Information on all the vaccinations available, including general child and adult ones, COVID, flu and travel.
Your health
This website aims to be a one stop shop for information relating to Care Homes. The Care Home Collaborative Web Team manage the website and it’s development. You can share your free learning opportunities and resources on our website.
Please see NHSGGC Website Guides to help make your web content easier to read and present it in a more accessible and consistent way.
If you’d like information published or amended on our website please complete the appropriate form below.
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We have collated a variety of useful resources that provide guidance and support for you and your baby.
Feeding Your Baby
Breastfeeding support in Greater Glasgow and Clyde.
Breastfeeding and your business
All businesses and organisations in Scotland open to the general public and who allow children, are under legal obligation to allow breast and bottle feeding. Read more about the law and find out how to become a breastfeeding friendly business.
Breastfeeding Friendly Venues
We have produced a map showing all breastfeeding friendly venues in Scotland.
Breastfeeding Network
Online support, factsheets and a fountain of knowledge on drugs in breastmilk.
BfN Greater Glasgow and Clyde | Instagram, Facebook | Linktree
Home-Start Glasgow South
Home-Start Glasgow South is a family support charity offering support that helps to give young children the best possible start in life.
Drop in Groups at Pollok library on Fridays – support from a BFN Volunteer will also be available at Home-Start Warm Place Pollokshaws on Fridays, and at the Warm place Castlemilk on Monday afternoon. For more info, go to
What’s On at Warm Place Castlemilk – Homestart Glasgow South
Support is also available to Muslim families online on the 4th Thursday of every month.
Infant Feeding – NHSGGC
These are pages on the NHSGGC website which we hope you will find useful.
National Breastfeeding Helpline
For independent, confidential and non-judgemental support available 24 hours a day, and with 1 to 1 support anytime.
Tel: 0300 100 0212

UNICEF
The UNICEF UK Baby Friendly Initiative has information regarding Baby Friendly Initiative Accreditation and Resources. As well as a safe guide to bottle feeding, responsive bottle feeding and infant formula Information please see links below:
[Links to follow]
Health and Wellbeing Information
Family
Child Smile
National toothbrushing programme available throughout Scotland, offered to all nursery aged children.
Every child is provided with a dental pack containing a toothbrush, a tube of toothpaste, and oral health messages on at least six occasions by five years of age.
Happy Healthy Tots
Information on the Health Visiting Service, feeding your child, parental health and wellbeing, your child’s health and emotional wellbeing, Family Nurse Partnership and local information.
HENRY
HENRY is a brilliant programme for parents, helping them to support a healthy, happy start for their children and lay the foundations for a brighter future.
Visit the website for further details regarding the programme, and watch out for groups and workshops in the South.
Glasgow Libraries
Glasgow libraries offer a wide range of health and wellbeing support. Visit the following website for the list of groups in your local library.
Glasgow City HSCP Your Support Your Way
An online resource that provides information, advice and guidance about local services and groups to improve lifestyle, independence and health and wellbeing in the community.
Your Support Your Way Glasgow – Homepage (yoursupportglasgow.org)
Lifelink
Information on wellbeing and counselling services, based in Pollok Civic Realm and Melissa House Brand Place Ibrox.
Self referral is available.
Thrive Under 5
Thrive Under 5 (TU5) is a project funded by Scottish Government monies and delivered by Health Improvement staff from NHSGCC. Through a whole systems approach to tackling child poverty in selected places, the programme aims to support children under the age of five to achieve a healthy weight.
Mental Health Support
Dads Rock
Provide support to Dads to increase parenting skills and increase their confidence . Please see the website and Facebook page for full list of services and groups.
Breathing Space
A confidential phone line for anyone in Scotland over the age of 16, feeling low, anxious or depressed.
Tel: 0800 83 85 87
Daisy Chain Early Years Project
Offers early intervention to improve health and wellbeing for under 12s and families based in Govanhill.
Daisy Chain Early Years Project | CrossReach
CrossReach Daisy Chain Early Years Project – Parents & Carers Group on Facebook
The Daisy Project
Providing an integrated domestic abuse advocacy and support service.
Glasgow Women’s Aid
Project supporting women, children and young people experiencing domestic abuse.
Gilded Lily
Supports women and girls in Govan and surrounding areas of Glasgow to become more confident, creative, employable and enterprising by providing workshops, training programmes.
Home-Start Glasgow
Home-Start North Glasgow and North Lanarkshire
Home-Start North is a family support charity offering support that helps to give young children the best possible start in life, and to help improve lives of families and children.
Home – Home-Start Glasgow North & North Lanarkshire
Home-Start Glasgow North and North Lanarkshire | Glasgow | Facebook
Home-Start Glasgow South
Home-Start Glasgow South is a family support charity offering support that helps to give young children the best possible start in life, and to help improve lives of families and children.
Home-Start also offer support to Dads and have groups in South Glasgow. See their website for a full list of support available.

Health In Mind
Offering a pathway of services to support you with a range of mental health problems including anxiety, depression and the impact of trauma.
Health in Mind | Support and services (health-in-mind.org.uk)
Lifelink
Lifelink can offer support to anyone who is struggling to cope with everyday stress or is feeling anxious or depressed. Issues such as debt, bereavement, addiction, self-harm/suicide and problems with relationships or family can all interfere with a persons’ quality and experience of life.
NSPCC
Offers support for parents who may be suffering from mental health issues.
PANDAS
PANDAS offer support to families and their networks who may be suffering with perinatal mental illness, including prenatal (antenatal) and postnatal depression. They offer a variety of person centred support.
Scottish Domestic Abuse Hotline
Hotline offering a pathway of services to support a range of mental health problems including anxiety, depression and the impact of trauma.
Tel: 0800 027 1234
The Women’s Centre
For over 25 years The Women’s Centre Glasgow has worked out of our Maryhill community hub to create a safe space for all women in Glasgow. We are here to support and empower our community by offering opportunities to strengthen women’s choices in life and social opportunities. We welcome women of all identities and are committed to fighting discrimination. We believe in the power of working together and aim to provide online and in-person services for mental and physical wellbeing which is accessible to everyone.
Family Support & Information – Glasgow City
3D Drumchapel
3D Drumchapel was established in 1997 to make a difference in the lives of children and families in Drumchapel by providing support, strengthening relationships and empowering families to make positive change.
All of our sessions services and support are FREE for families living in Drumchapel, Knightswood & Yoker.
Bookbug
Families can enjoy sharing stories, songs and rhymes with their little ones. Bookbug Sessions take place in libraries and community venues across Glasgow. Please see link for local venues and times for sessions.

Children 1st
Supports children and families to prevent families reaching crisis point, and to recover from trauma and harm. Please see website for full list of services.
Early Years Scotland
Support for children from pre birth to 5 years . They have Early Years Practitioners who work directly with children and families to deliver Stay, Play and Learn sessions all over Glasgow.
See website for details of the sessions.
Stay Play and Learn Details | Early Years Scotland
Early Years Scotland on Facebook
In the South we have sessions at SWAMP as part of THRIVE Under 5.
- Pollok on Friday mornings – for a place call Louise on 07375 044012
- Govanhill on Fridays – call Joanne on 077854 55794
- Gorbals on Monday afternoons – call Joanne on 077854 55794
Giggle ‘n’ Grow
Supporting early years, and children with literacy, music movement and play. Providing free activities such as Move dance grow, Family Fun Days and Bookbug . For all activities please see website for groups in your area.
Glasgow Life
Glasgow Life provides a range of services and activities for families. Please see the links below to services in the City.
Govan HELP
Support families with Children In the Govan area services include; Family Support, Play Therapy, Volunteering & Training Opportunities, as well as Adult Counselling and The Govan Pantry. See website link Facebook for full range of services.
We are Govan HELP – Supporting children, parents and families
Home-Start – Govan, Pollokshaws, and Castlemilk
Family support to help overcome a range of issues such as isolation, mental health difficulties, bereavement, family breakdown, addiction, physical ill-health, support to dads and more. Running weekly groups in South Glasgow.
Jeely Piece Club
Working with families and children in Castlemilk and across Glasgow, they specialise in fun play and learning . Please see website and Facebook page for full list of services.
Make Do & Grow
Govan based social enterprise supporting families in Glasgow through creativity and play. They also have a toy library on 901 Govan Road, G51 3DN.
Please see website for full list of services and groups
Make Do and Grow – Supporting families in Govan and beyond (makedogrow.co.uk)
One Parent Families Scotland
A national charity supporting single parents and separating parents in Scotland. See website for further details.
End Young Parent Poverty: Top up the Scottish Child Payment (opfs.org.uk)
One Parent Families Scotland – Glasgow on Facebook
Helpline: 0808 801 0323
Parent Club
Website offering advice and support on every aspect of parenting.
Tel: 0800 0308 003
South West Arts and Music Project – SWAMP
SWAMP works with children, young people, and older people in the Greater Pollok area. They offer a range of services and groups for the local community serving all ages. See website for a full list of their services and groups.
South West Arts & Music Project – Scottish Community Alliance
Stepping Stones for Families
For over 35 years, our charity has been working alongside communities in West and South West Scotland to address the impacts of poverty and inequality in the lives of children, young people, and families.
We believe in the potential within every individual to create positive change. Our Family Support and Flexible Childcare services help families at the early stages of their journey, building strong foundations for a brighter future.
Village Storytelling
Pollok based organisation who offer access to storytelling and creative opportunities for families. Including Imagine Lab sessions at their base in Pollok, which is a sensory storytelling sessions aged for 0-5 years. See website for list of all sessions.
The Women’s Centre
The Women’s Centre provide a range of activities for mums and babies in their creche facility.
They have a programme of activities that can be accessed through their website and by contacting them direct.
Financial Information
If you are worried about money, then please speak to your Health Visitor or Family Nurse who’ll be happy to discuss any issues with you and can refer you to a relevant service.
Cost of Living Support
Below is a link to a comprehensive list of some recommended Government approved pathways that are available to you, for free, impartial and confidential money advice and support. Information on local support services for Glasgow City and other Scottish Local Authority areas can be found here.
Cost of Living Support – Glasgow City Council (gosshosted.com)
Glasgow Community Food Network
Map of local food services.
Find Local Food Services | Glasgow Community Food Network (glasgowfood.net)
Glasgow HELPS
Directory listing activities and services across Glasgow.
Social Security Scotland
Social Security Scotland – Homepage
See website below for information on benefits including 5 Family Payments.
Pantry Guide
Pantries are shops which provide low cost food in community hub setting, and also offer wrap-around support services within the local area.
In the South West of Glasgow, we have pantries in Pollok, Nitshill, Crookston, Cardonald, Kennishead, Govan, Castlemilk and Gorbals. All are listed in the directory below. Days and opening times vary.
Worried About Money
Leaflet offering advice and support to help make ends meet.
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Newsletters
By signing up to our mailing list you agree to be contacted by the Care Home Collaborative. We will not share your details with anyone else.
- Sign up to our mailing list for regular updates
- Unsubscribe from our mailing list.
2025 Newsletters
- Issue 20 February 2025
- Issue 21 March 2025
- Mobile Skills Unit March 2025 – Special Edition
- Issue 22 April 2025
- Issue 23 May 2025
- Issue 24 June 2025
- Issue 25 July 2025
- Issue 26 August 2025
- Issue 27 September 2025
- Issue 28 October 2025
- Issue 29 November 2025
- Mobile Skills Unit October 2025 – Special Edition
- Issue 30 December 2025
By signing up to our mailing list you agree to be contacted by the Care Home Collaborative. We will not share your details with anyone else.
- Sign up to our mailing list for regular updates
- Unsubscribe from our mailing list.
2024 Newsletters
- Issue 9 February 2024
- Issue 10 March 2024
- Issue 11 April 2024
- Issue 12 May 2024
- Issue 13 June 2024
- Issue 14 July 2024
- Issue 15 August 2024
- Issue 16 September 2024
- Issue 17 October 2024
- Issue 18 November 2024
- Issue 19 December 2024
By signing up to our mailing list you agree to be contacted by the Care Home Collaborative. We will not share your details with anyone else.
- Sign up to our mailing list for regular updates
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2023 Newsletters
Latest News
- Scottish Government letter published 25th July 2025 advice on ‘Oral Swabs with Foam Heads’
- NHSGGC Interim Mouth Care Equipment Guidance (May 2025)
- Polypharmacy Guidance: appropriate prescribing, making medicines safe, effective and sustainable 2025 – 2028
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Care Home Teams
Our Purpose and Approach
The Care Home Collaborative (CHC) works in partnership with all care homes across Greater Glasgow and Clyde. We learn from and work with care home teams and their communities to help residents live their lives according to what matters to them.
We invite care homes to contact us to share their experiences. We can offer specialist advice, tailored training and support to carry out projects. This allows us to share good practice, highlight care home stories and celebrate success.
Find out more information about the care home teams in your area below.
Central Hub – All care homes within Greater Glasgow and Clyde
Central Hub is a dedicated resource. The service is available to all who live, visit and work in Care Homes across Greater Glasgow and Clyde.
Quality Improvement
We support Care Home teams across greater Glasgow and Clyde to build capacity for Quality Improvement. We also co-develop/design QI Projects and deliver training for Scottish Improvement Foundation Skills programme (SIFs).
Advanced Practice
Our CHC Lecturer Practitioner (LP) supports the governance and education of Care Home Advanced Nurse Practitioners (ANPs) employed by Health and Social Care Partnerships (HSCPs) and independent Care Homes. We support ANPs Continuing Professional Development (CPD) through sessions in clinical practice, leadership, facilitation of learning, evidence research and development.
Caring about Physical Activity (CAPA)
We offer support to care homes to encourage movement in all aspects of a resident’s daily life. We facilitate a Meaningful Activity Network NHSGGC where care staff support each other, share ideas and share ‘good news stories’. We collaborate with care homes to develop quality improvement projects to promote physical activity for care home residents. We can help you access useful resources.
Dementia Nurse Specialist
In partnership with care homes across Greater Glasgow and Clyde, we will translate the national strategic vision for dementia care. This vision stems from Scotland’s National Dementia Strategies and the Promoting Excellence Framework. Formal evidence-based training on dementia care is offered, as well as delirium prevention and early intervention training sessions. Furthermore, a number of quality improvement projects are ongoing to enhance practice and transform the experience of care home life for people living with dementia.
We can offer Dementia Friendly Environment assessments which support care homes in making their environments as dementia friendly as possible on request via our contact form.
Poole Activity Level (PAL) training is also available on request via our contact form. Poole Activity Training (PAL) is a meaningful activity programme, developed for people living with cognitive impairment and dementia. Using the PAL holistic tool, we can establish what point the person is. This can help staff and residents identify activities which will be most suited to residents. The aim of this is to ensure that all residents can participate in activities, regardless where they are in their dementia journey
Food Fluid and Nutrition (FFN) Team
The team provides holistic support for the nutritional wellbeing of residents. We assist the rollout of the Malnutrition Universal Screening Tool (MUST) and GGC local pathway for management (MUST Step 5). Also on offer are training resources which cover IDDSI guidelines, dysphagia management, food fortification, diabetes, weight management, mealtime experiences and documentation training to support food and fluid charts. We support FFN QI projects.
Infection Prevention and Control (IPC)
Our IPC Team provide advice and support aligned to the sector specific Care Home IPC Manual and aimed at supporting the local application of IPC practice within the home. The team offer training resources based on the ten elements of standard infection control precautions and developed to compliment education already available to staff as well as signposting to national IPC training resources. The team are always interested to hear of IPC innovations and are keen to work in collaboration with care homes where IPC projects or small tests of change are being considered.This is a placeholder tab content. It is important to have the necessary information in the block, but at this stage, it is just a placeholder to help you visualise how the content is displayed. Feel free to edit this with your actual content.
Palliative Care Nurse Specialist
The CHC Palliative Care Nurse Specialist offers advice, support and education, on all aspects of palliative care, to care home teams across NHSGGC. Available to guide, support and collaborate with care home colleagues on palliative care related quality improvement projects, we are a care home community team resource that promote the delivery of high standards of holistic palliative care for the care home community.
Person Centre Care and Engagement Lead
We are centering quality conversations about “What Matters To You?” for residents and staff of care homes across Greater Glasgow and Clyde. We can help you share your ‘good news stories’ about meaningful activity and are keen to celebrate your success!This is a placeholder tab content. It is important to have the necessary information in the block, but at this stage, it is just a placeholder to help you visualise how the content is displayed. Feel free to edit this with your actual content.
Tissue Viability Nurse Specialist
We offer guidance and support for pressure ulcer prevention, wound care and skin tear education. Analysis of training requirements, help meeting recommendations post-inspections and guidance with the implementation of tissue viability quality improvement projects are also available.
Glasgow City Care Home Nursing Team – Care homes in Glasgow
Glasgow City Care Home Nursing Team is a dedicated resource for care homes within Glasgow City
The team includes, Team Lead, Practice Development Nurses (PDNs), Registered Nurses, Care Home Liaison Nurses (CHLNs) and Care Home Support Workers.
The team can be accessed by contacting your Care Home Liaison Nurse(CHLN) or Practice Development Nurse (PDN) aligned to your Care Home.
Alternatively, email us on ggc.chlnreferral@ggc.scot.nhs.uk
Hub 5 – Care homes in East Dunbartonshire, East Renfrewshire, Inverclyde, Renfrewshire and West Dunbartonshire.
HUB 5 is a dedicated nursing team which includes, Nurse Team Lead, Registered Nurses and Care Home Support Workers. The team works in partnership with care homes across East Dunbartonshire, East Renfrewshire, Inverclyde, Renfrewshire and West Dunbartonshire.
We support the specialists in our Central Hub to deliver sessions on:
- Caring About Physical Activity (CAPA)
- MUST and MUST Step 5 pathway and calculations
- Palliative Care for Carer
- Peer-to-peer support networks
- Peer support for Quality Improvement projects
- Scottish Ballet Duet
We encourage requests from care home teams, and engage with other services and partner organisations to design peer-to-peer support and learning opportunities for Nursing and Care Support Staff, across a range of issues including
- Catheter Care
- Confirmation of Death
- Hydration
- Record Keeping
- Story Gathering and What Matters to You Conversations
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How we’re modernising services to support patients and staff
To help improve patient experience across hospital sites within urgent and unscheduled care services, we are constantly developing and implementing new and innovative pathways which help us provide additional and faster routes for them to access urgent and unscheduled care as an alternative to A&E.
These new pathways and services improve patient flow through our hospitals, avoid unnecessary bottlenecks and ensure our capacity is being utilised in the most efficient way possible across all of the health service.
This webpage outlines some of the work underway to deliver this ambitious project, which is overseen by the Urgent and Unscheduled Care (UUC) Oversight Board.
Virtual Pathways
Technology is playing a key role in modernising our health services and the creation of virtual pathways is already having a significant impact on our urgent and unscheduled care patients. Virtual pathways enable us to provide urgent care outside of A&E, and in many instances, in the comfort of the patient’s home –freeing up valuable capacity within our acute sites and giving our patients a better experience.
At the core of virtual pathways lies the FNC which launched in December 2020. The FNC enables patients who would otherwise visit A&E, to receive a direct video or telephone consultation with an emergency care clinician. Externally the FNC is branded as virtual A&E. You can find out more information by visiting our FNC webpage or watching the video below.
Interface Care
Interface Care is new approach to enable primary and community care providers such as GPs to access immediate specialist care advice from acute colleagues to help assess patients who may otherwise be sent to A&E.
The programme is currently in development, with new respiratory pathways coming online alongside heart failure pathways. With more immediate clinical advice being made available, the hope is to ensure patients receive the right type of treatment for their needs, faster, and without having to be admitted to hospital.
Falls and Frailty
Our teams are working closely with HSCP / Scottish Ambulance Service and other partners to establish new methods of A&E avoidance for elderly and vulnerable patients who would otherwise have been sent to hospital.
By linking these specialist frailty teams as early as possible in the patient journey, often patients are able to be discharged from hospital faster, or avoid A&E altogether.
Home First Response
Home First Response launched in November 2022 and helps provide targeted interventions to older and vulnerable patients who would otherwise spend long periods of time in hospital. Being treated at home provides significant benefits – increasing recovery time, preserving mobility and reducing the chance of delirium.
As part of the rollout, specially trained HSCP staff have been recruited and embedded alongside acute frailty teams at Glasgow’s Queen Elizabeth University Hospital and Paisley’s Royal Alexandra Hospital to help limit admissions, improve early discharges and support anticipatory care planning.
Outpatient Parenteral Antimicrobial Therapy (OPAT) service
OPAT is a specialist-led service which provides acute-level hospital care in an outpatient capacity to patients with complex infections is playing a critical role in freeing crucial bed space in hospitals across NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde.
Based at the QEUH in Glasgow, but with outreach to hospitals throughout NHSGGC, the specialist OPAT team is made up of nurses, pharmacists and infectious disease consultants and can see more than 100 new referrals each month.
The service treats patients with infections who require IV antibiotics either on a short or long-term basis but who are otherwise suitable for outpatient treatment. This might include, for example, patients suffering cellulitis, which is a common skin infection or, a range of other difficult to treat infections, for example, complicating diabetes, chronic lung disease or surgery.
About one in three patients are referred direct by GPs and avoid hospital admission altogether while two thirds (usually with more complex infection and requiring initial hospital investigations and treatment) have their hospital stay significantly shortened. For patients that require an initial inpatient stay, the time spent in hospital is shortened by an average of three weeks per patient.
Hospital at Home
Hospital at home aims to keep patients out of hospital by providing the same level of high-quality multi-disciplinary care they would receive as inpatients.
Eligible patients are identified either upon presenting at A&E thus avoiding admission, or to enable an early supported discharge, or they can be referred by their GP. Patients need to be over the age of 65 to be suitable for the service.
An example of a hospital at home patient would be an elderly person who has fallen at home, has a severe infection, delirium, or who has seen an acute functional decline due to an existing health condition. Individual assessments take place for each patient before a decision is made.
Patients who are treated within Hospital at Home also have access to hospital-level diagnostics, such as endoscopy services, radiology, cardiology and a range of urgent hospital-level interventions such as IV therapy and oxygen.
Care is delivered by a team of Nurses (including Advanced Nurse Practitioners and Consultant Nurse), GPs, Pharmacists, Occupational Therapists and Consultant Geriatricians.
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Don’t let your protection fade. It’s important to keep up to date with your vaccines as your level of protection may have faded since your last dose. Getting another vaccine will top up your protection and help prevent you from getting seriously ill or dying.
Quick Links
- Overview
- Am I Eligible?
- Drop In Clinics
- Why should I get the COVID-19 vaccine?
- How can I reschedule my appointment?
- Request support with interpretation, or get help with travelling to your appointment
- Other Sources of Information
- Choosing how you’d like to be contacted
Overview
The Spring Coronavirus (Covid-19) Vaccine Campaign will run from Monday 13th April March to June 30th 2026.
It’s important to take up the vaccine every time you’re offered. Even if your health condition is well managed, you’re still at increased risk.
You’ll receive an invitation to an appointment or information about how to book. If you previously chose to be contacted digitally, you’ll receive a text or email. Otherwise, you’ll receive a letter.
For further information visit NHS Inform
Am I eligible?
Who will be offered the COVID-19 vaccine
Coronavirus can be more serious if you are older or have a weakened immune system.
For spring 2026, the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) advises that a COVID-19 vaccine should be offered to:
- Residents in care homes for older adults
- Those aged 75 years and over
- Those aged 6 months and over who are immunosuppressed as defined in the COVID-19: the green book chapter – GOV.UK
Programme Age Limits
- Residents in care homes for older adults: There is no age restriction for this group. All residents in care homes for older adults are eligible.
- Those aged 75 and over: To be eligible this spring, an individual must be aged 75 years on or before 30 June 2026, so will have been born on or before 30 June 1951.
- Those who are immunosuppressed: Individuals who are immunosuppressed must be at least 6 months of age by 01 April 2026, therefore must have been born on or before 01 October 2025.
If an individual knows that they are eligible for vaccination this spring as part of the immunosuppressed group, or by virtue of being aged 75 years and older (up to and including 30 June 2026), and have not been sent an appointment or prompt invitation, they can book via the portal or by calling the national vaccination helpline on 0800 030 8013.
Drop In Clinics
The Mobile Vaccination Bus is a drop in service. This means that there may be busy times and you may have to wait. The mobile clinic can only accommodate 4 vaccinators and a limited supply of vaccine. Please be patient. (Please note – the mobile vaccination unit is for over 18 years only). You may wish to book an appointment at one of our Vaccination Centres instead. You can do this by going to the online booking portal or by calling the National Contact Centre on 0800 030 8013.
Community Clinic Drop-ins
TBC
Mobile Vaccination Unit Drop -ins
The Mobile Vaccination Bus service will offer the spring covid vaccination at:
Tuesday 5th May – Ladyton Shops, Bonhill, G83 9DZ – 10:00am – 16:00pm
Wednesday 6th May – Tweedie Hall (the car park beside linwood health centre), 11 Bridge Street, PA3 3DB – 10:00am – 16:00pm
Why should I get the COVID-19 vaccine?
Coronavirus can be serious. If you’re being offered the free COVID-19 vaccine, you are more at risk of coronavirus-related complications and need extra protection, even if you feel healthy or have a health condition that is mild or well managed.
If you do get coronavirus and have been vaccinated, the symptoms are likely to be milder and not last as long. This will reduce your risk of complications or needing treatment in hospital.
Millions of doses of the COVID-19 vaccine have been given in Scotland since its introduction in December 2020, and many more have been given worldwide.
How can I reschedule my appointment?
If you are unable to attend or cannot get to this location, you can change your appointment online at:
NHS Inform – Invitations and Appointments webpage
Alternatively, you can phone the national vaccination helpline on 0800 030 8013 to rearrange your appointment. The helpline is open from 9am to 6pm Monday to Friday, 9am to 1pm on Saturday and closed on Sunday.
Please note this number is for rescheduling appointments only.
If you missed your scheduled appointment
If you have missed your vaccination appointment, you must wait 72 hours after the time of that appointment before you can book a new one via the online booking portal.
Request support with interpretation, or get help with travelling to your appointment
Support is available in NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde if you:
- require an interpreter at your vaccination appointment
- need help finding transport to your vaccination appointment
Get help with travelling to your appointment
You can plan your journey using the Traveline journey planner, which provides up‑to‑date public transport routes and travel times. Further help with planning your journey is available on the Traveline Scotland website or by calling 0141 465 1878 (open 24 hours a day).
You can also find maps and directions for all our main hospital sites by visiting Main Hospitals – NHSGGC
If you’re unable to leave your home (due to your mobility or physical ability or mental health condition) or if you need additional support at your appointment (for example, someone to support you when you arrive or a private space to be vaccinated), phone the national vaccination helpline on 0800 030 8013 and your request will be sent to your local health board.
Other Sources of Information
Choosing how you’d like to be contacted
You can now update your contact details and your preferred method of contact on the online portal. If you select to receive future correspondence about your coronavirus and flu vaccines by email or SMS then you will no longer receive future letters with this information.
East Dunbartonshire
| Clinic | Facilities | Location/Transport |
| Milngavie Town Hall: 71 Station Rd, Milngavie, Glasgow G62 8BZ | Parking Wheelchair Access Hearing Loop Toilet Facilities Baby Changing Interpreter Services | Milngavie Town Hall – Google Maps Bus – First Bus Train – ScotRail Traveline – https://www.travelinescotland.com/cms/home |
| Kirkintiloch Town Hall, Kirkintilloch, G66 1HN | Parking Wheelchair Access Hearing Loop Toilet Facilities Baby Changing Interpreter Services | Kirkintilloch Town Hall Bus – First Bus Train – ScotRail Traveline – https://www.travelinescotland.com/cms/home |
| Bishopbriggs Community Treatment and Care Centre, Kirkintilloch Rd, Bishopbriggs, Glasgow G64 2TR | Parking Wheelchair Access Hearing Loop Toilet Facilities Baby Changing Interpreter Services | Bishopbriggs Community Treatment and Care Centre Bus – First Bus Train – ScotRail Traveline – https://www.travelinescotland.com/cms/home |
Renfrewshire
| Clinic | Facilities | Location/Transport |
| Renfrew Parish Church Hall, 14 Renfield Street, Renfrew PA4 8RG | Parking Wheelchair Access Hearing Loop Toilet Facilities Interpreter Services | Renfrew Parish Church Hall Bus – First Bus Train – ScotRail Traveline – https://www.travelinescotland.com/cms/home |
| Johnstone Town Hall: 25 Church St, Johnstone, PA5 8EG | Parking Wheelchair Access Hearing Loop Toilet Facilities Baby Changing Interpreter Services | Johnstone Town Hall – Google Maps Bus – First Bus Train – ScotRail Traveline – https://www.travelinescotland.com/cms/home |
| Piazza Shopping Centre Unit-28/29, Central Way, Paisley PA1 1ELB | Parking Wheelchair Access Hearing Loop Toilet Facilities Baby Changing Interpreter Services | Piazza Shopping Centre Bus – First Bus Train – ScotRail Traveline – https://www.travelinescotland.com/cms/home After 6pm, please use the Smithhills Street entrance to the Piazza Shopping Centre |
East Renfrewshire
| Clinic | Facilities | Location/Transport |
| Eastwood Health Centre, Drumby Cres, Clarkston, Glasgow G76 7HN | Parking Wheelchair Access Hearing Loop Toilet Facilities Baby Changing Interpreter Services | Eastwood Health Centre Bus – First Bus Train – ScotRail Traveline – https://www.travelinescotland.com/cms/home |
| l |
Glasgow City
| Clinic | Facilities | Location/Transport |
| Stobhill Hospital Seminar Rooms, car park 3 entrance, 133 Balornock Road, Glasgow G21 3UW | Parking Wheelchair Access Hearing Loop Toilet Facilities Baby Changing Interpreter Services | Stobhill Hospital Bus – First Bus Train – ScotRail Traveline – https://www.travelinescotland.com/cms/home The clinic is situated at the rear of Stobhill Hospital (Seminar Rooms) Go through main entrance door and continue to the exit directly at the rear of the building. The seminar rooms are at the building on the left. |
| Gorbals Health & Care Centre, 2 Sandiefield road, Gorbals, G5 9AB | Parking Wheelchair access Hearing Loop Toilet Facilities | Gorbals Health & Care Centre Traveline – https://www.travelinescotland.com/cms/home |
| Institute of Neurological Sciences, Queen Elizabeth 1345 Govan Road, Glasgow G51 4TF | Hearing Loop Toilet Facilities Baby Changing Interpreter Services | Institute of Neurological Sciences Bus – First Bus Train – ScotRail Traveline – https://www.travelinescotland.com/cms/home |
| Parkhead Hub, 1251 Duke Street, Parkhead, Glasgow, G31 5NZ | Parking Wheelchair Access Hearing Loop Toilet Facilities Baby Changing Interpreter Services | The Parkhead Hub Bus – First Bus Train – ScotRail Traveline – https://www.travelinescotland.com/cms/home |
| Priesthill Community Hall, 100 Priesthill Road, Glasgow G53 6QL | Parking Wheelchair Access Hearing Loop Toilet Facilities Baby Changing Interpreter Services | Priesthill Community Hall Bus – First Bus Train – ScotRail Traveline – https://www.travelinescotland.com/cms/home |
| St Marks Church, 281 Kinfauns Drive, Drumchapel, Glasgow G15 7BD | Hearing Loop Toilet Facilities Baby Changing Interpreter Services | St Mark’s Church – Google Maps Bus – First Bus Train – ScotRail Traveline – https://www.travelinescotland.com/cms/home |
| Greater Easterhouse Supporting Hands, 1 Redcastle Sq, Glasgow G33 5EG | Parking Wheelchair Access Hearing Loop Toilet Facilities Baby Changing Interpreter Services | Greater Easterhouse Supporting Hands – Google Maps Bus – First Bus Train – ScotRail Traveline – https://www.travelinescotland.com/cms/home |
| Whiteinch Centre, 1 Northinch St, Glasgow G14 0UG | Parking Wheelchair Access Hearing Loop Toilet Facilities Baby Changing Interpreter Services | Whiteinch Centre Bus – First Bus Train – ScotRail Traveline – https://www.travelinescotland.com/cms/home |
| Castlemilk Health Centre, 71 Dougrie Drive, Glasgow, G45 9AW | Parking Wheelchair Access Hearing Loop Toilet Facilities Baby Changing Interpreter Services | Castlemilk Health Centre Bus – First Bus Train – ScotRail Traveline – https://www.travelinescotland.com/cms/home |
| Govanhill Health Centre, 205 Inglefield Street, Glasgow, G42 7DR | Wheelchair Access Hearing Loop Toilet Facilities Baby Changing Interpreter Services | Govanhill Health Centre Bus – First Bus Train – ScotRail Traveline – https://www.travelinescotland.com/cms/home |
West Dunbartonshire
| Clinic | Facilities | Location/Transport |
| Alexandria Community Centre: Main St, Alexandria, G83 0NU | Parking Wheelchair Access Hearing Loop Toilet Facilities Baby Changing Interpreter Services | Alexandria Community Centre – Google Maps Bus – First Bus Train – ScotRail Traveline – https://www.travelinescotland.com/cms/home |
| Concorde Community Centre, St Mary’s Way, Dumbarton G82 1LJ | Parking Wheelchair Access Hearing Loop Toilet Facilities Baby Changing Interpreter Services | Concorde Community Centre – Google Maps Bus – First Bus Train – ScotRail Traveline – https://www.travelinescotland.com/cms/home |
| Clydebank Health And Care Centre, Queens Quay Main Avenue, Clydebank G81 1BS | Parking Wheelchair Access Hearing Loop Toilet Facilities Baby Changing Interpreter Services | Clydebank Health And Care Centre Bus – First Bus Train – ScotRail Traveline – https://www.travelinescotland.com/cms/home |
Inverclyde
| Clinic | Facilities | Location/Transport |
| Port Glasgow Health Centre, 2-4 Bay St, Port Glasgow PA14 5EW | Parking Wheelchair Access Hearing Loop Toilet Facilities Baby Changing Interpreter Services | Port Glasgow Health Centre Bus – First Bus Train – ScotRail Traveline – https://www.travelinescotland.com/cms/home |
| Broomhill Gardens and Community Hub, 46 Mearns St, Greenock PA15 4QD | Parking Wheelchair Access Hearing Loop Toilet Facilities Baby Changing Interpreter Services | Broomhill Gardens and Community Hub Bus – First Bus Train – ScotRail Traveline – https://www.travelinescotland.com/cms/home |
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Care Home Stories
What Matters to You (WMTY) 2023
WMTY day is an annual event which is recognised and celebrated internationally. On this day, more than any other, there is a focus on raising awareness of having conversations with care home residents and staff that help to build connections and improve outcomes for the person:
- Ask What Matters
- Listen to What Matters
- Do What Matters
Read a selection of WMTY Activities and stories from staff, residents and families below.
Collaborative Conversations
On this page there are some examples of Collaborative Conversations that have taken place across Greater Glasgow and Clyde.
How To Tell Your Story?
We believe that every staff member, resident and family member have a unique story to tell. These stories are powerful tools that guide us in developing person centred approaches that improve outcomes for people living, visiting and working in care homes.
To ensure we capture and share these meaningful experiences, we have established a dedicated section on our website. This platform serves as a safe space for residents, family members and staff to contribute their stories, insights and positive moments.
1. Enhancing Quality of Care: By actively listening to the voices of residents and their families, we gain invaluable insight into their preferences, needs, and concerns. This enables us to tailor care plans and services to meet their individual requirements effectively.
2. Building Trust and Connection: Openly engaging with residents and their families fosters trust, strengthens relationships, and promotes a sense of belonging. By valuing experiences, we create an environment where everyone feels heard and respected.
3. Continuous Improvement: Staff, resident and family feedback is a catalyst for improvement and by promoting participation, you can identify areas where you excel and areas that require enhancement, allowing you to continuously evolve and provide the highest level of care possible.
By sharing your story with us, you have the opportunity to inspire others, create connections, and help us shape a better care experience for everyone involved. Your story might highlight the impact of best practice, compassionate care, celebrate a personal achievement, or simply express gratitude for the way support was received.
1. Download and complete the template with brief details
2. Craft your story, ensuring to maintain confidentiality and respect privacy.
3. Submit your story by Email: ggc.chccontact@ggc.scot.nhs.uk , and let your voice be heard!
Remember, your story matters, and when shared, it has the power to touch the hearts of others and inspire positive change. Together, we can create an environment that truly reflects the needs and desires of our residents and their families.
Thank you for being an essential part of our care community. We look forward to hearing your story and continuing our journey towards exceptional care.
Newsletter
- Sign up to our mailing list for regular updates
By signing up to this mailing list you agree to be contacted by the Care Home Collaborative. We will not share your details with anyone else.
Join our networks
Networks being developed
Caring about Physical Activity (CAPA)
Help your care home to get involved with our Meaningful Activity Network where care homes across Greater Glasgow and Clyde support each other and share ideas, including information and resources which can enhance the provision of meaningful and purposeful activities for the residents.
If you would like to get involved please join our mailing list.
Join our workstreams
Further information to follow.
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Select from the drop down list below to access subject specific information and useful links
Bed Safety Rails/Bed Grab Handles
In August 2023 a National Patient Safety Alert was issued regarding Medical beds, trolleys, bed rails, bed grab handles and lateral turning devices: risk of death from entrapment or falls alongside updated guidance from MHRA. Care home residents were specifically mentioned and are particularly vulnerable to the risk of entrapment from these devices for the reasons below:
- Complex physical needs
- Cognitive impairment
To address this NHSGGC have worked collaboratively with care homes to produce some simple resources to help raise awareness of the key points to support safe use of bed safety rails and bed grab handles.
The resources include:
Care Home Pharmacy Services – Primary Care Pharmacy Sector
Video Resources
Please click below to access video resources from the Care Home Pharmacy Services team.
Recording of training session on topic of UTI’s in Care Home residents
Care Home Winter Readiness Pack 2025/2026
Preparing for winter is an important part of support to residents and staff in care homes across the Greater Glasgow and Clyde area. This pack contains a range of useful winter readiness information and planning resources. The information in the pack is aligned with good practice and national guidance, and is intended to complement local arrangements.
Please click here to access the Care Home Winter Pack 2025/2026.
Click here to access the abridged GP version of the Winter Pack.
Please click here to access the NHSGGC Influenza testing and antivirals primary care summary.
Watch the recording of the Winter Readiness webinar 2024/2025
Care Home Syringe Pump Training Resources
The Scottish Government Healthcare framework for adults living in care homes, “My Health, My Care, My Home” (June 2022) has identified Palliative and End of Life Care as a key recommendation to support improved outcomes for people living in Care Homes. This framework sets out priorities for implementation with recognition that people working in Care Homes require core knowledge and skills that are integral to the delivery of high quality palliative and end of life care.
NHSGGC offers comprehensive palliative and end of life care training to all NHSGGC staff and care home staff covering a wide range of subjects to enable high quality, person centred care. However, established NHSGGC training for the use of syringe pumps has not been extended to Care Home staff for a number of years. This has had a considerable impact on care home registered nurses who describe feeling less competent and confident with using syringe pumps to manage symptoms, resulting in a reliance on care home liaison nursing (CHLN) staff to set up and manage pumps or the management of bolus medications.
Continence Promotion and Bowel Care
The Care Inspectorate provides a helpful resource for promoting continence for people living with dementia and long term conditions.
SPHERE Bladder and Bowel Service
The Care Home Zone provides links and information to SPHERE assessment and product ordering documentation. As well as other useful information.
Delirium Resources
Deteriorating Resident
SIGN
SIGN 167 Care of deteriorating patients a national clinical guideline.
Diabetes resources
What is diabetes? – Diabetes UK website
Diabetes – Key points for providing a diabetes appropriate diet for your residents.
A series of short podcasts have been developed for busy care home staff who would like to know more about type 2 diabetes. The five podcasts are short and succinct with accompanying information slides. Click on the links below to access each topic.
Falls Pathway/Flow Navigation Centre
The GGC Care Home Falls Pathway from the Flow Navigation Centre (FNC) is available to all GGC care homes. It allows care homes to quickly access support and advice when a resident has fallen.
Using the Care Home Falls Pathway can help to avoid unnecessary visits to hospital. It can also help to keep residents comfortable at home in their own environment.
The support offered might include advice, and/or a next day appointment at a Minor Injury Unit (MIU) or a range of other community supports.
If a resident needs to go to hospital, the FNC service will assist with contacting the hospital and organising the ambulance.
When contacting 0800 141 2312 you will hear the following message
“You have reached Health Records, Admin Falls Hub and Blood Test Booking Centre”.
You will then be advised that you are in a queue, please stay on the line until your call is answered. Let them know that you work in a Care Home and one of your residents has fallen and you will be guided through the next steps.
This is a poster for Care Homes outlining the process to follow when a resident has a falls related injury.
Falls Resources
NHSGGC Resources to support falls reduction
A series of 5 posters aimed at care home staff and carers to highlight simple measures that can help reduce the risk of residents falling.
GGC care homes should receive a hard copy of each of the posters. Further copies can be ordered from the medical illustrations department. Email: medical.illustrationgri@ggc.scot.nhs.uk Telephone 0141 211 8580
Posters
- Zimmer – How to know when a zimmer is past it!
- Walking stick – How to spot when a stick is rot!
- Delta – How to check that wheels aren’t wonky!
- Footwear – Suitable footwear for care homes
- Seating and posture – Are you sitting comfortably?
Videos
Please click here to access educational videos for care home staff on the reduction and management of resident falls.
Mind Your Step
Click here to access the audio version of ‘Mind Your Step‘, a falls resource for care home residents, their families and friends. The resource gives simple steps that can be taken to reduce the risk of having falls. To download a PDF version click here.
Alternatively, NHS staff can order copies of the ‘Mind Your Step’ resource from medical illustration via the public health resources directory.
Points to Consider
Click here to access the audio version of the ‘Points to Consider‘ booklet, a learning resource for care home staff. The booklet covers key elements of fall risk assessment, gives useful interventions and advice to support staff in reducing falls within their care homes. Available to download is an A4 version or the A5 booklet.
Future Care Planning – previously known as Anticipatory Care Planning (ACP)
NHSGGC Future Care Planning
Future Care Planning Training Hub
The Programme has a range of training opportunities which are free and open to all.
Visit the training hub for more information.
Hydration
Good hydration is vital to maintain health and prevent illness.
CHC Quality Improvement Project Poster – A helping hand for hydration
Resources
Hydration Station Equipment List
Infection Prevention and Control (IPC)
Standard Infection Control Precautions
Standard Infection Control Precautions or SICPs are the basic infection prevention and control measure used to reduce the risk of transmitting infectious agents from known and unknown sources of infection. SICPs should be used by all staff, in all care settings, at all times, for all residents to ensure the safety of those being cared for as well as staff and visitors to the home.
There are 10 SICPs. For more information on SICPs please Care Home specific section of the National Infection Prevention and Control Manual.
Standard Infection Control Precautions (SICPs)
Resident placement/assessment for infection risk
For more information visit section 1 Chapter 1 of the Care Home Infection Prevention and Control Manual
Hand hygiene
The most important thing you can do to prevent the spread of infection in a care home is carry out hand hygiene. Hand hygiene can be carried out using soap and water or alcohol based hand rub (ABHR).
For more information visit section 2 Chapter 1 of the Care Home Infection Prevention and Control Manual
Handwashing Technique Demonstration and How to apply alcohol based hand rub
Respiratory and cough hygiene
For more information visit section 3 Chapter 1 of the Care Home Infection Prevention and Control Manual
Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
For more information visit section 4 Chapter 1 of the Care Home Infection Prevention and Control Manual
Safe management of care equipment
For more information visit section 5 Chapter 1 of the Care Home Infection Prevention and Control Manual
Safe management of the care environment
For more information visit section 6 Chapter 1 of the Care Home Infection Prevention and Control Manual
Safe management of linen
Handling Infectious Linen poster
For more information visit section 7 Chapter 1 of the Care Home Infection Prevention and Control Manual
Blood and body fluid spillages
For more information visit section 8 Chapter 1 of the Care Home Infection Prevention and Control Manual
Safe disposal of waste (including sharps)
For more information visit section 9 Chapter 1 of the Care Home Infection Prevention and Control
Occupational safety: prevention and exposure management (including sharps)
For more information visit section 10 Chapter 1 of the Care Home Infection Prevention and Control
Transmission Based Precautions
In certain circumstances using Standard Infection Control Precautions (also known as SICPs) won’t be enough to stop an infection spreading and you will need to use some extra precautions. These extra precautions are Transmission Based Precautions, or TBPs.
TBPs should be used if a resident has a suspected or known infection.
Please see below for a series of two short videos developed for staff wishing to refresh their knowledge of TBPs.
Transmission Based Precautions (TBPs) Video 1
Transmission Based Precautions (TBPs) Video 2
For more information on TBPs please see the care home specific section of the National Infection Prevention and Control Manual.
Further Resources
For more information on SCIPS access the Preventing Infection in Social Care Settings app released by the Scottish Social Services Council (SSSC) in partnership with NHS Education for Scotland (NES) and the Digital Health and Care Innovation Centre (DHI).
The app has been developed for staff in settings such as care homes with a view to enabling easy access to infection prevention and control guidance.
Learning Forum
Welcome to the Care Home Learning Forum Resource pages.
You can find information on future meetings and registration on our Learning Opportunities page.
Online Session 1- Future Care Planning and Palliative Care
Online Session 2 – Leadership, Retention and Chest Infection
Online Session 3 – Skin Tears, Pressure Ulcers and Burns
Online Session 4 – Delirium, UTIs and Falls
Online Session 5 – Residents with complex care needs, Polypharmacy and Clinical Frailty
Meaningful Activity – Keep Moving
There are several effective strategies to keep elderly residents active during the winter months, even when outdoor activities may be limited. While this list is not exhaustive, it provides a starting point for staff to explore various options for keeping residents engaged and active.
Indoor Gardening For residents with a passion for gardening, cultivating indoor plants can be a rewarding winter activity. Staff can assist residents in setting up a small indoor garden in a conservatory, greenhouse or a windowsill. Engaging in tasks such as pruning, re-potting or planting seeds provides physical activity while allowing residents to maintain a connection with nature.
It is important for care staff to remain informed about the latest guidelines and resources related to physical activity for older adults.
NHS Inform website provides comprehensive physical activity guidelines.
Keeping fit and active as you get older – NHSGGC and the Mobility – SSSC MyLearning are excellent references for understanding the needs of elderly individuals.
Care Inspectorate offers a valuable resource which outlines the significance of physical activity in promoting health and well-being among older adults. These resources can guide staff in implementing best practices for keeping residents active and engaged.
To further support staff in fostering an active lifestyle for residents, the Supporting older people to live active, healthy lives online course is a beneficial tool.
Care About Physical Activity programme is an improvement programme lead by the Care Inspectorate it can be used to support physical activity in different ways.
Paths for all is a Scottish Charity. Their vision: Scotland is a walking nation. Everyone has the opportunity ti be active everyday, creating a happier, healthier and greener Scotland. They support healthcare staff to deliver walking activities, combined with Strength and Balance, to residents, patients and clients in care settings.
Age UK Wellbeing for older people’s groups and organisations.
Scottish Ballet Duet is a series of three 10-minute films and two 12-minute audio recordings specially designed for people with reduced mobility to move together with their companions or carers. As with all SB Health materials, SB Duet can also be enjoyed on your own.
Medication Management and Waste Disposal
This pack aims to provide Care Home Teams with a step by step guide to returning medication that is no longer required by a resident. This guidance supports Care Inspectorate best practice.
Miami J Collar Information
This information can be helpful for use of a Miami J Collar following a stable neck injury or fracture where the patient is able to safely apply and remove themselves.
Miami J Collar – Stable with assistance
This information can be helpful for use of a Miami J Collar following a stable neck injury or fracture where the patient requires a carer, family or friends to safely apply and remove the collar as they cannot do this themselves.
This information can be helpful for use of a Miami J Collar following an unstable neck injury or fracture. It provides information to help their carers, family or friends understand how to safely remove and apply the collar as they cannot do this themselves and it requires two people to remove to apply the collar.
Milkshakes in Care Homes
The Food First and Project Milkshake section on the Right Decision website provides helpful resources including information videos and our milkshake recipe book to support starting fortified milkshakes in your home.
Nutrition and Hydration
NHSGGC Nutrition In Care Homes
MUST and MUST Step 5 training videos to support understanding of MUST calculations and MUST Step 5 pathway. This is used for care and residential homes. Click here to access the MUST Guide to Help.
Hydration poster identifies key points for delivering good hydration.
Mealtime experience poster identifies key points for delivering a good mealtime experience for residents.
Food Fortification Poster key points to support a food first approach for residents who require it.
IDDSI and dysphagia poster provides an overview of the IDDSI framework.
Eating and Drinking with Acknowledged Risk Information Leaflet
Weight Management poster to support care home staff and residents’ families.
NHSGGC Dysphagia
IDDSI and dysphagia training videos for care and catering staff in care homes created by Speech and Language therapy, Dietetics and IDDSI specialist chef.
IDDSI snack list poster to support snack choices for residents with dysphagia. This poster goes through each IDDSI level with sweet and savoury suggestions.
IDDSI level 6 poster explaining what a level 6 diet is and how to check if food is level 6 diet appropriate.
NHSGGC Malnutrition
Other resources
IDDSI resources and recipes to support providing food and fluid to residents with dysphagia.
Wessex academic health network website. The Hydration at Home e-learning module and Toolkit has been endorsed by the British Dietetic Association. Useful information to support training on hydration to all care staff.
Eating and drinking well in care: good practice guidance for older people
Nutrition and Hydration Week 2025
Malnutrition Monday – Signs, prevention and consequences of malnutrition plus malnutrition screening
Food and Fluid Preference Tuesday – Food and fluid preference tips and considerations
Snack Wednesday – Texture modified and diabetic snack ideas
Thirsty Thursday – Factors affecting hydration and tips to support fluid intake
Mealtime Friday – Importance of Positive Mealtime Experience
Malnutrition Awareness Week 2023
Malnutrition – Signs, symptoms and consequences
Interactive Tuesday – Be person centred, no one size fits all!
Ask Look Listen – Good Nutrition
Thirsty Thursday – Hydration
Focus on Resilience – Top tips
Oral Health
Care Inspectorate
‘Supporting better oral care in care homes’ quality illustration.
Caring for Smiles
Scotland’s national oral health programme for dependent older adults.
Palliative Care and Confirmation of Death
NHS Education for Scotland (NES) Resources for Health and Social Care Staff
Turas Learn
Confirmation of death resources are available on Turas Learn. The pages contain Information and Education Resources resources to support registered professionals with Confirmation of Death.
Turas Learn is a website for health and social care staff that hosts a wide range of learning materials including eLearning modules and courses.
You must be logged into your Turas Account to view and access eLearning modules Sign In
If you do not have a Turas account you can create one
Support around death
This website aims to support health and social care staff who are working with patients, carers and families before, at, and after death. It provides key information on the clinical, legislative, and practical issues involved.
NHSGGC Last Breath Poster
Click here to access the Last Breath poster developed by NHS Forth Valley and adapted by NHSGGC.
One hour training session available that would be ideal for relatives. Please complete a contact form if interested in this.
NHSGGC Syringe Pump Resources
Click here to access NHSGGC resources and updates for syringe pumps including instruction videos, competency frameworks and guidelines for use.
Scottish Palliative Care Guidelines and NHSGGC Palliative Care Right Decisions App
The Scottish Palliative Care Guidelines describes good practice in the management of adult patients with life-limiting illness. They are designed for healthcare professionals from any care setting who are involved in supporting people with a palliative, life-limiting condition.
This app is delivered through the Right Decision Service – the national decision support service provided by Healthcare Improvement Scotland and is Nationwide.
The guidelines can be accessed via the Right Decisions website or download the Right Decisions mobile app from the app store for Apple or Android.
Supportive and Palliative Action Register (SPAR) Resources
Please find SPAR documentation and resources below. If you are looking to implement SPAR in your care home, please contact us for support and guidance.
- SPAR Standard Operating Procedure
- SPAR Participation Agreement
- SPAR Register
- Palliative Performance Scale with guidance
Eating and Drinking with Acknowledged Risk
Eating and Drinking with Acknowledged Risk Information Leaflet
Podiatry
Quality Improvement (QI)
Red Bag resources
The Red Bag Scheme is a well-established initiative designed to support safe, effective, and person-centred transitions when a care home resident requires hospital admission. It accompanies the resident from the care home to the hospital and back, ensuring that essential clinical information and personal belongings remain together throughout the journey.
The Red Bag contains key documents such as the resident’s current medication list, DNACPR, RESTORE2 (or equivalent clinical information), relevant care plans, and details of any future care wishes. It also includes important personal items that promote comfort, dignity, and communication during the hospital stay.
A core component of the scheme is the Red Bag Checklist, which plays a vital role in ensuring the quality and consistency of the information provided.
Consistent use of the Red Bag supports early clinical decision making, improves communication between teams, reduces delays, and enables safe, well-coordinated discharge planning to begin as early as possible. Above all, it ensures that the resident’s needs, preferences, and baseline health information are clearly understood from the moment they arrive in the hospital. The Red Bag Scheme strengthens partnership working across health and social care, promotes continuity, and helps deliver a more efficient and person-centred experience for care home residents during periods of acute illness.
To promote understanding and encourage correct use of the Red Bag, dedicated awareness posters have been developed for both care home and hospital settings. These posters for care home and hospital settings act as quick reference guides and reinforce the key steps involved in preparing, transferring, and returning the Red Bag.
To support good governance and maintain consistency across the Red Bag Scheme, both care homes and hospital staff must report any lost red bags as soon as they are identified. Services should contact the ggc.redbag.enquiries@nhs.scot and quote the bag number and location to report the lost bag. This process ensures accurate tracking of bags, prevents disruption to the resident transfer pathway, and supports continuous improvement of the scheme across the system.
Record Keeping
Online Record Keeping module
The purpose of this course is to provide care home staff with information in order to improve their understanding of what makes a good record of care, what are the legalities of records and what is acceptable record keeping.
It should take you approximately 20 minutes to complete – please click here to access
RESTORE 2
Care Home Collaborative
RESTORE2 is the national acute deterioration tool recommended by Scottish Government for care homes.
The Care Home Collaborative can support the implementation of this nationally recognised tool in care homes across GGC.
If you would like more information or our support using the RESTORE2 tool within your care home please get in touch.
Wessex Patient Safety Collaborative
RESTORE2 is a national resources that was co-produced by NHS West Hampshire Clinical Commissioning Group and Wessex Patient Safety Collaborative.
RESTORE2 is designed to support homes and health professionals to:
- Recognise when a resident may be deteriorating or at risk of physical deterioration
- Act appropriately according to the residents care plan
- Obtain a complete set of physical observations to inform escalation and conversations with health professionals
- Speak with the most appropriate health professional in a timely way to get the right support
- Provide a concise escalation history to health professionals to support their professional decision making
Resources
The NHS Health Education England videos below can be used to support staff when implementing the RESTORE2 tool in your care home.
Soft signs of deterioration
NEWS What is it?
Measuring the respiratory rate
Measuring oxygen saturations
Measuring blood pressure
Measuring heart rate
Measuring the level of alertness
How to measure temperature
Using SBARD in care homes
SBARD is an easy to remember approach you can use to frame communications or conversations. It can be used very effectively to escalate a clinical problem that requires immediate attention, or to facilitate efficient handover of residents between health and care teams.
This video will show the benefits of using SBARD for care home staff and how it can improve the quality of care for our patients.
Other useful resources
RESTORE 2 Mini (Residential)
Wessex Patient Safety Collaborative
RESTORE2 Mini can help your team to identify that a resident is deteriorating and to get help earlier, supporting the resident to remain at home.
RESTORE2 Mini is a shortened version of the full RESTORE2 tool and is ideal for introducing to residential homes (that are currently unable to take physical observations) to the concepts of soft signs and SBARD structured communication.
Resources
Soft Signs of deterioration
This video explains “Soft Signs”.
Using SBARD in care homes
SBARD is an easy to remember approach you can use to frame communications or conversations. It can be used very effectively to escalate a clinical problem that requires immediate attention, or to facilitate efficient handover of residents between health and care teams.
This video will show the benefits of using SBARD for care home staff and how it can improve the quality of care for residents.
Other useful resources
Skin Tear Resources
Skin tears are a common yet often preventable injury in older adults, particularly within care home settings. These wounds can cause significant pain, increase the risk of infection, and negatively impact quality of life. This resource package has been designed to equip care home staff with the knowledge and practical skills needed to identify, prevent, and manage skin tears effectively. By understanding the causes, risk factors, and best-practice interventions, we can work together to reduce incidence, promote healing, and ensure the highest standard of care for residents.
TAPESTRY bereavement toolkit
TAPESTRY is a practical toolkit co-designed with the University of Glasgow, ENRICH Scotland and NHSGGC to support bereavement in care homes. It recognises that death is a natural part of care home life and that it affects residents, families and staff. The toolkit helps care homes respond with kindness, dignity and compassion before a death, at the time of death and afterwards.
The name TAPESTRY reflects the idea that the lives of people who live and work in care homes are woven together. Relationships, experiences, actions and feelings all form threads that create a unique tapestry of care home life. How death and bereavement are acknowledged and supported influences the strength, care and meaning of that tapestry. The toolkit is for everyone who works in a care home, including care assistants, nurses, managers, administrative staff and domestic staff. It does not need to be read all at once. Staff can use the parts that are most relevant to their role or to what is happening in the home at the time.
TAPESTRY focuses on simple, practical actions that make a real difference. This includes supporting families to spend time with loved ones who are dying, talking openly and sensitively about death, helping people say goodbye, and recognising the emotional impact of loss on staff and residents. It also provides guidance on planning and practical support; It includes discussing future and end-of-life wishes, respecting cultural and spiritual needs, supporting funerals and memorials, helping families after a death, and offering emotional support and debriefing for staff.
Overall, TAPESTRY promotes a shared, compassionate approach to bereavement, where care, understanding and support are part of everyday care home life.
Tissue Viability and Wound Care
Pressure Ulcer Prevention
Care Inspectorate
Health Improvement Scotland
- Tissue Viability Toolkit
- Pressure Ulcer Standards
- Pressure Ulcer Safety Cross and Guidance for Care Homes
NHSGGC
- Guide to help you prevent pressure ulcers Leaflet
- Pressure ulcer prevention information Poster
- Joint Wound Care Formulary (2022)
- The Prevention and Management of pressure ulcers Module
NATVNS
- Pressure Ulcer Grading Tool
Wound Care
The Scottish Wound Assessment and Action Guide (SWAAG)
NHSGGC Joint Wound Care Formulary (2022)
NHS Scotland Scottish Ropper Ladder for Infected Wounds
Airflow Mattress Change Package
The Airflow Mattress Change Package comprises of:
- Checklist: The checklist acts as an aide memoir, using it staff should soon be familiar with what should be checked on the mattress as a routine to reduce errors and prevent harm. This should be printed off in A5 with troubleshooting page on the back, laminated and attached to the pump.
- Airflow Mattress Audit: This can be printed off or used as an excel document to monitor the mattresses, either weekly, monthly or ad-hoc to ensure they are being set appropriately and errors are not occurring.
- Airflow Mattress Training: The CHC TVN offers a 30-45 minute training session to train the trainers within the care home on the safe use of airflow mattresses. Once training has been provided the care home will have access to the training slides and notes in order to ensure all their staff are familiar and competent in using airflow mattresses.
- Project Report: The project report summarises the key aspects of the project, including its goals, progress and outcomes.
- Airflow Mattress Train the Trainer Slides: This valuable training was developed to cover the main elements that relate to all airflow mattresses and the common errors that are made that result in pressure damage.
Please contact the CHC to arrange for the training to be provided.
Additional Resources
Resident in Care Home with a non-progressing wound
This guidance was collated by a short life working group of care home representatives from all HSCP partnerships. The guidance provides a clear decision making pathway for care home staff/care home liaison nurses to ensure streamlining of referrals following identification of a wound that has shown no signs of progressing in two weeks.
All wounds should show signs of progress (evidence of progress towards healing, reduced size, reduction in slough and necrotic tissue) over a two week period. If not ensure all steps are completed within your column before making referral to next stage.
- Residents in Care Home with a Non-Progressing Wound Guidance poster
Health Improvement Scotland
- Assessment Chart for Wound Management
NATVNS Scotland
- Wound Cleansing Pathway
What Matters to You (WMTY)
WMTY day is an annual event which is recognised and celebrated internationally. On this day, more than any other, there is a focus on raising awareness of having conversations with care home residents and staff that help to build connections and improve outcomes for the person:
- Ask What Matters,
- Listen to What Matters and
- Do What Matters.
You can read a selection of WMTY Activities and stories from staff, residents and families in our Good News Stories section. You can also get involved by Sharing your stories and building the evidence base.
For further information have a look at the these WMTY resources
Click here to access the NHSGGC Person Centred Care resources
Click here to access the Health and Social Care Alliance Scotland Person Centred Voices resources
Guidance notes for Carer Voices – Intelligent Kindness Best Practice
Urinary Tract Infections (UTIs)
Urinary Tract Infection (UTI) Assessment Tool for Care Home Staff
Urinary Tract Infections (UTIs) can have a serious impact on older adults. Early recognition and treatment can prevent deterioration and improve outcomes for care home residents.
The UTI Assessment Tool supports care home staff to recognise possible UTI symptoms and take appropriate action. It is an information-gathering form and flowchart developed by Healthcare Improvement Scotland (HIS) in partnership with the Scottish Antimicrobial Prescribing Group (SAPG).
This tool is for use by all care home staff, nursing and non-nursing, and supports safe, consistent decision-making.
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You can share your free resources and learning opportunities on this website. Further information available in About our website
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Capturing Workplace Learning: Care Home Registered Nurses
The NHSGGC Care Home Collaborative are committed to celebrating excellent in everday practice and fostering a culture of continuous learning with the Care Home nursing workforce across the NHSGGC region.
From conversations with Care Home registered nurses (RNs) over the past three years it has been identified that better support through enhanced professional development, recognition, and a stronger sense of value is needed.
This opportunity will support RNs from Care Homes (of all experience levels) in documenting, evaluating and recognising the value of their ongoing professional development. Participants will collaborate with senior colleagues and receive support and guidance in using the Turas Professional Portfolio to create a comprehensive record of evidence that highlights their expertise and experience in their speciality area of Care Homes.
Our vision is to empower Care Home nurses to take ownership of their career progression, acknowledging the breadth and depth of their skills and experiences throughout their journey as a professional. This initiative will support current best practice in care homes and promote future career planning for Care Home RNs and help those aspiring to transition into specialist, leadership, or advanced roles.
If you are interested in pursuing this brilliant opportunity please get in touch with the CHC team and email ggc.chccontact@nhs.scot to receive the MS Teams joining link.
Care Around Death Study Day
This study day presents an opportunity to help increase Care Around Death knowledge and skills. Using a case study approach this day will enable participants to learn and share practice with each other whilst taking into consideration relevant local and national guidance.
This study day meets ‘Enhanced’ level on Domain #2 of the NES Palliative and End of Life Care Education Framework.
Click on the link below for more information and upcoming dates.
Caring for Smiles
Caring for Smiles is Scotland’s national oral health, training and support programme, which aims to improve the oral health of older people particularly those living in care homes.
Education and training of staff play an important role in the delivery and improvement of oral care. All care staff including supervisors and managers are encouraged to take up Caring for Smiles training where it is available.
Staff are invited to attend a 2 hour training session between 2.00pm – 4.00pm, delivered by the NHSGGC Oral Health Directorate.
Caring for Smiles have also developed an e-learning module on mouth care for care home staff. This module can be accessed here.
Catheter Passport
The National Catheter Passport (NCP) is a person-held document that supports safe, high-quality, and continuous care for people with urinary catheters. It provides education for patients and carers and acts as a communication tool for health and social care staff.
The passport records key information such as the reason for catheterisation, insertion date, care needs and future plans. By accompanying the person across care settings it promotes improved communication, reduced duplication and helps reduce complications, particularly catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTIs).
Confirmation of Death
Care Home Collaborative
The NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde (NHSGGC) Confirmation of Death (CoD) policy permits any trained Registered Health Care Professional to confirm death in any circumstance.
The Care Home Collaborative sessions provide an overview of the national learning resources, provide an opportunity for reflective discussion, simulation and competency sign off.
These are 2 ½ hours sessions which are delivered face to face, with rotating venues.
The aim of the session is to familiarise care home registered nursing staff with the process of Confirmation of Death.
Learning Outcomes
Identify the difference between Confirmation of Death and certification of death
Understanding and undertaking the practical component of CoD
Demonstrating knowledge of navigation of NHSGGC palliative care website/Moodle and other relevant electronic resources
Overview the NHSGGC COD competency document
Please use buttons below to contact us
Delirium Risk Reduction
Delirium is a serious, life threatening condition that develops rapidly over days or hours. When untreated delirium can lead to poorer outcomes for care home residents.
Would you like to find out more about how to reduce the risk of your residents developing delirium? Click below to register for our upcoming sessions.
Essentials in Psychological Care – Dementia Training Programme
Care Home Collaborative
The Essentials in Psychological Care – Dementia Training Programme delivered by the Care Home Collaborative is a certificated, exciting training programme that will increase your existing dementia knowledge, in a practical way to help you support the people you care for.
Modules
1: Dementia and Unmet Needs
2: Understanding Distress in Dementia
3: Understanding the Persons’ Reality
4: Communication
5: Stimulation and Meaningful Activity
6: ABC Charts
7: Staff Stress and Distress
Learning Outcomes
- To enhance understanding of the causes of distressed behaviours in dementia.
- Explore evidence-based proactive and preventative strategies and be able to apply these effectively.
- Improve the experience and care for people living with dementia, their families and carers.
Please book online using the buttons below
Learning Forum
The Care Home Learning Forum aims to bring together Registered Nurses across all care homes, HSCPs teams and acute settings to share experience and practice across the NHSGGC area.
We aim to recognise, celebrate and highlight the impact of nursing practice in the care home setting, and establish a supportive community of learners and peer support networks. The 90min online sessions are designed to support accessible bite sized learning opportunities for busy RNs and are jointly chaired by RNs from Care Homes and HSCP teams.
Mobile Skills Bus
Mobile Skills Unit (MSU)
The Mobile Skills Unit (MSU) was developed to support the delivery of clinical skills training and education to all across Scotland.
No further dates are currently planned.
Meaningful Activity Network Meetings
Care Home Collaborative
Are you interested in new ideas to promote meaningful activities for your residents? Would you like to share your good news stories and celebrate successes with other care homes? Then this is the event for you!
The Care Home Collaborative would like to invite you to join us at our next ‘Meaningful Activity Network Meeting’ as we continue our conversation about meaningful and purposeful activity. We are hosting this event in partnership with Care Inspectorate’s Health and Social Care Improvement team.
Care homes who attended our first meeting indicated their keen interest in being involved in a network where they could support each other and share ideas, including information and resources which would enhance the provision of activities for care home residents. We have listened to your feedback and opened this to all care home staff (Managers, Nurses, carers, activity coordinators, catering, housekeeping, etc.).
Please click on the link below to register
MUST/MUST Step 5 Webinars
This webinar is open to all care home staff who would like an update on MUST and MUST Step 5. It will help refresh knowledge of each step of the MUST screening tool, including calculation of scores. It will also cover MUST Step 5 and explain how to complete the form.
This is vital in supporting nutritional care for residents and identifying risks.
Session Aims
- Refresh knowledge of the MUST pathway
- Learn to calculate total MUST score from steps 1-3
- Refresh knowledge of MUST Step 5 paperwork
Learning Outcomes:
- To accurately calculate MUST scores
- Complete MUST Step 5 paperwork and reviews confidently
Please click on the link below to register for this webinar.
Oral Health
Caring for Smiles is Scotland’s national oral health training and support programme.
Education and training of staff play an important role in the delivery and improvement of oral care. All care staff including supervisors and managers are encouraged to take up Caring for Smiles training where it is available.
Caring for Smiles (Non-accredited training)
Staff are invited to attend a 2 hour Online training session delivered by NHSGGC, Oral Health Directorate.
Learning Outcomes
- Demonstrate an understanding of why good oral health is important
2. Recognise the factors that contribute to poor oral health
3. Confidently carry out day-to-day oral care for residents who require assistance
4. Know how to report any health concerns
5. Understand the importance of the different oral care forms e.g risk assessment, care plans and daily documentation
6. To be able to carry out an oral health risk assessment
7. Understand what techniques and strategies may help those residents with dementia who resist oral care.
Please direct any questions to the Oral Health Team
Email: oral.health3@ggc.scot.nhs.uk
Contact Tel number: 0141 201 4217
Caring for Smiles Turas Learn and Turas Learn SSSC open badges
Caring for Smiles Turas Learn: Better oral care for dependent older people
SSSC open badges: Toothbrushing for oral health is a suite of 5 badges. Each of the 5 milestone topics award their own badge. To do this you must successfully complete all the eLearning modules in the suite and submit the required evidence of your learning on the SSSC badges website.
In care at home badge is aimed at people who care for the oral health of others at home. To do this you must successfully complete the eLearning module and submit the required evidence on the SSSC badges website.
In the care home badge is aimed at people who care for the oral health of other in the care home. To do this you must successfully complete the eLearning module and submit the required evidence of your learning on the SSSC badges website
Palliative Care
NHSGGC
- FREE online communication skills workshops.
SAGE & THYME workshops support all care home staff in using the evidence based skills required to provide person-centred support to residents and relatives with emotional concerns or worries. Using a mixture of group work, lectures and videos, the workshop discourages staff from ‘fixing’, and demonstrates how to work with the residents’ own ideas and solutions first.
Using a memorable structure, each 2 hour 45 minutes online workshop delivered via zoom reminds staff how to listen, and how to respond to distress in a way which empowers the resident or relative.
These FREE online workshops are delivered via Zoom for anyone working in health and social care. Click here to register for upcoming dates.
Macmillan Cancer Support
Macmillan Enhanced Palliative & End of Life Care Learning & Development Toolkit.
Our Toolkit has been designed to offer a range of interactive, online modules, tools and resources to develop your knowledge and skills in palliative and end of life care. The toolkit offers flexible, self-paced learning that can be accessed when and where you need it. We have divided the content into 5 topic areas:
- Pain management in palliative and end of life care
- Other common palliative and end of life symptoms
- Communication in palliative and end of life care
- Palliative care emergencies
- Person-centred care at end of life
Who is the toolkit for?
The toolkit is aimed at health and social care professionals who regularly assess, manage and influence decision-making for people with life-limiting illness.
What level is the toolkit?
The toolkit is Enhanced Level. This means that it’s suitable for learners with existing knowledge and/or experience in palliative and end of life care who wish to develop their knowledge and skills further.
How do I navigate the toolkit?
Each topic contains a range of resources – including online modules, articles, videos and tools – to enhance your knowledge and skills. You can choose the topics and resources relevant to your role, interests and professional development and complete them in any order.
How do I access the toolkit?
The toolkit is hosted within the Palliative and End of Life Care Community in the Macmillan Learning Hub. If you are not already registered for the Learning Hub please click here to sign up for this free resource.
If you would like more information you can watch a short video that explains more about our learning hub and toolkit.
Macmillan Cancer Support – Supporting Cancer Care Programme
Click here for more information on the Supporting Cancer Care programme commencing January 2026.
Peer Support for Care Home Staff – Looking After Yourself and Others
Click here to view more details on our upcoming online training sessions focussing on peer support for care home staff.
Prevent the Pressure – Training for Pressure Ulcer Prevention and Airflow Mattress Use
This webinar covers correct use of airflow mattressses and key signs to watch for when caring for residents.
Topics covered will include:
- Understand how pressure ulcers occur
- Work as a team to prevent and manage pressure damage
- Strategies to prevent pressure damage
- Airflow Mattress guide and troubleshooting
Please click on the link below to register for this webinar.
Prevention and Management of Pressure Ulcers – Online Module
An online module to provide residential care home staff with the knowledge and skills to understand pressure ulcers – how they form, how they are treated and crucially, how they can be prevented.
Click here to access
Project milkshake and Food Fortification webinar
This webinar is open to all care home staff who would like an update on food first and project milkshake as part of the MUST Step 5. It will help refresh knowledge on key foods and fluids that can be used as first line management for residents with an identified nutrtional risk.
Quality Improvement (QI) Scottish Improvement Foundation Skills Programme (SIFS)
Do you want to make lasting changes within your care home? Let us help you make those changes by giving you the tools and knowledge to carry out Quality Improvement (QI) projects. The Scottish Improvement Foundation Skills Programme (SIFS), developed in partnership with the Scottish Social Services Council (SSSC) covers the following topics:
• An introduction to the Model for Improvement
• How to understand and identify where changes can be made
• How to test and understand what difference your changes can make
The programme lasts 14 weeks and you will be asked to carry out a small project within your care home. You will take part in 3 in person learning days during the programme.
You will be assigned a Quality Improvement Advisor from the CHC team for support during the programme. If you are interested, please watch this space for information on how to join the 2025 cohorts.
To register please select from the cohorts below.
If you have any questions, or wish to be kept informed when we launch the call for the next cohort, contact us ggc.chccontact@ggc.scot.nhs.uk
RESTORE2 Leadership Training
RESTORE2 is a physical deterioration and escalation tool recommended in My Health, My Care, My Home Healthcare Framework for adults living in care homes by the Scottish Government.
The RESTORE2 leadership training will equip Care Home leaders with the necessary skills to effectively train colleagues and implement the tool with their care homes, contributing to a culture of proactive patient safety and improved care delivery.
Participants will gain a thorough understanding of the RESTORE2 tool, including its purpose, components (soft signs, vital signs, NEWS2, SBARD), and how to apply it in practice.
Click here to access RESTORE2 resources including videos, charts and the rollout handbook.
If you are a Care Home manager, Deputy or Clinical Lead and you are interested in empowering your staff to use RESTORE2 in your care home, please join us at one of our training events listed below to find out more.
RESTORE2 Training
RESTORE2 is a physical deterioration and escalation tool recommended in My Health, My Care, My Home Healthcare Framework for adults living in care homes by the Scottish Government.
The Care Home Collaborative can support the implementation of this tool in care homes across GGC.
Click here to access RESTORE2 resources including videos, charts and the rollout handbook.
If you are interested in using RESTORE2 in your care home, please join us at one of our training events listed below to find out more about RESTORE2 and how to implement it in your home.
RESTORE2 Mini Training for carers
RESTORE2 Mini can help your team to identify that a resident is deteriorating and to get help earlier, supporting the resident to remain at home.
RESTORE2 Mini is a shortened version of the full RESTORE2 tool and is ideal for introducing to residential homes (that are currently unable to take physical observations) to the concepts of soft signs and SBARD structured communication.
Learning Outcomes:
- Learning about RESTORE2 Mini
- Recognising ‘soft signs’
- Knowing the person you care for
- Structured communication and escalation
Click here to access RESTORE2Mini videos.
If you are interested in using RESTORE2Mini in your home, please join us at one of our training events listed below .
SSKINS Study Day (Prevention and Management of Pressure Ulcers)
Care Home Collaborative
The Care Home Collaborative are providing full day training sessions focusing on the SSKINS Bundle on the prevention and management of pressure ulcers. With the input of a multi-agency team the session will consist of an in depth look at each element of SSKINS.
This training is aimed at nursing staff, carers, activity co-ordinators and managers working in care homes.
After the training the participants will receive a certificate of attendance that will count for 6 hours CPD.
At the end of the session participants should be able to:
- Explain what SSKINS is
- Identify residents that would be at risk of pressure ulcers
- Carry out a thorough skin inspection
- Recognise and grade the different grades of pressure ulcer
- Understand the importance of pressure relieving equipment and how to care for it
- Understand what we can do to keep our residents moving to prevent pressure ulcers developing or deteriorating
- Ensure moisture and continence is managed appropriately to avoid/reduce risk of pressure ulcers
- Recognise the importance of nutrition and hydration in pressure ulcer prevention
Please book online using the buttons below. Availability of places is dictated by the size of each venue.
Strength and Balance
Join us for a 4.5hr workshop that explains why walking, plus strength and balance provide the key to active older age. You will spend time learning how to encourage mobility and activity and build strength and balance into daily care. This course is delivered by qualified trainers with extensive experience in health and social care. Click here for more details.
Stress and Distress
A two-hour interactive learning opportunity for all care home staff to better understand how to help residents experiencing distress in dementia.
Supporting people affected by cancer
Macmillan
Macmillan’s Social care community
The Social care community on Macmillan’s Learning Hub offers free training and education for staff working in adult social care. Develop your knowledge and skills in supporting people affected by cancer by learning about topics including:
- cancer awareness,
- communication skills,
- person-centred care,
- cancer and other conditions
- palliative and end of life care.
There is a wide range of resources in the community for you to explore, including interactive e-learning, virtual classrooms, articles and videos.
Who is it for?
This community is for staff working in adult social care who want to improve their understanding of cancer and skills in supporting people affected by cancer.
What level is it?
The community contains training and education at both Essential and Enhanced level.
How do I navigate the Community?
The training and education is organised into 5 topic areas. Each topic contains a range of resources (including e-learning modules, articles and videos) to enhance your knowledge and skills. You can choose the topics and resources relevant to your role, interests and professional development and complete them in any order.
How do I access the Community?
If you are not already registered on Macmillan’s Learning Hub, please click here to sign up for free
Once logged in, you can access the Social care community here
Turas Learn
Turas Learn is a website for Health and Social Care staff that hosts a wide range of learning materials including eLearning modules and courses.
There are a wide range of educational resources which provide guidance and support to enhance your ongoing professional development.
You must be logged into your Turas Account to view and access eLearning modules Sign In
If you do not have a Turas account you can create one
Watch the short video to find out how to:
- Register for Turas Learn
- Sign in to find learning resources
- Find your Learning Record
Wound Care Study Day
The Wound Care Study Day has been developed in response to care home colleagues’ requests for wound care information and updates. We worked in partnership with colleagues from each HSCP to develop a comprehensive wound care study day.
The training is suitable for registered nurses and care staff who have an existing competency in wound management within their role in the care home. It also counts towards Continuous Professional Develop (CPD).
The study day offers a full day combining presentations with hands on interactive sessions on the topics listed:
- Composition of the skin and its functions
- Introduction to wound assessment and definition of a wound
- Wound assessments – Practical session
- Wound management
- Healing and antimicrobial stewardship
- Treatment of wounds and case studies
Learning outcomes:
- Describe composition of the skin and its functions
- Define and assess a wound
- Carry out wound assessment
- Describe stages of wound healing and principles of antimicrobial stewardship
The training does not deem someone competent but provides an update and refresher on wound care and current formulary products.
Please book your place by clicking the link below.
Would you like to share your free learning opportunities with Care Homes?
You can share your free learning opportunities and resources on this website. How to information is available in our About our website section.









