SafeCare BC Logo
SafeCare BC Logo
Programs & Services

Programs and Services

View All
We are dedicated to providing comprehensive occupational health and safety (OHS) consulting services tailored to your needs.
View Service
Psychological health and safety, often called workplace mental health, encompasses principles and practices to foster a supportive, respectful, and psychologically safe work environment.
View Service
The Provincial Violence Prevention Curriculum is recognized as best-practice in violence prevention training for health care workers.
View Service
Guidelines & Regulations

Guidelines and Regulations

View All
WorkSafeBC is holding a second public hearing this month on proposed changes to the Occupational Health and Safety Regulation related to combustible dusts.
View News Story
Amendments to the Occupational Health and Safety Regulation (OHSR), Part 5: Chemical Agents and Biological Agents – Emergency Planning came into effect on February 3, 2025. Changes include additional requirements to minimize the risk, likelihood, and harm caused by an emergency involving hazardous substances.   Hazardous substances include biological, chemical or physical hazards that may reasonably […]
View News Story
Webinar

How to Recognize and Manage Unconscious Bias

Unconscious Bias is a topic that – though not new – is certainly getting more attention recently with the focus on the importance of Diversity, Equity & Inclusion. All of us carry unconscious bias in us, and this alone is not necessarily a bad thing. However, recognizing and working to address it is critical to […]

Unconscious Bias is a topic that – though not new – is certainly getting more attention recently with the focus on the importance of Diversity, Equity & Inclusion. All of us carry unconscious bias in us, and this alone is not necessarily a bad thing. However, recognizing and working to address it is critical to ensure equity for all groups.

Through a mix of presentation, storytelling, and interactive exercises, this session explores how to recognize various types of bias, the impact that unconscious bias can have (particularly for black, Indigenous and people of color), and strategies to notice one’s own biases to create new patterns of responding. Additionally, this session presents the concept of psychological safety and climates of authenticity by presenting the theoretical value of these ideas, and then invites participants to experientially explore them in the session through reflection and dialogue.

Learning objectives:

  • Understand the difference between explicit/conscious bias vs. implicit/unconscious bias
  • Acknowledge that we all have unconscious biases and learn to recognize examples
  • Learn about the neuroscience behind unconscious biases
  • Practice challenging stereotypes and questioning assumptions by speaking up
  • Practice responding to someone pointing out a (micro)aggression/(micro)inequity
Speakers

Presented by

Ellen Choi, PHD is an Assistant Professor at Toronto Metropolitan University in the Ted Rogers School of Management. She teaches organizational behaviour, which includes topics like decision making, team effectiveness, leadership, and motivation. She is an organizational social psychologist who trained at the London School of Economics and completed her doctoral degree at the Ivey School of Business. In particular, she studies the efficacy of mindfulness training on performance under pressure, resilience, and errors. Ellen has taught and researched mindfulness with corporate executives, lawyers, MBA students, elementary school students, police recruits, and in health care settings.

Resources Related to , ,

December 9 @ 12:00pm
Join Ron Beleno for an honest and hopeful look at the caregiving journey, from daily stress and uncertainty to moments of purpose and growth. Through personal stories and practical examples, Ron shares how caregivers can build resilience, find strength in community, and use innovation to support their well-being. Drawing on his own caregiving experience, he […]
View Webinar
This story is told from the perspective of Billie Askelend, Senior Executive Director at Nicola Lodge.  No one expected a love story to begin at Nicola Lodge, least of all Roy. At eighty-nine, he had settled into a life of quiet routines, believing love had passed him by. Then Janice came along, and everything changed.  […]
View News Story
SafeCare BC Logo
©2025 SafeCare BC | All rights reserved.
We strive to empower those working in the continuing care sector to create safer, healthier workplaces by fostering a culture of safety through evidence-based education, leadership, and collaboration.
cross