywhere, boundaries are being radically challenged, debated and redrawn, for example the boundaries between: further economic progress and ecological crisis; the old politics and the new; nation states and the relationships between them; old health system organisations and new; geographical and organisational boundaries; diseases and their transmission; different disciplines and sectors; communications; definitions of healthy and unhealthy; governments and citizens; partnerships and relationships. Boundaries can be helpful. They codify accountability, clarify rights and responsibilities, and help us to manage complexity. Boundaries can be real or imagined, divisive and inclusive, an obstacle or a strength for cooperation and cohesion. This conference will offer delegates the space to reflect on the breadth of challenges we face, the opportunities we must maximise, the boundaries we must span and our collective strategies to transcend them. At the conference, sponsors will have the opportunity to engage with public health professionals currently working across Scotland and the UK and with professional public health leaders, from the Faculty of Public Health, Scottish NHS Health Boards and national public health organisations.

Pip Farman & Chris Littlejohn Co-Chairs of the Faculty of Public Health Committee Further information/queries Please contact: SHSCEvents NHS National Services Scotland Scottish Health Service Centre Crewe Road South Edinburgh EH4 2LF Tel: 0131 275 7925 Fax: 0131 623 2525 Email: [email protected] www.fphscotconf.co.uk

Public Health in Scotland Transcending Boundaries #ScotPublicHealth Programme Day 1 Thursday 2 November 2017 Day 2 Friday 3 November 2017

09:30 – 10:00 Registration & Coffee Osprey Arena 08:45 – 09:00 Registration & Coffee Osprey Arena

10:00 – 10:15 Welcome & Introduction Auditorium 09:00 – 09:05 Welcome & Introduction Auditorium Julie Cavanagh, Convenor, Faculty of Public Health – Julie Cavanagh, Convenor, Faculty of Public Health – Scotland Scotland 10:15 – 10:45 Plenary 1: Ministerial Address 09:05 – 09:35 Plenary 5: Public health and climate change: head in Chair: Neil Galbraith, NHS Western Isles the sand or line in the sand? Aileen Campbell, Minister for Public Health, Chair: Gerald McLaughlin, NHS Health Scotland David Pencheon, Director, NHS Sustainable Development Unit working across NHS England and 10:45 – 11:15 Plenary 2: Presentation from the Chief Medical Officer Chair: Neil Galbraith, NHS Western Isles Public Health England Catherine Calderwood, Scottish Government 09:35 – 10:05 Plenary 6: Pharmaceuticals in our water: Linking environmental and human health 11:15 – 11:35 Refreshments/Exhibitions Osprey Arena Chair: Gerald McLaughlin, NHS Health Scotland & Poster Displays Stuart Gibb, Director of the Environmental Research Institute, The University of the Highlands and Islands 11:35 – 11:45 Public Health Wake Up Call Auditorium Elspeth Clark 10:05 – 10:35 Refreshments/ Exhibition Osprey Arena 11:45 – 12:15 Plenary 3: Shifting boundaries of responsibility and & Poster Displays contested judgements of good practice: facing up to 10:35 – 10:45 Auditorium the challenges of person-centred working Public Health Wake Up Call Chair: David Crichton , NHS Health Scotland Elspeth Clark Vikki Entwistle, Professor of Health Services Research 10:45 – 11:00 Plenary 7: Address from John Gairdner Prize winner and Ethics at University of Aberdeen Chair: Maggie Watts, NoSPHN Lead and Director of Public Health, NHS Western Isles 12:15 – 13:30 Parallel Session A Josie Murray, Visiting Scholar & specialty Registrar in 13:30 – 14:45 Lunch/Exhibitions & Osprey Arena Public Health, University of Edinburgh Poster Displays 11:05 – 12:20 Parallel Session C Walk and Conference Blether Reception Area 12:20 – 13:00 Lunch/Exhibition Osprey Arena 13:35 Meet the Public Health Reform Team Peregrine 1 & Poster Displays 13:45 Registrar Meeting Peregrine 2 Walk and Conference Blether Reception Area 14:45 – 16:00 Parallel Session B 12:20 Meet the Public Health Reform Team Peregrine 1 16:00 – 16:30 Refreshments/Exhibitions Osprey Arena 13:00 – 14:30 Parallel Session D & Poster Displays 14:35 – 15:50 Plenary 8: Transcending Boundaries Auditorium 16:30 – 17:00 Plenary 4: Auditorium to Improve Public Health Social Enterprise, a new way to tackle inequalities Co-Chairs: Malcolm Wright, Chief Executive Chair: David Crichton , NHS Health Scotland NHS Grampian and North of Scotland Regional James Dunbar, founding Chief Executive of New Start Implementation Lead and David Alston, Chair NHS Highland Highland Professor Marion Bain, Co-Director of the Executive 17:00 Conference Close Delivery Group for Public Health Reform Angela Scott, Chief Executive Aberdeen City Council, 17:15 – 18:15 AGM Strathspey Suite SOLACE representative on the Public Health Reform Committee of the FPH in Scotland Oversight Board 19:00 Conference Reception Registration Area Professor Simon Capewell, Vice President for Policy, Faculty of Public Health 19:15 Award Ceremony: Peregrine Suite Dr Andrew Fraser, Chair of and representing the Littlejohn Gairdner, Elizabeth Russell, Community Directors of Public Health on the Public Health and Committee Service Awards Reform Oversight Board 19:30 Conference Dinner & Networking 15:50 – 16:05 Closing Remarks and Presentation of Prizes For Best Posters (sponsored by ScotPHN) For Best Remote, Rural, and/or Island Poster The organisers reserve the right to alter the programme (sponsored by NoSPHN) as necessary without prior notification

CONFERENCE PROGRAMME 3 Parallel sessions day one session A Thursday 2 November 2017 12:15–13:30 Title Author Organisation A1 Reducing Inequalities – Health protection Peregrine 2 Chair: Maggie Watts, NHS Western Isles Realistic responses to viral and bacterial infection outbreak in people who use Emma Hamilton Scottish Drugs Forum drugs Treating Tuberculosis (TB) in the under-served population: so much more than Susan Duthie NHS Grampian just providing tablets! Glasgow Alcohol and Drug HIV testing in the community – responding to the Glasgow outbreak (year 2) Lee Middleton Recovery Service “She was respectable…” middle-aged heterosexuals negotiating sex in the context Glasgow Caledonian University/ Jenny Dalrymple of risk for sexually transmitted infections NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde A2 Vulnerable people Strathspey Chair: Ann Connacher, ScotPHN Trends in NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde Frailty admissions using geriatric frailty University of Glasgow / NHS Cathy Johnman syndromes codes Greater Glasgow & Clyde Co-ordinating palliative and end-of-life care at home: A collaborative approach to Emma Riches NHS Health Scotland knowledge brokering Building the offer of free, impartial energy advice into person-centred care to Jacqueline Mackenzie Home Energy Scotland support vulnerable patients to heat their homes affordably Loneliness and Social Isolation: what is the Scope for Public Health Action? Phil Mackie Scot PHN A3 Multi-agency prevention – smoking 1 Glenmore Chair: Laurence Gruer, Universities of Edinburgh and Glasgow “It's like sludge green”: Young people’s perceptions of standardised tobacco Scottish Centre for Social Andy Macgregor packaging Research ASSIST (A Stop Smoking in Schools Trial) a decade on: reflections and Fiona Dobbie University of Stirling perspectives from the pilot delivery in Scotland A Stop Smoking in Schools Trial (ASSIST): the trainer role and supporting factors Jennifer McKell Institute for Social Marketing Population cigarette consumption in Great Britain: novel insights using retail Mark Robinson NHS Health Scotland sales data A4 Boundaries in public health practice: Children and Young People Peregrine 1 Chair: Hester Ward, ISD, NHS National Services Scotland Engaging young people in community based participatory public health research Megan Watson NHS Lothian Working in partnership to create a whole school approach to promote mental Nicola Tomkinson NHS Ayrshire and Arran wellbeing in Largs Academy using Wellness Recovery Action Plan® (WRAP®) Once for Scotland: cool2talk; providing a safe space for young people Felicity Snowsill NHS Dumfries & Galloway A collaborative approach to supporting young people’s health and wellbeing in a Laura Gibson NHS Tayside digital era A5 Reducing Inequalities – Physical Activity and Sport Alvie Chair: Phillip Couser, PHI Scottish Collaboration for Public An evaluation of a physical activity and peer support intervention for people Stephen Malden Health Research and Policy, experiencing homelessness: Street Fit Scotland University of Edinburgh Vitamin D and Performance Sport… athlete health and wellbeing with wider Niall Elliott Scottish Institute of Sport implication on a sun-starved Scotland Gamification of physical activity as a method of addressing health and social Marc Harris Intelligent Health inequalities – Findings from 18 UK interventions. Boundary crossings: Reducing health inequalities in the Cairngorms National Park through the use of an activity tracker-based Medical Practitioner signposting Katherine Irvine James Hutton Institute programme A6 Building Public Health Capacity Auditorium Chair: Cathy Steer, NHS Highland Joint working across local authorities and health boards to promote emerging James McTaggart The Highland Council literacy and well being North of Scotland Public Health Driving forward a new public health leadership development agenda in Scotland Susan Webb Network, Scottish Directors of Public Health Exploring how barriers and facilitators to getting knowledge into action change Garth Reid NHS Health Scotland over time The Public Health Evidence Network (PHEN) Garth Reid NHS Health Scotland

Public Health in Scotland Transcending Boundaries #ScotPublicHealth

Title Author Organisation A7 What next in tackling tobacco? Morlich Chair: Gabe Docherty; NHS Lanarkshire Sheila Duffy, Chief Executive of health charity ASH Scotland, reflects on what next for tobacco policy in Scotland and on how taking an agile and joined-up approach to improving public health can yield a stronger influence than the sum Sheila Duffy ASH Scotland of the individual parts. These reflections on current practice and future possible developments are likely to be of interest with regards to other health activities focussed on the impacts of health-harming products. A8 Latebreaker – Healthcare and Public Health Dalwhinnie Chair: Paul McNamee, University of Aberdeen The health and healthcare impact of Syrian refugees in NHS Highland Catherine Flanigan NHS Highland Modernising Primary Care in Aberdeen City: A Baseline Evaluation Kasengele Kalonde NHS Grampian Paddling upstream to prevent harm from pharmaceuticals Sharon Pfleger NHS Highland NHS Borders: Staff Smear Amnesty Clinics Pilot Project – Reducing barriers to access and empowering staff to engage in the programme – Interim Report Julieann Brennan NHS Borders (6 months)

Parallel sessions day one session B Thursday 2 November 2017 14:45–16:00 Title Author Organisation B1 Multi-agency Prevention – Alcohol Glenmore Chair: Eve MacLeod, NHS Highland Empowering the Licensing Forum: alcohol licensing’s impact on Aberdeen City – a Rohan Mongru NHS Grampian qualitative study Alcohol-related deaths in Highland – why look at the data? Carolyn Hunter-Rowe Highland Alcohol and Drug Partnership Older People and alcohol a Highland peer education project – tell it as it is Elisabeth Smart NHS Highland Minimum Unit Pricing in Scotland: How will we evaluate its impact? Neil Craig NHS Health Scotland B2 Health protection 1 Alvie Chair: Pauline Craig, NHS Health Scotland A focus on partnership working during a measles outbreak in Edinburgh Peter Harrison NHS Lothian Hepatitis B knowledge and awareness among university students in North-East Emma W Davies NHS Grampian Scotland: A mixed methods study Assessing the Uptake of Hepatitis C Virus Testing & Treatment in Injecting Drug Peter Harrison NHS Lothian Users in Lothian Using Data Linkage to Laboratory Data and Construction of Piot-Fransen Model Trends in invasive group A streptococcal morbidity and mortality in Scotland Arlene Reynolds Health Protection Scotland B3 Sustainability & Climate Change Morlich Chair: Gabe Docherty, NHS Lanarkshire Climate Change Adaptation Actions: Co-Benefits and Dis-benefits for Health – A Emily Stevenson ScotPHN/SMaSH Systematic Review of the Literature Increasing environmental sustainability in the health sector: the case for reducing Joanna Teuton NHS Heath Scotland/SMaSH scope 3 Greenhouse Gas emissions Weathering Change: community resilience in the face of climate change Gregor Yates Glasgow Centre for Population Health What a difference a season makes; the impact of circulating flu strains on Jennifer Bishop Health Protection Scotland hospitalisations B4 Risk across the lifecourse Peregrine 1 Chair: Josephine Pravinkumar, NHS Lanarkshire Comparing two measures of multimorbidity in hospitalised patients in NHS Lynn Robertson University of Aberdeen Grampian The contribution of risk factors to socioeconomic inequalities in multimorbidity Kathryn Skivington University of Glasgow across the lifecourse: A longitudinal analysis of the West of Scotland Twenty07 cohort Prevalence of multiple risks to health among Scottish adults – results from the Joanne McLean ScotCen Scottish Health Survey Social influences on health-related behaviour clustering during mid-adulthood in Claire Mawditt University College London two British birth cohort studies.

CONFERENCE PROGRAMME 5 Title Author Organisation B5 Reducing Inequalities in Children & Families Auditorium Chair: Chris Littlejohn, NHS Grampian Tackling Poverty: A multi agency partnership giving single parents with lived Jackie Erdman NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde experience a voice The Healthy Start Scheme – Vitamins: Who needs them? Sabina McDonald NHS Lothian Health Promotion Service Reducing health inequalities by addressing barriers to healthy eating for families Katherine Hale British Heart Foundation living in areas of deprivation with Make, Move, Munch Clubs Parental and household influences on variation in children’s diet quality Michail Bitzios HERU, University of Aberdeen B6 Building partnerships and relationships: Co-production Peregrine 2 Chair: Valerie McNeice; Glasgow Centre for Population Health Developing an agenda for health promotion, community empowerment and Damien Williams University of St Andrews holistic problem-solving using the World Game: a pilot study Co-producing Public Health: a joint Voluntary Health Scotland (VHS) and Scottish Claire Stevens Voluntary Heath Scotland/ Public Health Network (ScotPHN) case study. ScotPHN Public Health Knowledge and Skills Framework (2016) – Opportunities and Fiona Macdonald NHS Health Scotland Implications for Public Health Workforce Development in Scotland “It all comes down to relationships” – illustrating asset-based approaches in Jennifer McLean Glasgow Centre for Population health and care services Health B7 Health and Place Strathspey Chair: Jane Parkinson, NHS Health Scotland The health impacts of 50,000 new affordable homes in Scotland Margaret Douglas SHIIAN Place Standard process evaluation: learning from case studies in year one. Megan MacPherson NHS Health Scotland Health impacts of the M74 urban motorway extension Fiona Crawford NHS Greater Glasgow & Clyde A remote, rural and island health proofing checklist Pip Farman North of Scotland Public Health Network (NoSPHN) B8 Latebreaker – Inequalities & Wellbeing Dalwhinnie Chair: Manira Ahmad, NHS National Services Scotland Reducing health inequalities through NHS procurement Debbie Nelson NHS Greater Glasgow & Clyde Trends in population mental health inequalities following the 2008 recession and Rachel Thomson NHS Ayrshire & Arran subsequent period of austerity An exploration of the relationship between health and social capital among Kathy Owens Glasgow Health and Social Care population groups in Glasgow Partnership (NHS) Identifying Public Health Advocacy Priorities for Scotland –evidence-based Josie Murray NHS Lothian decision making using a Delphi approach

Parallel sessions day one session C Friday 3 November 2017 11:05–12:20

Title Author Organisation C1 Action Learning and Research Strathspey Chair: Andrew Fraser, NHS Health Scotland Community-led research to build evidence for policy and practice Jacqueline McDowell NHS Health Scotland The Right to Health- participatory action research into practice Emma Kennedy NHS Health Scotland Humanising Healthcare: Transcending prison and academic boundaries through a Stephanie Morrison Robert Gordon University collaboration of learning Informing investment to reduce health inequalities (III) – learning from Andrew Pulford NHS Health Scotland engagement with local decision makers C2 Building partnerships and relationships: New Opportunities Peregrine 2 Chair: Claire Stevens, Voluntary Health Scotland Moray community health & wellbeing vintage tea parties Ann Griffin Health and Social Care Moray Young carers’ health, wellbeing and future prospects Oonagh Robison Glasgow Centre for Population Health A change of focus: Evaluation of Highland Persistent Offenders Project Carolyn Hunter-Rowe Highland Alcohol and Drug Partnership Sowing the seeds of health: a new approach to health in agriculture Andrea Gilmartin NHS Grampian

Public Health in Scotland Transcending Boundaries #ScotPublicHealth Title Author Organisation C3 Health protection II Morlich Chair: Susan Webb, NHS Grampian Analysis of linked data to estimate the burden of disease from Campylobacter Alison Smith-palmer Health Protection Scotland infection in Scotland Analysis of linked data to estimate the burden of disease from Salmonella Alison Smith-palmer Health Protection Scotland infection in Scotland Customer cohort study of a Norovirus outbreak associated with Mexican-themed Catriona Waugh NHS Lothian restaurant Duration of positivity among Shiga toxin producing Escherichia coli cases Alison Smith-palmer Health Protection Scotland C4 Realistic Public Health Peregrine 1 Chair: Pip Farman, NHS Highland Pandemic Influenza Severity Assessment – applying the WHO PISA framework to Arlene Reynolds Health Protection Scotland Scotland Prevalence of Lyme Disease in the Western Isles Isabell MacInnes NHS Western Isles Evaluation of a pilot of Dried Blood Spot Testing in Community Pharmacy in Fiona Aitken NHS Grampian Grampian Preventing major trauma in Scotland – Is it possible to bridge the gap between Lesley Nish NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde / injury and prevention? ScotPHN C5 Reducing Health Inequalities Auditorium Chair: Drew Walker, NHS Tayside Experiences of poverty-based stigma and discrimination in Scotland Greig Inglis Scottish Collaboration for Public Health Research and Policy The impact of fiscal policies on health and health inequalities in Scotland Elizabeth Richardson NHS Health Scotland Building communities where black and minority ethnic people have equal and fair Jackie Erdman NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde access to health and wellbeing Embedding health promotion into practice: supporting staff to promote health – Megan Watson NHS Lothian a pilot C6 Health Intelligence Alvie Chair: Colin Sumpter, NHS Forth Valley System Dynamics Simulation with Group Model Building to Facilitate Planning Douglas McKelvie Symmetric Across the Health and Social Care Boundary in Ayrshire and Arran Spanning boundaries by co-designing actionable intelligence Hester Ward National Services Scotland A public engagement campaign for primary care data (SPIRE) in Scotland Hester Ward ISD, NHS National Services Scotland Building health profiles and evidence for action in Glasgow Bruce Whyte Glasgow Centre for Population Health C7 Latebreaker – Children & Families Glenmore Chair: Scott Wilson, NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde Hearing Children’s Voices: The Catalyst for Family Recovery Deborah Stewart Highland Alcohol & Drugs Partnership A targeted approach to reduce health inequalities through the use of Specialist Rachel Harris NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde Children's Services Neighbourhood Profiles Do adverse childhood experiences negatively affect sexual health outcomes, Rosie Ilett The MOOD Project / Glasgow sexual risk-taking and wider health outcomes? A study of attendees at sexual Caledonian University health services in Greater Glasgow and Clyde. Intelligence in youth and health behaviours in middle age, with adjustment for Christina Wraw NHS National Services Scotland childhood and adult SES C8 Latebreaker – Disease Prevention Dalwhinnie Chair: Duncan Buchanan, NHS National Services Scotland Game of Stones: Recruitment of obese men from across the socio-economic Matthew McDonald University of Stirling spectrum into a text-message based weight management study Qualitative study of men’s experiences of having an abdominal aortic aneurysm Whitney Vogel University of Aberdeen (AAA) identified by screening Weight inclusive approaches to weight management: a service evaluation Fiona Clarke NHS Highland Tobacco control policy in Scotland: A qualitative study of expert views on Yvonne Laird University of Edinburgh successes, challenges and future actions

CONFERENCE PROGRAMME 7 Parallel sessions day one session D Friday 3 November 2017 13:00–14:30

Title Author Organisation D1 Multi-agency prevention – smoking II Morlich Chair: Sheila Taheny, NHS 24 Implementing a NHS Smokefree Policy – Why don't people comply? Karen Mather NHS Greater Glasgow & Clyde Estimating the impact of maternal smoking on childhood health using routine Richard Lawder ISD Scotland data Developing a harm-reduction approach to protect disadvantaged children from Colin Lumsdaine NHS Lothian second-hand smoke: A pilot study with parents and practitioners Inequalities in smoking in 16-24 year olds Hanna Delaney Scottish Centre for Social Research Staff views on a prison smoking ban: Evidence from the Tobacco in Prisons study Ashley Brown University of Glasgow D2 Realistic Public Health – Primary and Community Auditorium Chair: Andrew Pulford, NHS Health Scotland Sign-posting and referral approaches to community based activities – A Nurse's Shamini Omnes Aberdeen city Health and Social perspective Care Partnership HealthWorks: Building capacity and capability to embed ‘the work question’ in Therese Lebedis NHS Grampian routine care From Turmoil to Treatment: the role of the community pharmacy John Campbell NHS Greater Glasgow & Clyde SP A multi-disciplinary approach to patient safety in primary care Emma O'Keefe NHS Fife and South East Scotland SP Variation in Childsmile's Dental Health Support Worker Role: adaptive delivery Wendy Gnich University of Glasgow Dental versus a risk to achieving outcomes? Hospital & School D3 Mental Health Peregrine 2 Chair: Jane Bray, NHS Tayside An overview of the use of virtual reality in promoting mental health – where are Shaun Jerdan University of the Highlands and we now and where might we go? Islands / NHS Highland Supporting staff in mental health services to improve physical health outcomes Lynne Rush CSO/MRC Social and Public in service users, using ‘needs assessment’ as an enabler Health Sciences Unit Building Mutual Aid for Recovery Sharon Holloway Highland Alcohol & Drugs Partnership Cross sectoral partnership working to improve suicide prevention Rosemary Millar NHS Tayside SP Leading change for Public Mental Health – achieving parity! Kirsty Licence NSS Public Health and Intelligence D4 Leading Change – North of Scotland Peregrine 1 Chair: Louise Wilson, NHS Orkney Grampian Branching Out project focussing the needs of people with severe and Imran Arain NHS Grampian enduring mental health conditions Increased uptake in AAA screening associated with the transference and Margaret Taylor NHS Tayside consolidation of screening locations from community to hospital Orkney's Cervical Screening Campaign Hannah Casey NHS Orkney Public health – new models of working in the north of Scotland Maggie Watts North of Scotland Public Health Network (NoSPHN) SP Applying continuous improvement methodology to help support delivery of Carolyn Chalmers NHS Orkney Public Health Priorities in Orkney D5 Reducing Inequalities – School Age Children Strathspey Chair: Damien Williams, University of St Andrews Building Stronger Children: A health needs assessment of vulnerable children in Emily Stevenson NHS Grampian Grampian Hitting the right note for child and adolescent mental and emotional wellbeing: Christopher Harkins Glasgow Centre for Population a formative qualitative evaluation of Sistema Scotland’s “Big Noise” orchestral Health programme A Change for the Better? An evaluation of the refocused School Nurse role and Deborah Wason NHS Health Scotland supporting the health of school aged children. Early intervention and prevention in schools: killing three birds with one stone – Jim White Stress Control Ltd teaching 'Stress Control' to pupils, parents and teachers SP Opportunities to embed behavioural science into health improvement practice Ellen Jardine NHS Dumfries & Galloway

SP = Speed Presentation Public Health in Scotland Transcending Boundaries #ScotPublicHealth

Title Author Organisation D6 Global / International health Glenmore Chair: Elisabeth Smart, Highland Directorate of Public Health and Policy Investigation of a cluster of cases of acute flaccid paralysis associated with Catriona Waugh NHS Lothian Enterovirus D68 infection (EVD68) in children in South East Scotland, 2016 Can public health specialists in Scotland help improve health in rural Ghana? Laurence Gruer University of Edinburgh Key themes from a study of Polish suicides in Lothian and Scotland 2012- 2016- Rachel King NHS Lothian recommendations for policy and practice Enhancing self management for black Africans living with sight loss Gozie Joe Adigwe Royal National Institute of Blind People (RNIB) Scotland D7 Early Years Alvie Chair: Ruth Campbell, NHS Ayrshire & Arran CHANGE (Childcare and Nurture, Glasgow East): co-producing a new and Val McNeice Glasgow Centre for Population innovative model of childcare provision Health A collaborative approach to achieving the best start in life: Dumfries and Laura Gibson NHS Dumfries & Galloway Galloway’s Preconception Health Toolkit bumps2bairns: The right help at the right time from conception to school James McTaggart The Highland Council How has child growth around adiposity rebound altered in Scotland since 1990 Larry Doi University of Edinburgh and what are the risk factors for weight gain using the Growing Up in Scotland birth cohort 1? SP Using behaviour change theories and techniques to optimise on-the-ground Jennifer Eaves NHS Fife and University of delivery of public health interventions: the example of the Childsmile nursery Glasgow tooth brushing programme D8 Latebreaker – Health Protection Dalwhinnie Chair: Phil Mackie, Scottish Public Health Network Clinical efficacy and cost-effectiveness of Rotavirus vaccines: A Systematic Review Sanjeev Kumar Pugazhendhi University of Aberdeen of Randomised Controlled Trials and Economic Evaluations An outbreak of Invasive Group A Streptococcal infection in a care home for the Emmanuel Okpo NHS Grampian elderly in Scotland: Lessons and challenges Epidemiology of non-O157 shiga toxin producing Escherichia coli in Grampian, Zareen Thorlu-Bangura University of Aberdeen 2014-2017 Managing a protracted scabies outbreak in a residential care facility for adults Emmanuel Okpo NHS Grampian with ‘special needs’ in Grampian, Northeast Scotland: Challenges and Lesson learned

General Information Remote access Remote access to the event is available by Webcast. The main sessions and parallel sessions A6, B5, C5 and D2 Sustainable Events will all be live streamed. If you wish to join the event The Faculty of Public Health Annual Scottish Conference remotely please visit the webcast tab on the website is committed to running a sustainable event and has www.fphscotconf.co.uk for joining instructions. put in place the following environmental policies and procedures. Walk and Conference Blether Recycled Paper Transcend the barriers of the conference venue with a walk and blether about your reflections on the conference. The sessions All event documentation is printed on recycled paper. will be led by Paths for All and Active Cairngorm colleagues Recycling (please visit their stands in the main hall and presentations) and sign up to join the walks in the Conference Foyer during the All leftover delegate materials will be recycled after the morning refreshment breaks. conference. Transport Delegate Bags All participants are encouraged to consider their own personal No delegate bags or folders will be provided this year. contribution to ‘carbon saving’. Therefore, we are asking all Delegates are advised to bring their own if they wish. those attending the conference to consider, for example, sharing transport or using the public transport service. There will be many other ways that you can contribute to carbon saving and we hope that you will undertake to do so wherever possible and practical.

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Scotland’s health

NHS Health Scotland Working to reduce health inequalities and improve health

Find out more of who we are and what we do at healthscotland.scot Twitter @NHS_HS Instagram nhshealthscotland

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#ScotPublicHealth

Poster Competition Conference organisation

A poster competition for the best posters will take place This year’s annual Scottish Public Health over the 2 days of the conference – Thursday 2nd and Conference is being organised by the Faculty of Friday 3rd November. There are three categories in which Public Health in partnership with the North of all delegates have the opportunity to vote. Poster voting Scotland NHS Boards and partners and comprises the following planning group members: Scotland’s forms are available in the poster area. Category 1: Sponsored by ScotPHN health Convenor, CFPHS Julie Cavanagh Delegates are asked to vote for a poster taking into NoSPHN Pip Farman account its visual impact, clarity of content and the NHS Grampian Chris Littlejohn contribution to public health. NHS Highland Elisabeth Smart Category 2: Sponsored by ScotPHN NHS Orkney Louise Wilson NHS Shetland Elizabeth Robinson In recognition of the ScotPHN’s ethos of joint working across NHS Board areas and organisations involved NHS Western Isles Colin Gilmour in driving forward health improvement and services, Maggie Watts delegates are asked to vote for a poster which describes Aberdeen University Mike Crilly a piece of work that successfully involved several Robert Gordon University Caroline Comerford organisations. University of the Highlands and Islands Jenny Hall Sarah Morton Category 3: Sponsored by NoSPHN ScotPHN Ann Conacher In recognition of NoSPHN’s focus on remote, rural and Phil Mackie island public health, delegates are asked to vote for the NHS Health Scotland Carrie Blair poster which best contributes to improving remote, rural NHS Lothian Graham MacKenzie and island public health. Specialist Registrars Group Catherine Flanigan SHSC Events Cheryl Goff Victoria Delargy NHS Health Scotland Conference Sponsors Working to reduce health inequalities and improve health

Find out more of who we are and what we do at healthscotland.scot Twitter @NHS_HS Instagram nhshealthscotland CONFERENCE PROGRAMME 11

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Main Plenaries

Exhibition Area Posters Refreshments/Lunch

Registration

Osprey Arena Conference Foyer Exhibition Registration Posters Conference Reception Refreshments / Lunch Peregrine Suite Auditorium Parallel Sessions Main Plenaries Conference Dinner & Networking Parallel Sessions

Public Health in Scotland Transcending Boundaries #ScotPublicHealth

CONFERENCE PROGRAMME 13 Faculty of Public Health Committee of the Faculty of Public Health in Scotland

The conference organising group appreciate the contributions from the Faculty of Public Health, NHS Health Scotland, NHS Grampian, NHS Highland, NHS Orkney, NHS Shetland, NHS Western Isles, NoSPHN, ScotPHN, University of Highlands and Islands, Aberdeen University & Robert Gordon University

The North of Scotland NHS Boards

NHS Grampian NHS Shetland NHS Grampian is in the North East corner of Scotland, NHS Shetland is responsible for the public health and covering the populations of Moray, Aberdeenshire and healthcare of 23,000 people living in the northernmost Aberdeen City. Its population of over half a million islands of the UK, 80 km to the northeast of Orkney (10% of Scotland) varies from inner city to extreme and 280 km southeast of the Faroe Islands, between rural living with industries including oil and gas the Atlantic Ocean and the North Sea. One third of the production, fishing and farming. NHS Grampian is population lives in the main town of Lerwick, with the responsible for improving health and for the delivery rest living across 14 of over 100 islands which make of primary, secondary and tertiary healthcare. It does up Shetland. Shetland has high employment rates, and, so in partnership with the 3 local authorities and for most people, a high standard of living; this tends other public and voluntary organisations, and also to obscure the fact that there are numbers of families enjoys a mutually beneficial relationship with both and individuals who live in poverty and isolation. the University of Aberdeen and The Robert Gordon The NHS Board, Integrated Joint Board and Shetland University; in particular in health and health care Islands Council work closely with Community Planning research, workforce planning and training. Partners to address the health needs of the population.

NHS Highland NHS Western Isles NHS Highland covers 42% of the land mass of Scotland Bord SSN nan Eilean Siar (NHS Western Isles), serves and provides for a population of 321,000 across a population of 26,000 living in the Outer Hebrides. Highland Council and Argyll and Bute Council areas. NHS Western Isles is responsible for providing It is an area of contrasts with 28% of the population appropriate, accessible, modern primary and secondary living in urban areas and 28% in very remote, rural health care services over a distance greater than that areas including island populations. Approximately from Edinburgh to Belfast. The NHS Board has three 40% of NHS Highlands population live in the 15% hospitals with the main general hospital in the town most access deprived areas which is 180% higher than of Stornoway, Isle of Lewis. There is also the Uist and the Scottish level. In common with most of Scotland Barra Hospital in Benbecula and General Practitioner NHS Highland has an inverse population pyramid with led services at St Brendan’s Hospital in Barra. an aging population and clear inequalities with life expectancy being approximately 5 years less among NoSPHN the most deprived compared to the least deprived. NHS The North of Scotland Public Health Network Highland has developed the Highland Quality Approach (NoSPHN) is a collaboration between NHS Grampian, (HQA) to transform the design and delivery of safe, NHS Highland, NHS Orkney, NHS Shetland and NHS effective and person centred services across primary Western Isles. The Network aims to link groups of and secondary care. NHS Highland works closely with public health/health improvement professionals, The Highland Council, Argyll and Bute Council and the to work in a coordinated manner where this adds North of Scotland Public Health Network (NoSPHN). It value, to contribute to improving health and reducing also collaborates with the University of the Highlands inequalities, thus maximising shared resources. and Islands (UHI) and works with the Highlands and Islands Enterprise (HIE) through newly formed NHS Health Scotland Community Partnerships. NHS Health Scotland’s vision is a Scotland in which all of its people and communities have a fairer share of the NHS Orkney opportunities, resources and confidence to live longer, NHS Orkney serves a population of around 21,500 healthier lives. Our primary role is to work with others residents who live on the archipelago which consists of to produce, share and implement knowledge of what 70 islands although fewer than 20 are inhabited. The NHS works to improve the health of the people of Scotland Board has one rural general hospital based in Kirkwall in a fair and equitable way. Our strategic framework and plans for a new hospital and healthcare facility. for action; ‘A Fairer Healthier Scotland 2017–22’ sets NHS Orkney works in partnership with Orkney Islands out how we will do this and continue in our mission to Council and a range of other partners to ensure delivery reduce health inequalities and improve the health of of services to meet the population’s health needs. the population of Scotland. We share our ambition for a fairer, healthier Scotland with many organisations and individuals across the public, third and private sectors. We know that we cannot deliver a fairer and healthier Scotland alone.

Public Health in Scotland Transcending Boundaries ScotPHN Robert Gordon University The Scottish Public Health Network (ScotPHN) is Robert Gordon University, Aberdeen (RGU) provides hosted by NHS Health Scotland and is accountable to industry led undergraduate and postgraduate courses the Scottish Directors of Public Health collectively. leading to highly relevant awards and degrees. The It was created in 2006 as a collaborative network university is comprised of eleven schools which are which would add value to the work of Public Health situated on a beautiful campus on the banks of the Directorates and agencies across Scotland. River Dee. Its formal remit is to: RGU is ranked at 95.6% as a top – rated UK University • undertake prioritised national pieces of work for Graduate employment. Furthermore it is first for where there is a clearly identified need; four courses in Scotland; one of which is in Health Professions; also ranked fifth in the UK. The School • facilitate information exchange between public of Health Sciences encompasses Applied Social health practitioners, link with other networks and Sciences, Health Promotion, Nursing and Midwifery share learning; and Pharmacy and Life Sciences. • create effective communication amongst The School is multi-professional covering the professionals and the public to allow efficient disciplines of Diagnostic Radiography, Health co-ordination of public health activity and Promotion, Occupational Therapy, Physiotherapy and • support and enhance the capabilities and Sport & Exercise Science. There are a range of Under functionality of the Scottish Directors of Public Graduate and Post Graduate Courses including an MSc Health Group. in Public Health and Health Promotion. Most recently, the first element of ScotPHN’s remit, that The RGU School of Health Sciences has strong links of undertaking nationally prioritised projects, has been with practitioners and managers within the NHS, extended to ensure any issues identified as nationally Health and Social Care, Local Authorities and private important by NHS Boards, Scottish Government and sectors. The School has a reputation for the quality of the National Planning Forum are undertaken and that the delivery of all its professional courses. these national public health priorities are undertaken in a co-ordinated manner across Scotland. Aberdeen University Founded in 1495 the University of Aberdeen is the 5th The University of the Highlands and Islands oldest University in the UK. It attracts over 14,500 The University of the Highlands and Islands is the students a third of whom are international students UK’s leading integrated university encompassing taking undergraduate, postgraduate and research both further and higher education. Based in the study to doctorate level. The Medical School is situated Highlands and Islands of Scotland, our partnership on one of the biggest health complexes in Europe and of 13 independent colleges and research institutions offers Masters Programmes in Public Health (MPH), is locally based and rooted in communities, but with Global Health and Public Health Nutrition. national and international reach. Our Rural Health and Wellbeing research group contributes to the knowledge base on preventing ill-health and promoting wellbeing by enhancing the understanding of patterns and experiences of health, illness and their underlying drivers particularly in a rural context, and through contribution to the development of health services policy and delivery. This is achieved by addressing real life policy and practice challenges through close collaboration with policy makers, health service staff and communities.

This year’s conference is being held at the Macdonald Aviemore Resort www.macdonaldhotels.co.uk/Aviemore/ Faculty of Public Health Committee of the Faculty of Public Health in Scotland

#ScotPublicHealth www.fphscotconf.co.uk

NHS National Services Scotland, Scottish Health Service Centre, Crewe Road South, Edinburgh EH4 2LF Tel: 0131 275 7925 Email: [email protected]