TV

Skip navigation

Working Well in Healthcare - Transformative Experiential Learning and Simulated Environments

Call Us
Email us

Join us for our annual free-to-attend Working Well in Healthcare event designed to foster collaboration across the healthcare industry to tackle some of the most pressing workforce challenges.

This year will be the second event in the series. The hybrid event, which will be held at Northumbria University’s City Campus, will focus on “Transformative Experiential Learning and Simulated Environments” and will bring together health leaders from across the UK to explore how simulated teaching environments and experiential learning can help us to train the healthcare workforce of the future in a digital age.

During the event, speakers including Professor Paula Holt MBE DL, Senior Nursing Advisor at the Nursing and Midwifery Council, Jamie Hunt, Head of Education at the Health and Care Professions Council, Professor Graham Wynn, Pro Vice-Chancellor for Education at Northumbria University, Professor Alison Machin, Head of Department for Nursing, Midwifery and Health at Northumbria University and Chair of the Council of Deans of Health, and Professor John Unsworth OBE, Deputy Pro VIce-Chancellor for Health and Life Sciences at Northumbria University and Chair of the Queen’s Nursing Institute will discuss the role of simulated practice in the learning experience, as well as highlight the benefits of experiential and interprofessional learning for the workforce.

This time around our panel discussion will focus on ‘Myth-busting: the challenges, changes and concerns around simulated practice’ during which we intend to address the concerns surrounding replacing practice hours with simulated training and discuss how it can benefit both organisations and learners. 

The full event schedule, including additional speakers, will be announced shortly. 

Northumbria University has a well-established suite of health and social care related degree, CPD and workforce development programmes. Nursing at Northumbria is ranked Top 20 in the UK by the Complete University Guide for 2024 and 99% of our nursing graduates are in highly skilled employment or further study 15 months after graduation (Guardian University Guide, 2024) – accolades that we’re very proud of. We’re invested in supporting the sector and its staff and we hope that this event will provide an invaluable opportunity to learn, discuss and debate a timely and important subject.

Date: Thursday 15th May 

Time: 9:30am - 4:00pm*  

Location: CCE Northumbria University

*breakfast served from 9.00am for on-site guests

Schedule:

9:00am  Arrival and Breakfast 
9:30am Welcome - Professor John Unsworth OBE
9:45am Keynote - Simulated practice learning and its role in workforce development - Professor Paula Holt MBE DL (Nursing and Midwifery Council)
10:30am Keynote - Experiential learning - The HEI role in the provision of simulated practice learning - Professor Graham Wynn
11:00am Coffee Break
11:15am Keynote - Interprofessional education - role in practice learning - Claire Leader, Stevie Smith (Collaborative Newcastle) and Rebecca Hancock (Newcastle University)
11.45am   Presentation - Case TV - Accessing the full potential of simulated education - Operating Department Practice (ODP) focus - Dr Amy Bradburn
12:15pm

Q&A - Morning wrap-up Q&A 

Host: Professor Alison Machin

 

  • Professor Paula Holt MBE DL
  • Claire Leader
  • Stevie Smith
  • Dr Amy Bradburn
12:45pm Lunch
1:45pm Welcome back - Professor Alison Machin
2.00pm Keynote - Developments in modern health care: the wider context for simulated learning - Professor Sir Liam Donaldson (North East and North Cumbria ICB)
2:45pm

Presentation/talk - The performance and reality of VR and simulated environments, virtual showcase - Dr Alan Platt and Dominic Simpson

3:15pm

Panel - Myth busting - Challenges, changes and concerns around simulated education 

Host: Professor John Unsworth OBE

  • Professor Paula Holt MBE DL
  • Professor Sir Liam Donaldson
  • Jamie Hunt (Health and Care Professions Council)
  • Professor Alison Machin
4:15pm Closing remarks - Professor Alison Machin
4:30pm End


Speaker Biographies 

Professor Paula Holt MBE DL, Senior Nursing Adviser at the Nursing and Midwifery Council

Paula Holt

EdD MSc (Health Psych) PgD(Ed) BScHons (Psych) FHEA RN(A) RN(MH) CMHN  

Paula started her career as a Registered General Nurse, working in acute medicine, then became a Registered Mental Health Nurse working in acute and dementia services. She served as an Army Officer for 8 years in England, Germany and Scotland heading up mental health services for Forces personnel and their families. She undertook operational tours of Bosnia in 1993/4 (with the UN) and 1997 (with NATO) providing responsive mental health care. Back in the NHS she led a drug and alcohol team, a mentally disordered offender service and developed and delivered a court mandated drug treatment and rehabilitation programme.  
She enjoyed a 19-year career in Higher Education, developing nursing and AHP education portfolios with a focus on widening participation into these professions, and supporting student success through innovative pedagogy. She spent many years as UK regulation lead for the Council of Deans of Health. She left the HE sector as a Pro Vice Chancellor and Dean in September 2021.  

Paula currently works for the Nursing and Midwifery Council as a Senior Nursing Adviser. The role draws on her significant practice and educational experience, and she has led work around pre-registration nursing standards, education quality and simulated practice. 

Paula has multiple statutory and charitable roles regionally to support veterans and the armed forces community. 

Professor Graham Wynn, Pro Vice-Chancellor for Education at Northumbria University 

Graham Wynn December 2024

Graham is responsible for shaping and implementing Northumbria University's education vision and strategy. He provides strategic leadership across all educational activities, overseeing the design, implementation, and monitoring of quality frameworks to ensure consistently high academic standards.  

Graham has led on the development of the University’s Education Strategic Delivery Plan, focusing on experiential learning and driving social mobility through education, this strategy includes embedding experiential learning opportunities, developing a Quality Enhancement and Development Framework for taught awards, and ensuring tailored support services for all students. The Education Strategy directly supports the Northumbria’s Strategy 2030 ambition of Powering an Inclusive Economy by embedding experiential learning in all undergraduate programs, enhancing students' employability and social capital. Additionally, his work on Driving Social Mobility involves providing tailored support services and eliminating disparities in student outcomes, ensuring equitable access and success for students from diverse backgrounds.  

He is a Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society (FRAS) a member of the Institute of Physics (MInstP) and a Senior Fellow for Higher Education Academy (SFHEA).  

Professor Sir Liam Donaldson, Chair, North East and North Cumbria Integrated Care Board

Professor Sir Liam Donaldson

 

Professor Sir Liam Donaldson is recognised as an international champion of public health and patient safety. He was the creator and foundation chair of the World Alliance for Patient Safety, launched in 2004. He is a past vice-chairman of the World Health Organisation Executive Board. In his current global health roles, he is the World Health Organisation’s Special Envoy for Patient Safety, Chair of the Independent Monitoring Board for the Global Polio Eradication Programme, as well as Chair of the Polio Transition Independent Monitoring Board.

In the United Kingdom, he is Chair of the Integrated Care System (ICS) for the North East and North Cumbria region of England (planning and providing care for three million people) and Professor of Public Health at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. He was Chancellor of Newcastle University for 10 years until 2019.

Prior to this Sir Liam was the 15th Chief Medical Officer for England, and the United Kingdom's Chief Medical Adviser, from 1998-2010. During his time in this historic post (established in 1855) he held critical responsibilities across the whole field of public health and health care. As the United Kingdom's chief adviser on health issues, he worked with and advised six Secretaries of State for Health, two Prime Ministers and many other government ministers. He has produced landmark reports which have set health policy and legislation in fields such as stem cell research, clinical governance, quality and safety of health care, infectious disease control, patient empowerment, poor clinical performance, smoke free public places, medical regulation, and organ and tissue retention. He led the government’s response to the H1N1 influenza pandemic.

He has published over 300 papers in peer-reviewed journals and many technical reports for the UK government, the National Health Service and the World Health Organisation. He is author of a standard textbook of public health that has been in continuous print for nearly 40 years and co-author of the history of the Chief Medical Officers of England. He has made hundreds of media appearances as part of his professional roles and numerous keynote addresses, presentations and speeches at national and international conferences and events.

Sir Liam initially trained as a surgeon and went on to hold posts in academia, general practice, public health, healthcare management and the civil service.

Sir Liam has received many public honours: 17 honorary university doctorates, eight fellowships from medical royal colleges and faculties, and the Gold Medal of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh. He was the Queen's Honorary Physician between 1996 and 1999. He was knighted in the 2002 New Year's Honours List.

 

Jamie Hunt, Head of Education at the Health and Care Professions Council

Jamie Hunt, Head of Education at the HCPC 

Jamie Hunt is Head of Education at the HCPC. He has worked at the HCPC for about 15 years, mostly on matters of education quality assurance.

In recent years, Jamie led a fundamental change programme to deliver a new model of education quality assurance. This was co-produced with the sector, and shifted the way HCPC assesses and ensures the quality of education provision across the UK, for the 15 HCPC-regulated professions.

Jamie’s primary interest is on ensuring regulatory requirements are delivered within education and training, with a focus on current key initiatives and sectoral developments. An aim to reduce regulatory burden, whilst keeping quality high is central to Jamie’s public protection goals. Jamie works closely with stakeholders across the education and health sectors, including professional bodies, representatives from all four home countries, Higher Education Institutions, and commissioning bodies.


Back to top