Explorez tous les épisodes du podcast MedicsVoices
| Titre | Date | Durée | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Minna Johansson | Seeing Things Differently | 06 Dec 2025 | 00:24:23 | |
Minna Johansson is a general practitioner working clinically at Herrestads healthcare centre a healthcare centre in Uddevalla, a small town on the Swedish west coast. She is an Associate Professor at Gothenburg University, director of Cochrane Sustainable Healthcare.She is the lead investigator of the Global Center for Sustainable Healthcare, focused on finding novel ways to make healthcare more sustainable for patients, clinicians, health systems, societies, and for our planet. Minna feels just as passionate about her clinical work as she does about her research. “My goal is to contribute to a more sustainable healthcare through research inspired by the problems me and my patients face in clinical practice.”Her PhD in 2018 was titled "Evaluating benefits and harms of screening - the streetlight effect?". Her research interests include methodological aspects of evaluating benefits and harms of screening when up-to-date data from randomized trials is lacking, informed choice/shared decision making, overdiagnosis/medicalization and how values and context can be integrated in evidence-based medicine. | |||
| MaryAnn Ferreux | Leading with Purpose | 02 Dec 2025 | 00:28:31 | |
MaryAnn Ferreux is the Chief Medical Officer for Health Innovation Kent Surrey Sussex and a Non-Executive Director for Kent and Medway NHS Partnership Trust.She has 20 years clinical experience working across both the Australian and UK health system, with specialist qualifications in health system leadership, management, and population health. She has held Board level roles as a medical leader in both primary and secondary care and is passionate about using digital and innovation to improve the patient experience for underserved communities, deliver better integration, and ensure equitable access to care. She is a thought leader for health equity in innovation and is leading on several projects to explore gender and racial bias in AI, debias policymaking and increase women in leadership for digital and technology. She has a special interest in researching health equity and the impact of the social determinants of health. She is leading several initiatives to promote equity, diversity and inclusion in medicine and is a Trustee and Chair of the Royal College of Physicians (Edinburgh) EDI Committee. | |||
| Igor Švab | Defining General Practice | 22 Sep 2025 | 00:23:32 | |
Professor Igor Švab. First Head of the Department of Family Medicine and current Dean of the Medical Faculty, University of Ljubljana. He graduated in 1981, Masters in 1988, and PhD in 1991 at the University of Ljubljana. President of the European Association of Family Physicians WONCA Europe 2004-2010. He is coordinator of national and international research projects and World Bank projects in the field of family medicine. Editor-in-chief of the Slovenian Journal of Public Health, Editor of the European Journal of General Practice, Member of Slovenian and Croatian Academy of Medical Sciences, honorary member of the Royal College of General Practitioners (UK) and recipient of the title of WONCA World Fellow. He published more than 100 scientific and professional articles in MEDLINE. | |||
| Hilliard (‘Hill’) Jason | 12 Oct 2024 | 00:15:54 | |
Hilliard (‘Hill’) Jason is one of the most influential innovators in medical education. With his wife, Jane Westberg PhD, Hill has co-authored seven academic books on aspects of teaching and learning in the health professions, and has co-authored and hosted more than 60 widely distributed video programs on medical education in the health professions.Since the mid-1950s “Hill” has spent his career seeking ways to help enhance and humanize medical education and practice in the health professions. He is the first person known to have pursued medical and educational doctorates simultaneously. He designed and conducted the two largest, multi-institutional studies of medical teaching ever done. Since 1990 Hill has been Clinical Professor of Family Medicine at the University of Colorado Denver. Dr. Jason has presented keynote addresses, offered workshops and/or been a consultant on aspects of education in the health professions in 42 countries | |||
| France Légaré | 12 Oct 2024 | 00:17:12 | |
Chercheuse, médecin de famille, professeure à la Faculté de médecine de l’Université Laval. Reconnue dans la recherche sur la prise de décision partagée et l’application des connaissances. Initially trained as an architect, France Légaré is a family doctor in Québec city. She completed a master’s degree in community health and a PhD in population health. She holds a Canada Research Chair in Shared Decision Making and Knowledge Translation at Université Laval. In 2020, she received the Dr. Léo-Paul Landry Service medal of the Canadian Medical Association and the Association of Faculties of Medicine of Canada President’s Award for national leadership in academic medicine. In 2022, she was named a Knight to the National Order of Quebec in recognition of her work in patient engagement in health care decisions. | |||
| Grant Russell | 12 Oct 2024 | 00:12:21 | |
Grant Russell is Professor of Primary Care Research and Director of the Southern Academic Primary Care Research Unit (SAPCRU) within the Department of General Practice at Monash University. After working as a GP in Perth, he first undertook research at the University of Western Ontario and later at the University of Ottawa, where he was greatly influenced by Professors Moira Stewart and Bill Hogg, before taking up his current post at Monash University. He is a world renowned academic whose work is focused on patient centred care and on understanding and measuring the impact of primary care on patients, clinicians and general practices. He has undertaken many senior leadership roles in academic and educational organisations. | |||
| Alan Katz | 12 Oct 2024 | 00:17:45 | |
Dr. Alan Katz is a family physician and health services researcher whose interests focus on the delivery of primary care, including quality of care indicators, knowledge translation and disease prevention. Dr. Katz has been the principal investigator or co-investigator on grant funding totaling more than $20 million. He served as director of the Manitoba Centre for Health Policy for 8 years and is completing a term as president of the Canadian Association of Health Policy and Research in May 2023. | |||
| Sibyl Anthierens | 12 Oct 2024 | 00:12:42 | |
Sibyl Anthierens, associate professor at the Department of Family Medicine and Population Health, UAntwerpen is a passionate teacher of qualitative research methodologies to the wider community of healthcare researchers. A social scientist, she has been working in the field of infectious diseases in European primary care for over a decade. She explores strategic opportunities to deliver cross-cutting social science research across clinical and epidemiological work in infectious diseases research | |||
| Raquel Braga | 12 Oct 2024 | 00:10:33 | |
Raquel Braga discusses the challenges and opportunities in Portuguese Medicine. She is a Family Physician at the Health Center (CS) of Senhora da Hora in Porto, Portugal. She was previously Clinical Director for the Primary Health Care area of ULS Matosinhos, a role she held until 2013. Since 2017 she has been Assistant Professor at ICBAS / UP-Institute for the Biomedical Sciences Abel Salazar / Porto University. She has a particular interest in evidence based medicine and was previously editor, and later director of the Portuguese Journal of General and Family Medicine | |||
| John Frey | 12 Oct 2024 | 00:15:30 | |
John Frey is a thought leader in US Family Medicine and ‘Faculty Whisperer’. He is an Emeritus Professor of Family Medicine and Community Health at the University of Wisconsin who engaged in many jobs over a 50-year teaching career. He loves books, coffee with colleagues, having wonderful trips with wife Cathy, grandchildren and friends. He was a liberal arts major in college and snuck into medicine because he was born a year before the post war baby boom officially began. He is also a very good garden weeder. A full life, no regrets | |||
| Evert Verhagen | 12 Oct 2024 | 00:11:02 | |
Evert Verhagen is a world leader in sport and exercise medicine research. A movement scientist and epidemiologist, he is a professor at the Amsterdam UMC Department of Public and Occupational Health and the Amsterdam Movement Science Research Institute. He leads the Amsterdam Collaboration on Health and Safety in Sports which is one of a very select group of International Olympic Committee Research Centres for the Prevention of Injury and Illness. He is also Editor in Chief of BMJ Open Sports & Exercise Medicine. | |||
| Richard Taunt | 12 Oct 2024 | 00:15:26 | |
Rich Taunt is part of Kaleidoscope Health and Care, a social enterprise working with others to build a future which is kind, connected and joyful. Rich is also the Lead-non executive and Chair of the Board at Here, a Sussex-based social enterprise provider of health services working to create exceptional care, for everyone. Rich has spent his career working in health and care, including at the Department of Health, HM Treasury, the Care Quality Commission, and the Health Foundation. He started working life sweeping hair and serving tea-cakes (not normally at the same time). Rich is passionate about a lot of things but particularly improving how organisations work, understanding why people don’t talk to each other, and the Premier League season of 1995/96. Rich is married with three children and two cats and lives in south London.
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| Helen Bevan | 12 Oct 2024 | 00:14:18 | |
Helen once had one of the most intriguing job titles – “Chief Transformation Officer”. After 30 years as an internal change agent in the National Health Service in England she still works for the NHS for part of her time but otherwise she works with a lot of different organizations and systems supporting large-scale change. Most of her work is still in the UK but she also works with healthcare systems in many other interesting places. | |||
| Suzanne Strasberg | Leading from the Chair | 13 Sep 2025 | 00:24:58 | |
Suzanne Strasberg is a Canadian primary care clinician with extensive experience in national medical leadership and board governance. Dr Suzanne Strasberg was chair of board of the Canadian Medical Association (CMA) and previously served as board chair for MD Financial Holdings Inc. a post she held for four years, has served as a board member with the CMA, and as board chair, board director and president of the Ontario Medical Association. She was a founding member of the Coalition of Family Physicians of Ontario. She was a family doctor in Toronto as a member of the Jane Finch Family Health Team. Her clinical interests include pediatrics, adolescent medicine, gynecology and palliative care. She was provincial primary care lead at Cancer Care Ontario from 2012 to 2018. She qualified in medicine from the University of Toronto and ICD.D from the Rotman School of Management at the University of Toronto | |||
| Dominique Allwood | 12 Oct 2024 | 00:19:09 | |
Dr Dominique Allwood is Chief Medical Officer at UCLPartners and Director of Public Health at Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust.A Consultant in Public Health Medicine by background, she has worked widely across healthcare in leadership, management and advisory roles for provider and commissioner organisations, academic institutions, national bodies, management consultancy, charities and think tanks. She provides leadership and expertise on a range of areas including environmental sustainability, clinical engagement, quality improvement, improving equity and population health, anchor institutions and learning health systems. She holds an MPH, is a Fellow of the Faculty of Public Health, has undertaken a Darzi Fellowship in Clinical Leadership and is an Associate Editor for BMJ Leader Journal and on the Board of The Patient Revolution. She recently completed an Executive MBA at Henley Business School. | |||
| Amanda Goodall | 12 Oct 2024 | 00:13:12 | |
Amanda Goodall is Professor of Leadership at Bayes Business School, at City, University of London. She studies leadership in healthcare and the qualities of the best leaders. This episode was recorded in collaboration with BMJLeader | |||
| Tara Kiran | 12 Oct 2024 | 00:14:46 | |
Tara Kiran is the Fidani Chair of Improvement and Innovation at the University of Toronto. She is a leading academic who writes, broadcasts, and promotes family medicine. | |||
| Luciano Duro | 12 Oct 2024 | 00:09:41 | |
Luciano Duro is Professor and coordinator of the medical school at Univates (Universidade do Vale do Taquari), Rio Grande do Sul. There have been huge developments in medical education in Brazil creating major challenges against a backgroundof social and political change. | |||
| Campbell Murdoch | 12 Oct 2024 | 00:19:22 | |
Professor John Campbell Murdoch, was the Founding Head of The Rural Clinical School of Western Australia. Known throughout the world as Campbell Murdoch, he is the doyen of rural medicine. His career has taken him around the globe from Scotland to New Zealand, via the UAE, Malaysia and Australia | |||
| Gordon Caldwell | 12 Oct 2024 | 00:12:25 | |
Dr Gordon Caldwell’s is a physician with an interest in quality improvement. He published a photo that highlighted the paperwork needed to admit a patient with diabetes to hospital..and became a twitter sensation. But, Gordon has many other interests, including active safety management and the human side of medicine. | |||
| Savita Rani | 12 Oct 2024 | 00:12:36 | |
Savita Rani is a doctor, artist and poet. | |||
| Martin Dawes | 12 Oct 2024 | 00:13:52 | |
Professor Martin Dawes has had a groundbreaking academic career in primary care on both sides of the Atlantic, starting in Oxford, moving to Montreal and now in Vancouver. | |||
| Marie Murphy | 12 Oct 2024 | 00:12:16 | |
Professor Marie Murphy is one of the world leaders in research on physical activity. Her research on walking underpins much of our public health guidance. | |||
| Niall Downey | 12 Oct 2024 | 00:13:43 | |
Niall Downey is a cardiothoracic surgeon and transatlantic commercial airline pilot. He qualified as a doctor in Dublin in 1993, and undertook subspecialty training in cardiothoracic surgery. He now flies transatlantic passenger planes for AerLingus. He combines his medical and aviation experience by teaching safety management. | |||
| Richard Hobbs | General Practice at Heart | 07 Sep 2025 | 00:27:57 | |
Richard Hobbs is a Pro-Vice-Chancellor (without portfolio) at the University of Oxford, where he holds the inaugural PCRT Mercian Chair in Primary Care (2022-) Previously the inaugural Nuffield Professor of Primary Care (2011-22) at the Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences (2011-2024), he remains Director of the Oxford Institute of Digital Health (2020-) and is Lead for Global Partnerships for Oxford Primary Care. He delivered 42 years of service to the NHS as a doctor, 38 years committed to a disadvantaged and challenging inner-city practice until 2019, and 34 years of leadership and excellence as a clinical scientist focussed mainly upon primary care, clinical epidemiology, and vascular disease. He is one of the world’s foremost primary care academics and has held many national and international leadership roles, leading the development of two of Europe’s most highly rated centres for academic primary care, firstly at Birmingham and since 2011 at Oxford, now one of the largest and most successful centres for academic primary care in the world. He has made major contributions to growing primary care academic capacity, in terms of people development and research networks. He was the fifth recipient of the RCGP Discovery Prize in 2018 (occasional awards since 1953) and was awarded a CBE for services to medical research in 2018 in the Queen’s New Year’s Honours List. He has an outstanding track record in cardiovascular disease research, delivering trials that changed international guidelines and practice, especially in the areas of stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation (BAFTA, SAFE, and SMART trials), heart failure burden and diagnosis (ECHOES and REFER trials), and hypertension self-management (TASMINH 1-5). He made many non-remunerated contributions to educational charitable boards, serving as trustee on some 7 learned societies and universities. Within universities, he has led several major change initiatives and the associated people management within Oxford University. He also leads a new Institute of Applied Digital Science at Oxford. At the onset of COVID-19 he re-tasked much of his research to urgent COVID studies and is co-Chief Investigator of all the UK National Urgent Public Health Priority Studies in primary care, namely the national repurposed therapies platform trial (PRINCIPLE), national COVID Surveillance (Oxford-RCGP RSC), the national PC diagnostics platform trial (RAPTOR/CONDOR), and the national COVID novel anti-viral platform trial (PANORAMIC). Several papers during Covid ranked top 10 in the world for downloads by SSRN, who also list him as a ‘highly cited global researcher’. He has authored over 600 peer reviewed publications, has an h-index of 121, i10-index of 498, with >140,000 citations (>60,000 since 2019), with 136 papers with >100 citations, 20 papers >1000, and 15 papers >2000. | |||
| Pat Harrold | 12 Oct 2024 | 00:09:48 | |
Pat Harrold is a GP, writer, broadcaster, and musician. We talked about his life in the media, the future of rural practice, and how to do …dermatology on the radio. | |||
| Jan De Maeseneer | 12 Oct 2024 | 00:17:27 | |
Jan De Maeseneer is one of the world’s leading Academics in Primary Care… “Born in 1952, I was part of the ‘Baby Boomers’. There were six children and we lived in a small house. But, most important, our parents decided that after four years in the local neighbourhood school, we could go to the college to the city, and finally to university. It’s only thanks to subsidies, financial support for children to go to university, that we six children had the opportunity to study.” | |||
| Tom O'Dowd | Academic and Social Entrepreneur | 25 Aug 2025 | 00:25:16 | |
Professor Emeritus Trinity College Dublin, Tom O’Dowd was appointed Professor of General Practice in 1993 and continues as a practising GP in West Tallaght, Dublin. After general practice vocational training in Ireland, Tom joined the University of Wales College of Medicine (1980 – 86) as a lecturer and subsequently the University of Nottingham (1986 – 1993 as a senior lecturer. He has been involved in curriculum change and design and postgraduate research supervision. He was Chairman of the Education Committee of the Medical Council that led to the current professionalisation of medical education in Ireland. | |||
| Liz Sturgiss | Thinking Prevention | 04 Aug 2025 | 00:27:26 | |
Prof Liz Sturgiss is a clinical general practitioner and primary care researcher in the Faculty of Health Sciences and Medicine at Bond University, Queensland. Liz leads an emerging research program on complex and chronic disease management in primary care that focuses on the translation of guidelines into real-world practice and the implementation of innovative interventions. Her research is based on theoretical principles from behaviour change and implementation science. | |||
| Florian Stigler | An Innovative Communicator in Primary Care | 20 Jul 2025 | 00:23:08 | |
Florian Stigler is GP and researcher with a passion for making Evidence-Based Family Medicine exciting and easy to understand. He trained in Styria/Austria with postgraduate studies in the UK in Manchester (MPH) and London (DrPH). He works as a GP with focus on preventive medicine. He has a passion for new projects and created “Golden Nuggets of Family Medicine” – newsletter for busy GPs to provide exciting, practical, evidence-based and short insights. For free and without industry funding. He has been involved several professional organisations (AMSA, IFMSA, JAMÖ, WFPHA). | |||
| Nagina Khan | Mental Health Research | 05 Jul 2025 | 00:21:01 | |
Dr Nagina Khan is a Senior Clinical Research Fellow at the Centre for Health Services Studies, University of Kent. Her work champions lived experience, patient involvement, and socially impactful research, and she is actively involved in editorial roles with BMJ Leader, BMJ Mental Health, and other journals to help bring diverse voices into academic publishing. Dr. Nagina Khan, PhD is a Senior Clinical Research Fellow in Primary Care at the University of Kent’s Centre for Health Services Studies (CHSS), where she also serves as Director of the MSc Applied Health Research Programme. Her current research supports Integrated Care Systems (ICS) to enhance collaborative research, prioritise underserved populations, and strengthen local infrastructures for evidence-based practice and innovation. Her expertise spans mental health, social justice, and healthcare equity. She has held research roles at the University of Oxford’s Department of Psychiatry and as a Project Scientist at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) in Canada, where she focused on culturally appropriate mental health care for South Asian communities. She was previously a Medical Research Council (MRC) Research Training Fellow at the University of Manchester, researching complex interventions for depression, and later conducted postdoctoral work at the NIHR School for Primary Care Research on early intervention for first-episode psychosis. She is currently an Associate Editor for BMJ Mental Health and an Editorial Fellow for BMJ Leader. She also served on the Editorial Board of BMC Medical Education. Her research interests include medical education, professionalism, social justice in healthcare, culturally appropriate care for South Asian Communities, and global mental health. | |||
| John Gillies | Island Wisdom | 27 Jun 2025 | 00:26:39 | |
Dr John Gillies is an Edinburgh graduate who has worked in Malawi and as a general practitioner in rural Scotland, latterly in Selkirk for 16 years. He has been an undergraduate tutor, a GP educational supervisor and a training programme director with NHS Education Scotland. He was Chair of the Royal College of GPs in Scotland from 2010 to 2014 and deputy director of the Scottish School of Primary Care from 2015-2019. www.sspc.ac.uk He is an Honorary Professor of General Practice at the University of Edinburgh and the University of St Andrews. In 2019, he chaired a group for the Scottish Board for Academic Medicine which produced recommendations on increasing undergraduate exposure of medical students in Scotland to general practice. John is from North Uist Western Isles Scotland, proud of his Gàidhlig roots, language, and heritage. He co-directs the Compassion Initiative within the Global Health Academy, which works across disciplines to use the growing evidence for compassion in workplaces including healthcare. He is on the editorial board for a book of poetry for new doctors, “Tools of the Trade”, gifted to all new doctors in Scotland, published jointly by Scottish Poetry Library and Polygon Press in June 2022. He keeps fit — and tries to keep sane– by cycling and walking in the Scottish Borders, Western Isles and beyond. | |||
| Michael Klein | The Dissident Doctor | 22 Jun 2025 | 00:28:46 | |
Clinician, Activist, and Thought Leader who Challenged Accepted Obstetric Care Family Physician, Pediatrician, Neonatologist, Maternity Care Researcher, Maternity, Primary Care and Organizational Consultant “Refusing to serve as an officer in the US Army Medical Corps during the Viet Nam War, he fled to Canada in 1967 with his wife Bonnie. He became a family practitioner, pediatrician, advocate, professor, and researcher at McGill and the University of British Columbia. Michael Klein has played a vital role in placing maternity care at the heart of family medicine. Motivated by concerns over the harmful effects of certain then widespread medical interventions, he pushed for the adoption of family-friendly birth practices, the re-introduction of midwifery, the promotion of doulas in birth and the elimination of routine intrusive interventions such as episiotomy. An influential mentor to many, his approaches are now widely adopted in maternity care.” Citation for the Order of Canada 2016. | |||
| David Haslam | A Passion for Honesty, Communication, Patient Centeredness | 16 Jun 2025 | 00:24:24 | |
Sir David Haslam was a GP in Cambridgeshire for 36 years and is a past Chair of the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE), past-President and past Chairman of Council of the RCGP, past-President of the BMA, and former Professor of General Practice at the University of Nicosia, Cyprus. He is currently chair of the charity “Young Lives vs Cancer”, Non-Executive Chair of Itecho Health, and an Associate with Kaleidoscope Health and Care. He has written 14 books, mainly on health topics for the lay public and translated into 13 languages, and has been invited as keynote speaker to Conferences in 33 different countries. Every year for over ten years he was listed by the HSJ as one of the most influential people in the NHS and was named by Debretts and the Sunday Times as one of the 500 most influential and inspirational people in the UK. David was awarded CBE in 2004 for services to Medicine and Health Care, and knighted in 2018 for services to NHS Leadership. | |||
| Louise Dubras | Academic Aventurer | 21 Nov 2025 | 00:26:25 | |
Louise Dubras, Professor Emeritus, led the creation of a new GP focused Graduate Entry Medical School, at Ulster University. She joined Ulster University as Foundation Dean of the new medical school in 2018, developed the curriculum, put together the educational team, and the first cohort of medical students graduated in 2025. During this time she continued to work as a general practitioner one day each week, and immersed herself in the local community. She was born and grew up in Jersey in the Channel Islands. She was lead GP for a homeless service. addiction and mental illness in Southampton where her increasing involvement with the University of Southampton led to her running the medical degree programme. She became Deputy Dean of Medical Education King’s College GKT homas’s medical school in London at a time of huge curriculum change and later became Interim Dean of Medical Education. She was recognised by the award of MBE in the King's Birthday Honours in 2025. | |||
| Emma Challans-Rasool | Culture and Transformation | 08 Jun 2025 | 00:21:52 | |
“My passion is to help each other realise social impact through citizen, organisation and system movements.” Emma Challans-Rasool is Director of Horizons and Founder and Chair of @Proud2bOps a National Network of Operational Managers and Leaders. As a Director in Horizons, Emma leads at national level and is proud to have built a strong professional presence and credibility across health and care and supporting business sectors. Proud2bOps is a multi-award winning network, leading and supporting under represented professionals; Ops, Managers and Administrative Professionals. She is an entrepreneurial leader, continually striving to bring innovative solutions to improve people lives. As an experienced board level director and systems leader within the health and care sector she is a values driven leader centred around people, continually striving for innovation and improvement that enhances patient, colleague and customer experience. Her career includes senior positions with portfolios of organisational development, culture, operational management, quality improvement and large scale movements. She has experience both in the public and private sector, in both commercial and public facing businesses. With extensive non-executive director experience in citizen facing organisations, organisational effectiveness and continuous Improvement is at the heart of everything. She is a qualified coach & mentor committed to enhancing people’s performance and satisfaction. A very family orientated person and she values time with my friends and family, loves the outdoors, being creative, and enjoys fun holidays and adventures. | |||
| Deborah Cohen | The Communication Doctor | 30 May 2025 | 00:27:34 | |
“Shedding light on the work that people do not often see and therefore take for granted.” Professor and Vice Chair of Research in the Department of Family Medicine at Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU) in Portland, Oregon. Implementation scientist and an expert in qualitative and mixed methods research. My research examines the interpersonal and organizational aspects of health care delivery with a particular focus on primary and behavioral health care. I enjoy examining and understanding how to address the challenges that emerge when implementing innovations and quality improvements in primary care practices, and my research highlights the often-invisible work and value of primary care clinical teams. One of my current projects is to study the staffing configurations of advanced primary care practices (professionals, roles, functions) in the United States (U.S.). I am honored to be a National Academy Medicine member, and I currently serve on the National Academy of Science Engineering and Medicine Standing Committee for Primary Care, which is an advisory committee to the federal government on primary care. For fun, I mom, a wife, a Portland Timbers fan, a foodie, and dog-lover who endeavours to be a decent recreational tennis player. | |||
| Martin Roland | Promoting Quality, Measuring Outcomes | 26 May 2025 | 00:26:16 | |
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. | |||
| David Rabago | The Medical Teacher | 18 May 2025 | 00:24:03 | |
“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. | |||
| Alex Gouveia | Swiss Family Medicine | 12 May 2025 | 00:23:49 | |
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. | |||
| Oscar Lyons | Music, Medicine, and Medical Leadership | 05 May 2025 | 00:20:10 | |
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. | |||
| Parker Magin | The Real Generalist | 25 Apr 2025 | 00:20:17 | |
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. | |||
| Martin Marshall | Clinician, Academic, Public Servant, Medical Leader….shaping healthcare | 18 Apr 2025 | 00:26:03 | |
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. | |||
| Bruce Arroll | GP and Clinical Epidemiologist | 13 Apr 2025 | 00:22:19 | |
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 | |||
| David Pendleton | Communication and Consultation | 31 Mar 2025 | 00:28:06 | |
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. | |||
| Viviana Martinez-Bianchi | Family Medicine Activist | 16 Nov 2025 | 00:26:11 | |
Dr. Viviana Martinez-Bianchi is a distinguished family physician and a Fellow of the American Academy of Family Physicians. She serves as an Associate Professor and the Director for Community Engagement at Duke University’s Department of Family Medicine and Community Health. In October 2023, she was elected President-Elect of the World Organization of Family Doctors (WONCA) and assumed the presidency on September 20, 2025 until November 2027. | |||
| Richard Budgett | Olympian Doctor | 23 Mar 2025 | 00:26:18 | |
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. | |||
| Mylaine Breton | Soins de Santé Primaires | 17 Mar 2025 | 00:22:24 | |
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. | |||
| Mercy Wanjala: Rising Star in Family Medicine | 10 Mar 2025 | 00:16:35 | |
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. | |||
| Charlotte Williams : Working for the Greatest Good | 03 Mar 2025 | 00:20:56 | |
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. | |||