Challenges to Positive Behavioural Support practice in Australia

with Dr. Jeffrey Chan

This presentation is an opportunity to pause, observe and ponder on Positive Behaviour Support (PBS), in particular on leadership at a national and global level. In Australia, PBS is undergoing significant change and a degree of uncertainty, and within an increasing regulatory compliance context. The presentation is a reflective practice on why, what and how we need to intentionally foster PBS leadership at all levels of practice and service provision.
Jeff will present a view that we need to go beyond technical and or clinical expertise, and applied research capability. Both skill-sets are critical but they speak to a narrow aspect of PBS. In the current Australian context, collective leadership is important to influence and shape the future of PBS, PBS leaders need to 'play' outside the sphere of PBS and regulatory compliance. It is time to nurture and cultivate a deliberate succession planning of PBS leaders. To do nothing is not an option for PBS if we wish to remain relevant, viable and nimble to the changing environment.

🗓 Date: 12th March
Time: 1-2pm AEST (QLD)
               
2-3pm AEDT (NSW, VIC, TAS, ACT)
                1:30-2:30pm ACDT (SA)
                12:30-1:30pm ACST (NT)
                11am-12pm AWST (WA)

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Register now to secure your spot!

Challenges to Positive Behavioural Support practice in Australia

with dr. Jeffrey chan

12th March, 2-3pm AEDT (Sydney timezone)
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meet the presenter

Dr. Jeffrey Chan

University of Queensland

Jeff has more than 20-years Senior Executive experience in both not-for-profit and Government settings in operational and practice leadership roles. Including an inaugural statutory in the protection of the rights of people with disability and compulsory treatment in Victoria, and as an inaugural Governor-in-Council appointment as Director of Forensic Disability and Chief Practitioner to protect the rights of people with cognitive disability in the disability forensic system. More recently, he was the Deputy Commissioner, Practice Quality division at the NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission where he was part of the ‘foundation’ team.

Jeff has extensive experience in resolving sensitive and complex disability matters, and provides sound authoritative advice at Department Secretary level, to Disability Ministers, State/Territory senior officers, statutory officers, CEO and Boards. He has led organisational, State and national transformation initiatives, and reform programmes (abuse prevention) in quality and safeguarding, clinical governance, application of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) in practice and organisational systems, and regulatory compliance. Together with Australian colleagues, Jeff has led influential research on the quality of BSPs, rights-based legislation, PBS and the elimination of restrictive practices for more than 17 years. He is an Adjunct Professor, University of Queensland and former Adjunct Professor, University of Sydney. He combines practice insight into research rigour, pragmatic policy and rights-based legislation.

Check out some of Dr. Chan's recent publications:

  Chan, J., & Paley, S. (2024). Challenges to positive behavioural support practice in Australia: Implications for building the next generation of positive behavioural support leaders: A discussion paper. International Journal of Positive Behavioural Support, 14(2), 31–36.

Chan, J. (2024). Rights of Persons with Disabilities: Current Status and Future Directions. Advances in Neurodevelopmental Disorders,8(1),3-6. https://doi.org/10.1007/s41252-024-00392-3

Hwang, Y-S, Chan, J., & Singh, N. N. (2023). Human Rights, Disability and Mindfulness. Advances in Neurodevelopmental Disorders. https://doi.org/10.1007/s41252-023-00375-w

Younan, B., Jorgensen, M., Chan, J., Winata, T., & Gillies, D. (2023). Restrictive practice use in people with neurodevelopmental disorders: A systematic review. Advances in Neurodevelopmental Disorders, https://doi.org/10.1007/s41252-023-00367-w

Singh, N. N., Lancioni, G. E., Medvedev, O. N., Felver, J. C., Myers, R. E., Hwang, Y-S., & Chan, J. (2023). Effects of mindful engagement and attention on reciprocal caregiver and client interactions: A behavioral analysis of moment-to-moment changes during mindfulness practice. Mindfulness, https://doi.org/10.1007/s12671-023-02190-9

Jorgensen, M., Nankervis, K., & Chan, J. (2023). ‘Environments of concern’: Reframing challenging behaviour within a human rights approach. International Journal of Developmental Disabilities, 69(1), 95-100. Special Issue: Positive Behaviour Support: Moving towards a human rights based model of support. https://doi.org/10.1080/20473869.2022.2118513

Cheah, K.J., Chan, J., &Manokara, V. (2022). Exploring the Concepts of Clinical Governance and Evidence‑based Practice Within the Disability Sector in Singapore. Advances in Neurodevelopmental Disorders https://doi.org/10.1007/s41252-022-00241-1

Nankervis, K. & Chan, J. (2021). Applying the CRPD to People with Intellectual and Developmental Disability with Behaviors of Concern during COVID-19. Journal of Policy and Practice in Intellectual Disabilities, https://doi.org/10.1111/jppi.12374


🔍 Want to dive deeper? Check out Dr Chan’s website.

What you will learn in the webinar

Following the session, participants will be able to:

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