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New
General Osteopathic Council members announced.
The General Osteopathic Council (GOsC)
welcomes the Appointments Commission’s
agreement in principle to appoint 13
new members to its reconstituted Council,
following an independent recruitment
campaign conducted by the Appointments
Commission.
The new Council
members will take office on 1 April 2009, subject to the
General
Osteopathic Council
(Constitution) Order 2009 coming into force and will
operate
under the leadership
of the Chair. Transitional arrangements under this Order
set
out that the person
who is Chair on 31 March 2009 will be reappointed for 4
years.
The current GOsC
Chairman, Professor Eddleston, commented on the
announcement:
“I am very pleased
that this process, which has selected candidates against
well-
defined
competencies, has enabled us to appoint such an excellent
mix of talented
people, both lay and
registrant, to form the new General Osteopathic Council. I
am
particularly
grateful to the members of the present Council for their
hard work in
creating such a
strong regulatory environment for osteopathy, and for
their
enthusiasm and
commitment which has done so much to ensure a most
promising
future for the
GOsC."
The new Council
Members are:
Lay
Members
•
John Chuter OBE (to be
recommended as Treasurer to the Council on
10 March 2009)
• Geraldine Campbell
• Professor Ian Hughes
• Kim Lavely
• Professor Julie Stone
• Jenny White MBE
Osteopath Members
•
Paula Cook
• Jonathan Hearsey
• Nicholas Hounsfield
• Brian McKenna
• Kenneth McLean
• Robin Shepherd
• Fiona Walsh
The Council provides
the strategic direction that ensures the GOsC fulfils its
statutory
functions and
retains the trust and confidence of registrants, patients
and the public.
All appointments
were approved by the Appointments Commission’s Health
and
Social Care
Appointments Committee. All appointments are made on merit
following
a fair, open and
transparent recruitment and selection process.
Biographies
of new Council Members:
Lay members
John
Chuter is a member
of the current Council and Treasurer of the GOsC. He
is
also Chairman of the
Bradford & Airedale Teaching Primary Care Trust and,
before
that, was the
Chairman and a Non-Executive Director of the Bradford
District Care
Trust. Previously he
spent most of his working life in the defence logistics
arena as
a Commissioned
Officer.
Geraldine
Campbell is a member
of the current GOsC Council. She is also a Lay
Chair within the Health and Personal
Social Services Complaints Procedure of the
Eastern and Southern Health and Social
Services Boards, Northern Ireland; a
member of the Northern Ireland Social
Care Council; and a consumer engagement
advisor to the Food Standards Agency.
In addition, Geraldine is a Trustee of
Citizen’s Advice Belfast; a former
Trustee of the National AIDS Trust London; and
Chief Executive of the HIV Support
Centre, Belfast.
Professor
Ian Hughes is a
member of the current GOsC Council. His other
current
appointments include
work with the Judicial Appointments Commission, the
General
Social Care Council,
the Bar Council, the Richmond Fellowship and the
Biobank
Ethics and
Governance Council. He is Professor of Pharmacology
Education, Faculty
of Biological Sciences, University of
Leeds and Chairman of the Leeds Partnership
NHS Foundation Trust.
Kim
Lavely is an
independent consultant. Until September 2008, she was
Chief
Executive at The
Prince’s Foundation for Integrated Health. Before that she
was
Deputy Chief
Executive of the Consumers’ Association, which she joined
in 1988.
She has served on a
number of boards, including those of the Charities
Aid
Foundation and
Consumers International.
Professor Julie Stone is an independent consultant in
Healthcare Ethics and Law
and visiting Professor in Ethics at the
Peninsula Medical School. She has a range of
current appointments, including:
non-executive director of NHS Cornwall and Isles of
Scilly; member of the Advisory Board on
the Registration of Homeopathic Products;
and senior consultant to Political
Intelligence, a public affairs consultancy. In
addition she is a member of the British
Psychological Society Ethics Committee, the
Clinical Disputes Forum, and the
Governing Body of the Institute of Medical Ethics.
Recent former appointments have
included: Deputy Director of the Council for
Healthcare Regulatory Excellence, where
she led a Department of Health-funded
project on maintaining sexual
boundaries; Advisor to the Department of Health
Steering Group on the Statutory
Regulation of Practitioners of Acupuncture, Herbal
Medicine and Traditional Chinese
Medicine; and Advisor to the Kerr/Haslam Inquiry.
She is the author of the ‘Stone Report
on a Federal Voluntary Structure for
Regulation of CAM’.
Jenny
White is a
non-practising barrister with broad experience in the
public,
regulatory and
voluntary sectors. She is a member of the current GOsC
Council.
She holds other
positions with the Centre for Accessible Environments,
the
Employers’ Forum on
Disability, and the East London and City NHS Research
Ethics
Committee. In the
past she has held posts with the Disability Rights
Commission,
the Electricity
Association, Royal National Institute for Deaf People
(RNID), the
National Disability
Council, the Electricity Council, the British Steel
Corporation and
the Department of
Employment. She is an accredited mediator and member of
the
RSA, the Royal
Society of Medicine, the Medico-Legal Society and the
Discrimination
Law Association,
Clarity.
Osteopath
members
Paula
Cook qualified as an
osteopath in June 2008. Previously, she was a
partner
at Bacon &
Woodrow and has held appointments in the human resources
field for
Hewitt Associates,
Coopers & Lybrand, Bromley Hospitals NHS Trust and the
South
East Thames Regional
Health Authority. She was a Non-Executive Director at
the
Crawley and Horsham
NHS Trust, and currently holds a public appointment for
the
Department of
Justice.
Jonathan
Hearsey graduated
from the European School of Osteopathy (ESO) in
1994. He has a private osteopathic
practice and runs a team of osteopaths on
behalf of West Sussex Primary Care
Trust, both in multidisciplinary and in-house
formats. Jonathan is a member of the
ESO’s teaching faculty and previously taught
and examined in the ESO’s undergraduate
programme and held management
positions in the teaching clinic and
international department. He lectures to
postgraduate physiotherapists and
medical doctors in Norway, Spain, France and
Russia.
Nick Hounsfield qualified as an osteopath in 1997. He
has opened a
multidisciplinary
health practice in Bristol with three members of his family
who are
also osteopaths. His
special interests are the treatment of children and
research into
the treatment of
cystic fibrosis. He also works in a GP practice in Bristol,
where he
has been conducting
research into the provision of osteopathy in the NHS. He
is
Chairman of the very
active Western Counties Society of Osteopaths and belongs
to
the GOsC Regional
Communications network.
Brian
McKenna lives and
works in Cardiff.
Brian was formerly the
elected member
for Wales on the
GOsC Council and is also a committee member of the South
Wales
Osteopathic Society
(SWOS) where he assists other members in providing
Continuing Professional Development,
support and lobbying for the funding of
osteopathy by the NHS. He is a partner
in a general osteopathic practice and has a
special interest in paediatrics and
shoulder dysfunction. He also has an interest in
data collection and clinical audit and
sees the benefits this brings to his own practice
and the potential benefits for the
profession. He is currently following the post-
graduate Sutherland Cranial College
(SCC) pathway.
Kenneth
McLean lives and
practises in North Berwick, Scotland. Prior to
returning
to Scotland in 2008,
he worked at the Penn Clinic in Hatfield and ran a
private
practice in London.
Before qualifying as an osteopath, Kenneth worked in
the
voluntary sector for
the National Autistic Society and in the commercial sector
for the
Laporte Group, based
in England and The Netherlands. He speaks several
European
languages and is
fluent in French and Dutch. He is also involved in a
voluntary
capacity with the
emergency and lifesaving response team First Responders in
North
Berwick.
Robin
Shepherd has been in
both private and NHS employed osteopathic practice
since qualifying in 1990. He is
additionally trained as an ‘Expert Witness’ offering
medical report writing and mediation
services. Robin has been a board member of
the GOsC since 2002 and is currently
acting chairman. Previous positions include
part-time funded osteopath for the NHS,
pain clinician at Addenbrookes Hospital
Cambridge and Consultant Adviser to
Boots the Chemist. For eight years he taught
osteopathy at an undergraduate level
and has since run post-graduate training
courses associated with osteopathy. Mr.
Shepherd has chaired and spoken at
numerous osteopathic events, presented
at national medical conferences and
published a number of papers in
professional journals.
Fiona
Walsh is
a member of the current
GOsC Council. She was closely involved in
the transition of osteopathy from
voluntary to statutory regulation. She has both
private and NHS practices and also
undertakes a number of academic and clinical
teaching roles, both at home and
abroad.
For
further information, please contact:
The GOsC Press Office
Tel: 020 7357 6655 ext. 245
Email: sarahe@ostepathy.org.uk