Introduction

Application

Except for our occasional courses and services provided via third parties (eg colleges sending OJT students to us), this button is the sole gateway to our training schemes…

Quality

We are a leading provider of holistic training about offender healthcare and related issues such as the care of vulnerable patient groups. Much of it is free. All of it is high quality and safe.

Enquiries

Email us about our courses and bespoke training solutions.

Firsts

  • 2025: we celebrate a whole decade of being a leading provider of offender healthcare electives!

  • 2023: we published our first book and took our first physiotherapy elective student.

  • 2022: we returned to hands-on electives, started vocational training for Filipino caregivers and nurse assistants, recorded our first offender healthcare webinar with ICMDA, and for the first time took an elective student to one of our trips to a less open South-East Asian country.

The 2020/2021 Health & Justice Track delegates meeting online for the first time

  • 2021: we ran the Health & Justice Track for the first time.

  • 2020: we took our first clinical fellow and created virtual electives so that students could still do offender healthcare during the height of the pandemic.

  • 2019: we took our first nursing elective student, and we moved to a larger base and created a bespoke training room.

  • 2018: we took our first dental elective student.

  • 2017: aided by a generous grant from the British Medical Association and Health Books International, we assembled a training library and skills equipment (including resuscitation mannikins) in the Philippines.

Our autism & disability advocate, Zoe training NHS mental health staff

  • 2016: we took our first student-selected course (SSC) student to the Philippines and started autism awareness training for NHS staff caring for mentally ill patients detained under the Mental Health Act.

  • 2015: we ran a Health & Justice summer camp, took our first elective students to Philippine places of detention, and presented our in-house research at a United Nations conference.

  • 2014: we started continuing professional development training for healthcare professionals working within a UK prison.

Medico-political debate training within the Medics & Justice SSC

  • 2013: we devised Medics & Justice, a student-selected course (SSC) for the University of Leeds, which ran yearly until the pandemic.

  • 2012: we started speaking at relevant conferences, as seminar leaders and session speakers.


As a prisoner for the Lord, then, I urge you to
live a life worthy of the calling you have received.
Ephesians 4:1