Co-Stars: Culturally Responsive Care

Certificate available: complete this course to be awarded a certificate

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Co-Stars: Culturally Responsive Care e-learning is co-developed with young people from Black diaspora backgrounds with lived experience of mental ill health, researchers from the University of Birmingham, and mental health professionals from Forward Thinking Birmingham. This e-learning aligns with the Birmingham Women's and Children's Trust's Patient and Carer Race Equality Framework (PCREF) objectives.

Through interactive learning, video materials, voice quotes, a poem, and reflective exercises, you will gain a better understanding of the needs of underserved youth with mental ill health and how to better support them, specifically young people from Black diaspora backgrounds. Upon successful completion of this e-learning, you will receive a certificate that can contribute to your professional development.

The certificate is generated through the NHS Learning Hub platform and will only be available upon passing the quiz.

Key Content:

Unequal Distribution of Severe Mental Illness

  • Ethnoracial Disparities in Mental Healthcare
  • Inequitable Outcomes and Offer of Treatment
  • Racial Discrimination
  • Bias in Mental Healthcare
  • Barriers to Help Seeking

Intergenerational Trauma

  • Impact of Intergenerational Trauma
  • Cycles of Fear
  • Understanding Intersectionality

Recommendations for Culturally Responsive Care

  • Shifting Perspectives
  • Rethinking Care in Cuturally Responsive Way
  • Regaining / Rebuilding Trust
  • Improving Accessibility

QUIZ (>80% pass)

Co-Stars project aims to evaluate the effectiveness of e-learning to promote culturally responsive mental health care for young people from Black diaspora backgrounds.

For more infomation about this project, please visit our website: www.co-stars.co.uk/
or contact us at: co-stars@contacts.bham.ac.uk

Resource details

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Contributed to: Community contributions
Community resources are online learning and digital materials provided by the wider Learning Hub community that anyone can contribute to.
Contributed by: Milan Antonovic
Authored by: Milan Antonović, University of Birmingham, Research Associate
Dr Sian Lowri Griffiths, University of Birmingham, Assistant Professor
Dr Balachandran Kumarendran, University of Birmingham, Research Fellow
Professor Joht Singh Chandan, University of Birmingham, Clinical Professor of Public Health
Eliza Cherrington, University of Birmingham, Peer Researcher
Youth Advisory Group (7 people)
Birmingham Women's and Children's NHS Foundation Trust
Black Country Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust
Co-Stars Investigator Group
Licence: © All rights reserved More information on licences
Last updated: 13 March 2025
First contributed: 03 March 2025
Audience access level: General user

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