John Ramage, Staff Governor Medical & Dental.jpgProfessor John Ramage is a consultant physician in gastroenterology and hepatology at Hampshire Hospitals NHS Trust He is also honorary consultant physician at the Institute of Liver Studies, King’s College Hospital and deputy lead clinician for King’s Health Partners NET Centre which includes King’s, Guys and St Thomas’s, Kent Oncology Centre, and Hampshire Hospitals. Professor Ramage is deputy research director at Hampshire Hospitals Foundation Trust and is lead clinician for the Hampshire Collaboration for Health Research and Education. Professor Ramage trained at Portsmouth, Brighton, and King’s College hospitals.

 

Professor Ramage is advisory board member, past treasurer and immediate past Chair of the U.K. and Ireland Neuroendocrine Tumour Society. He is a member of the EORTC Quality of Life Group, through which he pursues research into quality of life in cancers. His main research interest is in quality of life and symptoms scores in neuroendocrine tumours of the small bowel and liver.  He has written more than 190 peer-reviewed publications and was the corresponding author of the UK guidelines for NET.  He is now on the executive board of the European Neuroendocrine Tumour Society. He is chief investigator for several UK and international studies and recently co-ordinated Hampshire Hospitals Foundation Trust input into the RECOVERY study for COVID-19. He has taken part in the recent webinars on COVID-19 and NET patients for ENETS and has co-authored the UKINETS statement on this topic.  

 

Recent grants and publications can be found on ORCID. See john ramage (0000-0003-4824-6600) (orcid.org)

 

In his spare time, he plays keyboard for the hospital band and cycles the lanes of Hampshire.

helen_allen.jpgI trained as a nurse and am a registered midwife and I am proud to belong to a caring profession.

I believe high standards of care are delivered by supporting staff through the successes and challenges of working in today's NHS.

Representing our professions on the Council of Governors, is one way of ensuring the voices of nurses, midwives and health care support workers are heard directly at this level.

 

Laura Dyer.pngLaura is a Physiotherapist Specialising in Neurology. She graduated from the University of Southampton in 2006. After completing generic junior Physiotherapy rotations, she went on to specialise in neurology and stroke at the Queen Alexandra Hospital Portsmouth. In 2014 Laura moved to Winchester to undertake the role of Physiotherapy team leader in the stroke unit. In February 2018 she was appointed the Clinical Matron for the Stroke Service at Hampshire Hospitals Foundation Trust where she continues to work to drive forward the quality of stroke care within the organisation. Outside of work Laura relaxes spending time with her family and running.