The programme is a follow-up to and builds on the results of the EU/CoE Joint Programme on Human right and healthcare in prisons and other closed institutions that finished in February 2016. The Project assists the Georgian authorities in consolidating the results achieved in previous years in the areas of provision of healthcare services in prisons and in police detention facilities as well as in addressing remaining challenges in the protection of human rights of people deprived of their liberty in prisons, police and other closed institutions. Wide range of activities are envisaged in the Project such as provision of expertise, technical assistance in developing the regulatory and policy framework and design of management and monitoring tools, assessment visits and country-specific studies, development of training programmes, materials and publications and organisation of various learning and awareness raising events (training sessions, conferences, workshops, etc.) as well as peer-to-peer exchanges.

The duration of the Project is 18 months and it is expected to be completed by 31 August 2017. The overall project budget is EUR 745,000 funded by the European Union, co-funded by the Council of Europe, under the auspices of the EU/CoE Programmatic Co-operation Framework in the Eastern Partnership countries.

Retour First Training Programme for Psychiatric Nurses in Georgia

First Training Programme for Psychiatric Nurses in Georgia

The Council of Europe (Coe) continues to assist the Ministry of Corrections of Georgia (MoC) to strengthen capacity building of the psychiatric nurses on main principles of mental health nursing. Between 20 and 25 April 2018, 6 psychiatric nurses, trained on a program developed by CoE international and local experts, underwent training sessions on teaching methodology, trainer’s skills and refreshing training on mental health nursing.

Mental health nurses play a central role as clinicians, case managers, clinical nurse specialists and nurse practitioners in mental health-care settings in various countries. The development of this programme in Georgia is aligning national practice to European standards, building upon nurses’ role as part of multidisciplinary teams that deal with mental illnesses.

The training program is designed to equip psychiatric nurses with basic theoretical knowledge on mental health issues. With a total of twelve modules, the nurses participating on this training programme, will have the possibility to cascade their knowledge to the rest of psychiatric nurses working in the penitentiary establishments throughout Georgia.

This activity has been organised within the framework of the Project “Improving mental health care of persons detained in Georgia”, funded by voluntary contribution of Bulgaria, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Norway, the Slovak Republic, and Sweden, to support the implementation of the Council of Europe Action Plan for Georgia 2016-2019.

We work together to promote Human rights, Democracy and Rule of Law!

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Photo Stories - Human rights in Prisons and Other Closed Institutions

The joint EU/CoE programme launched in July 2013 aimed to strengthen human rights and improve the provision of healthcare (including mental health care) in prisons, police detention and other closed facilities.

We collected those fascinating photos that represent the project support of national authorities on aligning the regulatory framework and practices with European Standards.

50 main group of activities were carried out under and more than 3,200 people benefitted from some type of learning opportunity, including staff of penitentiary administration and training institution, Ministry of Internal Affairs, psychiatric establishments, public defender's office and national preventive mechanism, judges, prosecutors as well as members of the civil society and the 60 local trainers trained. The Project supported the national authorities in aligning the regulatory framework and practices with the European standards.

The second phase of the project was launched in March 2016.

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