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Yvonne Carter

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Cause of death
  
Breast cancer

Name
  
Yvonne Carter


Role
  
Academic

Died
  
October 20, 2009, England

Yvonne Carter httpsiguimcoukimgstaticsysimagesGuardia

Full Name
  
Yvonne Helen Carter

Born
  
16 April 1959 (
1959-04-16
)

Alma mater
  
St Mary's Hospital Medical School, London

Occupation
  
Dean of Warwick Medical School

Spouse(s)
  
Dr. Michael Bannon (1988-2009; her death); 1 son

Education
  
St Mary's Hospital Medical School

Books
  
Refugee Doctors: Support, Development and Integration in the Nhs

Blake Yvonne Carter


Yvonne Helen Carter (16 April 1959 – 20 October 2009) was a British general practitioner (GP or family doctor) and Dean of the Warwick Medical School, a post she took up in 2004, after being the Vice-Dean. Warwick Medical School is Britain's first medical school to only accept applications from graduates.

Contents

Yvonne Carter Yvonne Carter obituary Education The Guardian

Her career as a GP spanned 20 years, practising in a succession of inner city communities in Liverpool, Birmingham, East London and, until 2007, in Coventry. She was also an academic GP and Honorary Consultant in Primary Care at Coventry Teaching Primary Care Trust and a Non-Executive Director and Vice Chair at University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire NHS Trust. She was also Chair of the Comprehensive Local Research Network for West Midlands (South).

Yvonne Carter Helen Atherton wins the Yvonne Carter Award University of Oxford

She was a Non-Executive Director of University Hospitals of Coventry and Warwickshire NHS Trust and the Pro-Vice-Chancellor for Regional Engagement at the University of Warwick. In 2008 she was appointed Deputy Lieutenant for the County of the West Midlands.

Medical career

Carter attended Notre Dame High School in Liverpool. She first trained at London's St Mary's Hospital Medical School graduating in 1983 with a distinction in Obstetrics and Gynaecology.

She completed a General Practice Vocational Training Scheme in Liverpool and became a Member of the Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP) in 1987. In 1990 she became an Honorary Research Fellow at Keele University and was awarded a three-year Royal College of General Practitioners Research Training Fellowship. She was awarded a Doctorate of Medicine in 1994 by the University of London. In the same year she was awarded a Fellowship of the RCGP.

From 1992-96 she was a Senior Clinical Lecturer in the University of Birmingham's Department of General Practice. She became the youngest Professor of General Practice and Primary Care in the UK when she took up post as Chair and Head of Department at Barts Hospital and the Queen Mary's School of Medicine and Dentistry in 1996. In 2001, she became Head of the Division of Community Sciences and in 2002, following restructuring in the School, became Director of the Institute of Community Health Sciences.

National roles

In 1998 she was elected as a founder Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences. She was a Member of the Council of the Royal College of General Practitioners from 1994-2004. From 1996-2001 she was the RGCP's Chairman of Research and was also a member of the RGCP Council's Executive Committee. From 1995-96 she was the Clinical Director of the Quality Network; from 1995-97 she was a member of the Commissioning of Care Task Force and from 1998-2000 she was a member of the Health Inequalities Group. She is an elected member of the Council of the Academy of Medical Sciences. She has also served as a Governor of the Health Foundation and a member of the General Medical Council's Quality Assurance of Basic Medical Education visiting team.

She was Governor of the Health Foundation from 1999-2007. From 1999-2004 she chaired the commissioning panel for the NHS National Primary Care R&D awards. She has also been involved in the development of the Department of Health Strategy on Research Governance. She was a member of the Appraisal Committee of the National Institute for Clinical Excellence from 1998-2001 and a member of the National Screening Committee from 1999-2003.

Awards and recognition

  • Officer of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2000 Queens Birthday Honours List.
  • Winner of the Confederation of British Industry First Woman of Science Award on 7 June 2006.
  • In 2008 she was awarded a Coventry City Council Good Citizen Award
  • Carter was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 2009 Birthday Honours for services to medical education.
  • Family

    Carter married Michael Bannon, a paediatrician and medical academic, in 1988. They had one child, a son, Christopher.

    Death

    Yvonne Carter was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2004 and died from the disease on 20 October 2009, aged 50. She was survived by her husband, son, and a sister, Alma and elder sister Joan.

    References

    Yvonne Carter Wikipedia