Welcome to the Health BOCS Update, the monthly update on Health and Wellbeing activities at the Brothers of Charity Services in England.
Click here to view HealthBOCS Booklet 2019/2020.
February Promotion
As part of Health BOCS, the Brothers of Charity Services’ health and wellbeing programme, throughout February, we promoted: Dignity Action Day.
Dignity Action Day
Dignity Action Day gives everyone the opportunity to contribute to upholding people’s rights to dignity and provide a truly memorable day for people receiving care. Dignity Action Day aims to ensure people who use care services are treated as individuals and are given choice, control and a sense of purpose in their daily lives.
“Dignity Action Day highlights a more respectful way of behaving towards vulnerable people. The very old and the very young clearly need our respect, but it wouldn’t do any harm to spread the dignity message across the population then we can all benefit.”
Supporting Dignity Action Day will:
Raise Awareness of the importance of Dignity in Care.
Provide someone with an extra special day.
Demonstrate that everybody in the community has a role to play in upholding Dignity in Care.
Remind the public that staff have a right to be treated with dignity and respect too.
Provide a great community networking opportunity.
On Dignity Action Day we ask health and social care workers to promote dignity in their place of work. We also ask members of the public to promote dignity for people in their communities.
Click here for more information.
March Promotion
As part of Health BOCS, the Brothers of Charity Services’ health and wellbeing programme, throughout March, we will be promoting: No Smoking Day; Downs Syndrome Awareness Week and Sport Relief.
No Smoking Day
No smoking day is an annual health awareness day in the United Kingdom which is intended to help smokers who want to quit smoking. The first No Smoking Day was on Ash Wednesday in 1984, and it now takes place on the second Wednesday in March.
Over the last few decades, it has become very clear how terrible dangerous smoking is. There are toxins in them that cause many different forms of cancer from the mouth to the lungs. What is also important to know is that while it may be a personal choice to smoke or not, when someone smokes near another person, the second hand smoke is just as dangerous to then. So, in fact it really isn’t just a personal decision. The protection of people who do not want to be effected by second-hand smoke has led to new laws in most communities that ban smoking in most public spaces.
Click here to find out more
Downs Syndrome Awareness Week
Every single person with Down’s syndrome should have the same opportunities as everyone else, in EVERY area of life:
- Personal development
- Personal relationships
- Education
- Health care
- Work
- Public Life
- Hobbies and Leisure
Down’s syndrome Awareness Week and World Down Syndrome Day are an amazing opportunity to challenge our society’s misconceptions about Down’s syndrome and to call for it to be more inclusive.
Down’s syndrome Awareness will be celebrating the achievements of people with Down’s syndrome, telling their stories and amplifying their voices.
The DSA will especially be highlighting the stories and achievements of people with Down’s syndrome and who have more complex needs; a section of our own community who can sometimes feel particularly left behind.
Click here to find out more.
Sports Relief
On 13 March, people across the UK will be raising money to help tackle issues including mental health, homelessness and child poverty right across the world.
Sport Relief is the time, every two years, when the British public can get active, have fun and raise cash to help people living incredibly tough lives both in the UK and around the world.
Our fabulous fundraisers get sponsored for Sport Relief, and go the extra mile by organising sports tournaments, quizzes and challenges to raise even more cash.
It all leads up to a fantastic night of Sport Relief TV on the BBC.
Click here to find out more.