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London based general practitioner From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dame Clare Mary Louise Francis Gerada, Lady Wessely, DBE, FRCP, FRCGP, FRCPsych (born November 1959) is a London-based general practitioner who is a former President of the Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP) and a former chairperson of the RCGP Council (2010–2013). She has professional interests in mental health, substance misuse, and gambling problems.
Clare Gerada | |
---|---|
Born | Clare Mary Louise Francis Gerada November 1959 (age 64–65) |
Citizenship | British and Maltese |
Education | MB BS, 1983, UCL Medical School |
Occupation | General practitioner |
Known for | Chairperson of RCGP |
Spouse | Simon Wessely |
Children | 2 |
Medical career | |
Profession | Medical doctor |
Sub-specialties | Mental health (especially of health care workers), substance misuse, and problem gambling |
Gerada is a convenor of the cross-party political movement, More United.[1] She is a patron of Humanists UK.[2]
Gerada was born in Nigeria although her father came from Malta; the family moved to the United Kingdom in 1963.[3] Her father was a general practitioner. He opened a single-handed practice in Peterborough.[4][5]
Gerada qualified in medicine at UCL Medical School in 1983.[6] She then trained in psychiatry and worked at the Maudsley Hospital in south London.[3][7] She qualified as a GP in 1992[7] and started work in general practice in Lambeth, London, the same year.[8] She cites her main interests of work as being around mental health and substance misuse and has spent over her professional career leading the development of primary care substance (alcohol, drugs) services in England. In 2000, she established the Substance Misuse Unit at the RCGP.[3]
She has also been Director of Primary Care for the National Clinical Governance Team and Senior Medical Advisor to the Department of Health,[8] and is Medical Director of the NHS Practitioner Health Programme, which provides confidential medical advice for doctors and dentists.[9] She is one of the partners in the Hurley Group which runs a number of GP practices and walk-in centres across London.[10]
In November 2010 she became chairperson of the Council of the Royal College of General Practitioners for a three years term of office.[8] She was the college's first female chairperson for 50 years, the previous female chairperson having been Dr Annis Gillie.[11]
In September 2013 she was appointed as the chairperson of Clinical Board, Primary Care Transformation, NHS England (London Region), to take up the position the following month.[12] She resigned from this position in April 2015 so she could speak out against what she calls the Conservatives' "desperate quest for privatisation".[13]
In April 2016, she was elected to the council of the Council of the British Medical Association (BMA).[14]
She established the Practitioner Health Programme to support general practitioners, dentists and other health professionals with mental health and associated issues. In March 2019 The Care Quality Commission rated the service outstanding.[15]
In September 2016 she was named as one of the Liberal Democrats' "new Beveridge group" of advisers.[16] She had been a lifelong supporter of the Labour Party until the 2016 United Kingdom European Union membership referendum.[17]
In March 2019 she was appointed co-chair, with Sir Chris Ham, of the forum to implement the NHS's long-term strategy.[18][19] In 2019, she established the Primary Care Gambling Service, whose aims are to provide treatment to people with gambling problems.[20]
Since 2020 she has been Chair of the charity Doctors in Distress,[21][22] which aims to reduce suicides amongst doctors and other health care workers. It was set up after the suicide of Dr Jagdip Sidhu, a cardiologist killed himself in 2018.[23][24] It exists with the goal of zero suicides amongst doctors by 2025. "DiD have many laudable ways of reaching this target but we have a most urgent priority which is to create a network of facilitated therapeutic spaces where doctors can talk about the emotional impact of their work, gaining support from each other, in a safe, non-stigmatising environment."[25][26] She was a non executive director of University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust until March 2021[27]
Gerada was appointed in April 2021 as an Independent Advisor to address Governance and Clinical Quality to her first role within the private hospital sector with Cygnet Healthcare,[28] an independent provider of mental health services that had acquired Whorlton Hall shortly before an undercover investigation by BBC Panorama in 2019 filmed vulnerable patients being abused.[29] In August 2021, she was announced as RCGP president, succeeding Amanda Howe, and taking up the role on 20 November 2021 for a two-year term.[30]
Gerada is married to Sir Simon Wessely, a professor of psychiatry. He was knighted in 2013.[37]
She was one of the first people in the UK to publicly self-isolate when she contracted Coronavirus during a trip to New York in March 2020. She described it as the 'worst illness I've ever had'.[38] She gave an interview from home to Good Morning Britain, which entertained viewers when she was interrupted by her phone and her dog.[39]
Gerada was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2000 Birthday Honours for service to medicine and to drug misusers[42] and Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE) in the 2020 Birthday Honours for services to general practice.[43]
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