Shared Learning Awards 2020: Winner announced
Virtual ceremony sees a project from Avon and Wiltshire Mental Health Partnership Trust voted winning submission
All NICE products on children and young people. Includes any guidance, advice and quality standards.
We use the best available evidence to develop recommendations that guide decisions in health, public health and social care.
Published guidance on this topic (59)
Critical assessment of evidence to help you make decisions. Advice, rather than formal NICE guidance.
Published advice on this topic (8)
Set out priority areas for quality improvement in health and social care.
Published quality standards on this topic (30)
Review the evidence across broad health and social care topics.
Reviews the clinical and cost-effectiveness of new treatments.
Review clinical and cost-effectiveness of specialised treatments.
Assessments of whether procedures are safe enough and work well enough for wider use in the NHS.
Review the best available evidence for selected medicines.
Review the evidence and likely costs of medical devices and technologies.
Guidance, quality standards and advice being developed.
Guidance and quality standards awaiting development.
Guidance in topic selection.
Virtual ceremony sees a project from Avon and Wiltshire Mental Health Partnership Trust voted winning submission
NICE has today (28 March) published a summary for healthcare professionals bringing together all its recommendations and other safety advice on the drug valproate.
Professor May-Chahal explains how NICE guidance will help protect children and young people from abuse.
Examples of how our guidance and standards have been put into practice in the NHS, local authorities, voluntary sector and a range of other organisations.
Showing 3 of 56 shared learning examples for this topic:
In this podcast:
Corinne May-Chahal, professor of applied science and chair of NICE guideline explains the crucial principles that need to be considered when responding to child abuse. What do young people think about this? Emma Harewood describes how we can recognise abuse and neglect and how we are moving forward in the field.