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Winter Business Meeting

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

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This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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Copyright © 2001. The Royal College of Psychiatrists

4.30-5.00p.m. on 5 February 2002, to be held at the Royal College of Psychiatrists following the meeting of Council. Chaired by the President, Professor John Cox.

Agenda

(1) To approve the Minutes of the previous Winter Business Meeting held at the Royal College of Psychiatrists on 6 February 2001

(2) Obituary

(3) Election of Honorary Fellows

Professor David A. Alexander

Throughout his career as a clinical psychologist, Professor Alexander has always believed in the mutual value of collaborative work between psychologists and psychiatrists, and between psychologists and other medical disciplines. He has worked in the University of Aberdeen's Department of Mental Health since 1971, acquiring a personal Chair in 1994. It is difficult to overestimate his contribution to undergraduate education in psychiatry, and through the Aberdeen Postgraduate Training Scheme in Psychiatry he has also provided excellent clinical and research supervision, and acted as advocate for many young psychiatrists. In 1998, Professor Alexander spearheaded the response of psychiatric services to the Piper Alpha Disaster in the North Sea; since then his clinical and research work has focused to a great extent upon the care of victims of various kinds of trauma. He became Director of Scotland's first Centre for Trauma Research, which was opened by terry Waite in 1999. Professor Alexander has also established himself internationally as a renowned clinical and academic expert in the field of trauma. He has lectured in 17 countries and has the almost unique distinction of acting as Visiting Lecturer to the FBI Academy in the USA. Professor Alexander also visited Nairobi in 1998, following the bombing of the American Embassy when 253 people were killed; his expert and humane contribution proved to be immensely valuable to both victims and professional colleagues.

Professor Sir David Goldberg

Professor Goldberg has had a long and distinguished career in psychiatry, including being Professor of Psychiatry and Director of Research and Development at the Maudsley Hospital, London. A Gaskell Gold Medallist, he has maintained a close relationship with the College over many years. His numerous College roles include being Secretary of the Research Committee; a member of the Court of Electors; Chairman of the General Psychiatry Specialist Advisory Sub-Committee; Regional Adviser for Manchester and, between 2000 and 2001, Director of the College Research Unit. Professor Goldberg has also been a member of the DHSS Research Liaison Group, the Neurosciences Board, Medical Research Council and Wellcome Trust, and the Department of Health's Central Research and Development Committee (CRDC). He was Chairman of the CRDC's Mental Illness Steering Group and London Commissioner on Mental Illness (King's Fund). He was also on the Education Committee of the World Psychiatric Association (WPA) and has undertaken extensive work for the World Health Organization (WHO). In 1998, he received the Adolf Meyer Award of the American Psychiatric Association. In Manchester, he established undergraduate medical education based on teaching interview techniques and seeing psychiatry as an integral part of medical practice, set up the research option for all undergraduates and the first dedicated training scheme for overseas medical graduates. Professor Goldberg was Founding Director of the Mental Illness Research Unit, designed and developed the General Health Questionnaire and initiated seven other commonly used research assessments. As a result of Professor Goldberg's efforts, the Maudsley Discussion Papers now bring controversial issues affecting the care of mental disorders to the attention of politicans, NHS managers and public servants. He has tirelessly campaigned for more resources for community mental health teams with successive ministers, and was successful in persuading the Department of Health to increase the resource allocation to deprived inner-city areas.

Professor Kevin Gournay, CBE

Professor Gournay is an outstanding academic, clinician and teacher and has made a major contribution to the field of nursing and to multi-professional mental health developments both nationally and internationally. At the Institute of Psychiatry, he is currently Professor of Psychiatric Nursing and Deputy Head of the Health Services Research Department. He holds qualifications in nursing, psychology, training in behavioural psychotherapy, and was also awarded a CBE in the New Year Honours list 1998 for services to psychiatric nursing, research and education. In addition, he is an elected Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences and an elected Fellow of the Royal College of Nursing. Within his academic role he has produced outstanding results to develop one of the most successful nursing research teams in Britain. Alongside this he has numerous external affiliations and responsibilities, including acting as an advisor to ministers on a regular basis and preparing advice to the House of Commons Select Committee Inquiries. He is a Visiting Professor to the University of Wollongong and a member of the task force for the training initiative to the Romanian mental health services. His publications are both prolific and consistent in showing his dedication to quality and relevance to clinical care. He has produced two single-author books, three edited books and two monographs and is the author of over 80 conference papers presented around the world, as well as more than 130 papers in peer-reviewed journals and numerous book chapters.

Professor Assen V. Jablensky

Professor Jablensky originally trained in medicine and psychiatry in his native Bulgaria and subsequently worked as a registrar at the Maudsley for 2 years during the late 1960s. He then spent 14 years on the staff of the WHO, where he was successively principal investigator of each of the WHO's three great international studies — the International Pilot Study of Schizophrenia, Determinants of Outcome of Severe Mental Disorders and the Collaborative Study on Depressive Disorders in Different Cultures. It was also he who laid the foundations of the ICD-10 Classification of Mental and Behavioural Disorders. Partly for these reasons, he is now one of the best known and highly respected psychiatric researchers in the world. Since moving to Western Australia in 1993, he has built up an impressive research-based department and mounted a series of innovative studies of the epidemiology of psychosis in Australia. His high international reputation is illustrated not just by the international prizes he has been awarded but also by the posts to which he has been appointed — membership of the Executive Board of the WHO, Co-Chair of a US National Academy of Sciences Committee and membership of the WPA's ethics committee. Professor Jablensky has maintained many links with the UK since he worked here in the 1960s. He is a Fellow of the College and a member of the International Advisory Boards of both Psychological Medicine and the British Journal of Psychiatry.

Dr Rosemary MacDonald

Dr MacDonald retired in October 2001 after 34 years of service to the NHS. She has enjoyed a distinguished career, where her early reputation was based on original research into pain relief for obstetric anaesthesia. She pioneered the introduction of new clinical techniques as the first Clinical Director of Anaesthetic Services at St James' University Hospital, one of the largest teaching hospitals in Europe. Her subsequent career has become particularly associated with her contributions to postgraduate education and training, first as Clinical Sub-Dean of the Medical School in Leeds and then as Dean of Postgraduate Medical Education to the Yorkshire Deanery from 1993 until the present. She has encouraged the advancement of psychiatric training in the region by her support in many areas, including: the development of the first specialist postgraduate medical education centre specifically for trainees in psychiatry; the continuance of the Masters training course at Leeds University, assisting in its progressive quality improvements; providing new funding for training courses; and the investments required to develop training following recommendations from educational inspection visits. Since 1999, her contributions as Lead Dean in Psychiatry will be familiar to many in the College, during which time she has been active in supporting workforce planning, rationalising national training numbers, encouraging recruitment and retention and generally promoting training and development for the speciality.

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