Afleveringen
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Leading Academic GP and Health Service Researcher
Inaugural RAND Chair of Health Services Research at the University of Cambridge where he founded and directed the Cambridge Centre for Health Services Research (CCHSR), a collaboration between the University of Cambridge and RAND Europe.(2009-2016)
Martin Roland trained in clinical medicine at the University of Oxford, where he obtained a first class honours degree and his doctorate. Following vocational training for general practice in Cambridge, he worked in London and Cambridge before moving to the Chair of General Practice in the University of Manchester in 1992. In 1994, he established and subsequently became Director of the National Primary Care Research and Development Centre. Between 2006 and 2009, he was also Director of the NIHR School for Primary Care Research, a collaboration between the five leading departments of primary care in England. Clinically active throughout his career, his main research interests were in developing methods of measuring quality and evaluating interventions to improve care using both quantitative and qualitative methods. With over 350 publications, his h-index is 80. Professor Roland was appointed CBE for services to medicine in 2003.
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“The educator never left”…Teacher, Mentor, Family Doctor and Researcher.Dr. David Rábago is the Vice Chair for Faculty Development in the Department of Family and Community Medicine at Penn State College of Medicine.David began professional life as a middle- and high-school teacher in Milwaukee and Chicago. After a nine-year teaching career, he transitioned to academic medicine. He has taught clinical and research-related topics at the medical school and residency levels. One of his goals is to help optimize the relationships between clinical, research and education endeavors of academic family medicine to the benefit of each. David is family physician at Penn State Health Medical Group, with a special interest in prevention, shared decision-making, and patient autonomy.
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Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
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On an Academic Journey from the Azores to Lake Léman
Alexandre Gouveia has a particular interest in quality and patient safety, in postgraduate teaching, and in clinical research within the Department of Ambulatory Care at Unisanté (University of Lausanne, Switzerland).
Alexandre was appointed senior physician in 2021 and took on the responsibility of the Polyclinic of General Practice. In 2022, he began part-time training in medical education at Harvard University (Master of Medical Sciences in Medical Education). In 2023, he earned his Doctor of Medicine (MD) degree from the University of Lausanne, focusing on potentially avoidable hospitalizations in Switzerland.
After obtaining his medical degree from the Faculty of Medicine of the University of Lisbon in 2004 and completing his specialization in General Practice and Family Medicine in 2009, Alexandre Gouveia worked as a primary care physician in a group practice (Viana do Castelo, Portugal) for five years, and as a lecturer in Community Health at the School of Medicine of the University of Minho (Braga, Portugal).
In 2014, he began his medical career in Switzerland as a resident physician at the University Medical Polyclinic in Lausanne and was appointed deputy chief resident in 2015. After earning a CAS in Clinical Research in 2017, he worked for two years in the Internal Medicine Department at CHUV as deputy chief resident and received his FMH title of specialist in General Internal Medicine in 2019.
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Oscar Lyons is a researcher, educator and doctor who specialises in healthcare leadership development.
Oscar worked as a doctor in Hauora Tairāwhiti and Counties Manukau (Aotearoa NZ) before completing his DPhil in “Evaluating Medical Leadership Development Programmes” at Oxford University.
After his DPhil Oscar was the first Programme Director for the Oxford University MSc in Global Healthcare Leadership. He now runs Thrum Leadership Ltd., a spinout from his DPhil research that supports real-world impact from leadership development in healthcare through evidence-based programmes and research. Oscar is Associate Editor of BMJ Leader, Assistant Director of the Green Templeton College Health Systems Development Centre, and Module Lead for Oxford University’s MSc in Surgical Science and Practice. Oscar spends his spare time singing in bands, playing bass, cycling and rowing.
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Professor Parker Magin is Senior Academic Advisor, Royal Australian College of General Practitioners GP Training Research Unit, Newcastle, Australia; Conjoint Professor, the University of Newcastle; and Adjunct Professor, the University of New South Wales. He has been an NHMRC Medical Postgraduate Scholar 2003-2006; and 2007-cohort member, International Primary Care Research Leadership Programme, University of Oxford. His main research interests are the in-consultation experiences of GP registrars; antimicrobial stewardship; medicines use and deprescribing in older patients; and dementia.
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From clinician to academic, from public service to leadership, forever shaping change.Martin Marshall is the Chair of the Nuffield Trust, Emeritus Professor of Healthcare Improvement at UCL and a non-executive director of the Royal Devon University Healthcare Trust. Martin was a GP for over 30 years, initially as a GP partner in Devon and more recently in Newham in East London and was Chair of the Royal College of General Practitioners from 2019 until 2022. He was appointed as a deputy Chief Medical Officer for England and Director General in the Department of Health in March 2006, and in 2007 became director of clinical quality of the Health Foundation. He was previously Programme Director for Primary Care at UCL Partners, a clinical academic at the University of Manchester and a Harkness Fellow in Healthcare Policy based at the RAND Corporation in Santa Monica, California. He received both the John Fry Award (2005) and the James MacKenzie Award (2008), from the Royal College of General Practitioners, and in 2005 was awarded a CBE for Services to Health Care.
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Bruce Arroll graduated in New Zealand, trained in Family Medicine at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, and completed a Masters in Clinical Epidemiology in Vancouver, before returning to NewZealand.
At McMaster, he was so impressed with clinical epidemiology, which later became an evidence-based practice, that he began a PhD in Epidemiology when he returned to NZ late in 1987, conducting a randomised controlled trial of sodium restriction and exercise in treated hypertensives. In 1991, he joined the Department of General Practice and Primary Health Care, where he has remained. His research changed to rational prescribing of antibiotics in primary care, and he later got interested in rapid assessment and treatment of mental health conditions. In 2015, he started training in FACT (focussed acceptance and commitment therapy). He now works at the Calder Clinic at the Auckland City Mission with a highly disadvantaged group of citizens, most of whom have been homeless but are now housed, and many of whom have substance issues and where the average age of death is 51. Bruce has trained in written exposure therapy and is planning on conducting a randomised controlled trial in the Calder Clinic. He is also director of the Goodfellow Unit (www.goodfellowunit.org), which educates primary care clinicians
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Pendleton’s Rules, Primary Colours, and Bringing Joy to WorkDavid Pendleton is a psychologist, organisation and management development consultant, author and professor. He completed a DPhil at Oxford on Doctor-Patient Communication in General Practice, was Stuart Fellow at the RCGP, consultant to their membership exam and was a Trustee of the College for 6 years. In the corporate field, he was Director of People and Organisation Development from 2001-3 at Innogy (now npower) a FTSE100 company, and an in-house consultant at Cathay Pacific Airways from 1993-5 based in Hong Kong. He co-founded the Edgecumbe Consulting Group with his wife Dr Jenny King and they co-led the company from 1995-2015. In the academic field, he was an Associate Fellow at the Said Business School at Oxford from 2005-2022 and has been an Associate Fellow at Green Templeton College Oxford since 2007. He has been Professor in Leadership at Henley Business School since 2017 and has been appointed Advisor in Leadership at the FMLM in 2025.
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Olympic Gold Medalist, and World Leader in Sports Medicine
Dr Richard Budgett was the Medical and Scientific Director of the IOC from October 2012 to December 2024. Before that he was Chief Medical Officer for the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games from 2007 to 2012.
Richard was Director of Medical Services for the British Olympic Association from 1994 to 2007 and Team GB Chief Medical Officer at the Olympic Games in Atlanta, Nagano, Sydney, Salt Lake City, Athens and Turin. He was team doctor to the Great Britain men’s rowing team from 2005 to 2008 and was Governing Body Medical Officer for the Great Britain Bobsleigh Association from 1990 to 2007 attending the Olympic Winter Games in Albertville in 1992 and Lillehammer in 1994. He was a member of the IOC Medical Commission at the Olympic Games in Beijing in 2008 and Winter Games in Vancouver in 2010.
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Chaire de Recherche du Canada sur la Gouvernance Clinique des Services de Première Ligne
Mylaine Breton holds a Canadian Research Chair in clinical governance on primary health care.
She is based at the Department of Social Science and Medicine at University of Sherbrooke. She trained as an occupational therapist, followed be an MBA at Université Laval, a doctorate in Health Service Management from University of Montréal in 2009, and a postdoctoral at Université de Sherbrooke and McGill University. Her current research focuses on primary health care to better understanding promising organizational innovations to improve accessibility and continuity such as the implementation of centralized waiting list for patients without a primary healthcare provider and advanced access.
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Dr Mercy Wanjala is a graduate of the University of Nairobi School of Medicine, she holds a Master of Comprehensive General Medicine from the University of Medical Sciences of Havana, and an MBA in Healthcare Management at Strathmore University Business School. She currently works at the County Government of Embu Health Department as a Family Physician and Primary Healthcare Coordinator. She has held prominent positions, including Head of Primary Health Care, Embu County and National secretary for the Kenya Association of Family Physicians. She sits on the National technical Working Group on Primary Health Care and the Technical Group for National Cancer Strategic Information, Research, Registration and Surveillance. She served as a visiting Lecturer in Primary Health Care in Global Health at the University of Global Health Equity-School of Nursing and as part-time lecturer in Health Services Leadership at Kabarak University Department of Family Medicine. She held leadership roles in the Africa Forum for Primary Health Care, WONCA Working Party for Quality and Patient Safety, WONCA Working Party on Rural Practice and Women in Global Health Kenya Chapter. In 2023 she won the Young Family Doctors Rising Star Award from the Africa Region of the World Organization of Family Doctors (WONCA) and the WONCA Sydney Conference Full Scholarship.
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Charlotte Williams is Deputy Chief Executive Officer at North West Anglia NHS Foundation Trust. She leads on quality improvement and innovation, transformation, strategy, digital and organisational development. She began her career on the NHS General Management Training Scheme before joining East and North Hertfordshire NHS Trust in 2003. She joined Ashford and St Peter’s Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust in 2006 before moving to the role of Assistant Director of Operations at North Middlesex University Hospital NHS Trust. In 2010 Charlotte joined UCL Partners as Director of Integrated Cancer and Executive Director for the London Cancer Integrated Cancer System before being promoted to the role of Chief of Staff at UCL Partners in 2013.Charlotte is an Honorary Associate Professor at University of Birmingham, School of Social Policy. She is an Associate Editor of the BMJ Leader healthcare journal, and has published on the topic of patient involvement in major redesign of health services.
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Fern R. Hauck, is the Spencer P. Bass, MD Twenty-First Century Professor of Family Medicine and Professor of Public Health Sciences at the University of Virginia.
Fern’s research is focused on risk factors and protective factors for sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) and other causes of sleep-related sudden infant death, including pacifier use, infant sleep location including bedsharing, and infant feeding, with particular attention to racial-ethnic disparities. She serves as an advisor to numerous federal agencies and SIDS organizations to assist in SIDS and infant mortality related projects and she is a member of the American Academy of Pediatrics Task Force on SIDS, which develops evidence-based guidelines for safe infant sleep and prevention of SIDS and other sleep-related infant deaths. She founded and directs the University of Virginia International Family Medicine Clinic, which cares for several thousand refugees who resettled in Central Virginia from around the world. In addition to comprehensive primary healthcare, the IFMC team provides educational programming for residents and medical students, conducts quality improvement and research projects, and collaborates with community partners.
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A Lifetime Commitment to Social Justice and Health Care Access.
Carol Herbert is Professor Emerita of Family Medicine at Western University (London, Canada), and Professor Emerita of Family Practice at UBC (Vancouver, Canada). Past Chair of the University Board of Trustees for the American University of the Caribbean and a member of the Board of Governors of Simon Fraser University.
She served as Dean, Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry at The University of Western Ontario (1999-2010) and was Royal Canadian Legion Professor and Head of the UBC Department of Family Practice (1988-98). At UBC, she was founding Head of the Division of Behavioural Medicine and a co-founder of the UBC Institute of Health Promotion Research. She is former Editor of the international journal, Patient Education and Counseling. Dr. Herbert is a UBC graduate in Honours Biochemistry and in Medicine. She was a full-service community-based family physician and clinical instructor at the REACH community health centre, a UBC teaching facility in Vancouver, from 1971 until 1982 when she joined the full-time faculty in the UBC Department of Family Practice.
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Paul Little is Professor of Primary Care Research at the University of Southampton. He is a Fellow of the Academy of Medial Sciences, a National Institute of Health Research (NIHR) Senior Investigator (emeritus), and winner of the Maurice Wood award (for Lifetime contribution to primary care research).
He led a wide range of studies in acute infections; diagnostic studies, prospective cohorts, placebo controlled trials, pragmatic trials of antibiotic prescribing strategies, and complex interventions to address antimicrobial stewardship and reduce the threat to public health of antibiotic resistance. His research has demonstrated reductions in antibiotic use in RTIs using: delayed antibiotic prescriptions; a clinical score for pharyngitis (FeverPAIN); communication skills training; C-reactive protein (CRP) point-of-care tests; and a digital intervention to support handwashing. This research has formed a key part of 9 national and 4 international guidelines, two UK 5-year AMR strategies and a successful intervention by the CMO for overprescribing GPs
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Nicki is interested in all things kindness, and in speaking, researching and writing about kindness in healthcare.
She is an occupational therapist in NewZealand with a long history of engagement with primary healthcare service design and implementation. From her lived experience she developed a particular interest in the clinical communication and in how teams work. She acts as a patient advocate on several local and international boards and foundations and is employed as an associate editor at the British Medical Journal Leader.
She has worked with many different organisations to help them understand how to build their capacity for kindness at all levels of their workforces and systems and does not tolerate the perception of kindness as a soft or discretionary skill in healthcare. Nicki has recently submitted her PhD at the University of Auckland’s Medical School.
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The most exciting medical job in the world…. With her medical degree in one pocket and her passport in another, Claire has travelled the world, climbing volcanoes, diving in the Caribbean, and crossing the Antarctic ice, chasing her dreams Claire is an emergency doctor who has been practising since 2015, mainly on Reunion Island. She has unique experience, from medical evacuations in the Pacific, to oil clinics in Africa, and medicine about the scientific expedition ship Marion Dufresne. In her first book entitled Docteur Globetrotter, she shared her adventures combining emergency medicine and travel. Published 2022, it describes emergencies in the Caribbean, medicine aboard the expedition ship, and in an isolated Amazonian rain forest. Her second book, Tour du Monde en blouse blanche, Docteur Globetrotter 2 brings us to three other healthcare destinations.
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Glyn Elwyn is a clinician, and researcher at The Dartmouth Institute leading an international interdisciplinary team studying shared decision making into clinical settings, which include collaboRATE, a patient experience measure of shared decision making, and Observer OPTION-5, for use on recorded data.
Glyn was previously Professor of Primary Care at the Swansea Medical School (2002–2005) before being appointed Research Professor at Cardiff University where in collaboration with Professor Adrian Edwards, he led the Decision Laboratory. In a lifetime committed to shared decision making and evidence based medicine, he also developed Option Grids™ patient decision aids, licensed to EBSCO in 2017.
He holds chair appointments at the Scientific Institute for Quality of Healthcare, University Nijmegen Medical Centre, Netherlands; UniSante University in Lausanne, Switzerland; Cochrane Institute for Primary Care and Public Health, Cardiff University; and at University College London.
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Dr. Anna Stavdal has held leadership roles within family medicine organizations in Norwegian, Nordic, European, and global family medicine organizations. She is a Past President of the World Organization of Family Doctors (WONCA). She is a Family Doctor based in Oslo, Norway, where she has been providing compassionate care to patients since 1989. In addition to her clinical practice, she holds the position of Associate Professor at Oslo University, where she actively contributes to the education and training of future healthcare professionals. With primary areas of interest in health systems and the core values of family medicine, she is a passionate advocate for family medicine and primary care and she actively engages in public debates, sharing her expertise through columns and speaking engagements. She is an Honorary Fellow of The College of General Practice in Sri Lanka, and holds a an Honorary Doctorate at the University of Oulo, Finland.
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From the highlands of Scotland to the Welsh Valleys...bringing the core values of family medicine to the world.
Professor Graham Watt was the Norie Miller Professor of General Practice in Glasgow University from 1994-2016 and Head of the Department/Section of General Practice from 1994-2009. He is Emeritus Professor and Honorary Senior Research Fellow and Honorary Professor at the University of St Andrews.
After graduating from the University of Aberdeen in 1976, he trained in epidemiology and general practice, and worked with Dr Julian Tudor Hart at Glyncorrwg in South Wales.He completed vocational training at Townhead Health Centre in Glasgow and in the following decade, he established the Glasgow WHO MONICA Project Centre, then worked in the Scottish Chief Scientist Office and as a senior lecturer in public health at Glasgow University.His research interest in health and disease in families began at Glyncorrwg and continued with the Ladywell Blood Pressure Study in Edinburgh and the MIDSPAN Family Study in the west of Scotland. He coordinated and led the Deep End Project from 2009-2016, based on the 100 most deprived general practice populations in Scotland, and remains closely involved.
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