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Disability Awareness & Inclusion Training | iHASCO

Activism

Our Disability Awareness & Inclusion Training will help staff to gain a better understanding of how visible and invisible disabilities can affect people both at work and outside of it. As well as the laws protecting people with disabilities and what practices and policies should be in place. This course can be completed in 55 minutes and is Citation Approved. Get instant access to this course today! https://www.ihasco.co.uk/courses/detail/disability-awareness-training ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- VIDEO TRANSCRIPT: This online Disability Awareness and Inclusion training explores the realities of those who live and work with a disability, including the disadvantages and discrimination people with disabilities encounter at work and in the community. It also covers an organisation’s legal obligations, as well as offering practical advice to everyone - employees, managers and leaders alike - on how they can become TRULY inclusive; by not only changing the way we VIEW disability, but also by proactively taking action to ensure that people with disabilities are treated equally and given fair access to the same opportunities at those without disabilities. The end goal is to create a workplace and a society that is so NATURALLY inclusive, that NO ONE feels DIS-ABLED by the environment they live and work in. This course is informative, concise yet comprehensive, and it provides a downloadable course certificate upon completion. Get started with a no-obligation free trial today.

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maanaszachariah60
maanaszachariah60 2 years, 3 months ago

Awareness of CKD is highly important. When I informed my x manager at work in a Rotherham labour council children's home that I had to start dialysis within 2 weeks he made me walk through the home singing dead man walking and laughing. He got all the children and other staff to laugh at me before getting me in the office and threatening me with the sack and asking if I'm a liar. He then proceeded to phone me or my dialysis unit every dialysis session for 3 weeks demanding I prove I was on a machine or be sacked. I tried to make a complaint but was told ' you have had one dialysis session. You must be cured. Why do you need more dialysis and why can't you work full time. We have no qualified staff' Then more threats of being sacked if I didn't stop attending dialysis. Horrible horrible experience...