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BME Women
into Public Appointments
11 November 2009
Did
you know that there are three Asian women who
head up NHS Trusts in the United Kingdom? These
three women are Naaz Coker, Chair of St George's
NHS Trust; Dr Robina Shah MBE DL JP who became
the youngest Asian to attain the post of Chair
of a Trust at the Stockport NHS Foundation Trust
and Professor Soraya Dhillon MBE, Chair of the
Luton & Dunstable Hospital Foundation Trust.
These women represent the pinnacle of achievement
in the NHS where ethnic minorities are over-represented
in the workforce. Between them, these three women
govern budgets of hundreds of millions of pounds,
oversee the activities of 12,600 employees and
care for nearly 2 million patients.
In his lecture to CEMVO last
week (4 November 2009), Professor James Nazroo
argued that health inequalities in the NHS could
readily be overcome "The NHS directly employs
more than a million people and, indirectly through
subcontracts, many more. Ethnic minority people
are over-represented in its workforce, so it has
real potential to lead the field in relation to
good, equitable, employment practices, and ensuring
subcontractors meet these standards. Such practices
could cover employment rights, holidays, sick
leave, maternity leave, job security and flexibility,
limits to unpaid overtime, and management practices
that promote autonomy and control at work."
Black and minority ethnic
(BME) representation on the Governing Boards of
NHS Primary Care Trusts (Foundation Trusts and
all other organisational structures) is critical
to achieving much of 'good, equitable employment
practices' that in turn would deliver better health
outcomes for ethnic communities.
"They could also include
financial benefits, ensuring a more equitable
distribution of salaries across employment grades.
The immediate and longer-term impact of this on
the drivers of health inequalities is likely to
be significant," James Nazroo added.
Public Appointments
NHS Trusts are a major part
of the Public Sector: with nearly 18,500 Public
Appointments each year to over 1,200 public bodies,
this a market sector heavily dependent on talent,
experience and skills. Most public bodies are
led by a board comprising non-executive chairs
and other Board members, and are categorised as
Executive NDPBs (Non-Departmental Public Body);
Advisory NDPBs, Public Corporations, Utility Regulators,
NHS Trusts, Primary Care Trusts, School and Educational
establishments, Conservation Bodies and other
organisations such as the Charity Commission,
Gambling Commission and Arts Council England.
Types of Public Appointments include: Chairs,
Board Members or Board Directors, Non-Executive
Board Directors, Commissioners and Finance &
Audit Committee Directors. The roles can be remunerated
or unremunerated and most are likely to be part-time.
The primary role of the Board is governance, financial
control, providing strategic direction and risk
management.
As at September 2009
- Women made up 33.3% of
public appointees (women represent 51% of the
UK population)
- Disabled people made
up 5% of public appointees
- Ethnic Minorities made
up 5.7% of public appointees (minorities represent
11% of the population)
In April 2009, the Rt. Hon.
Harriet Harman QC MP tabled The Equality Bill,
designed to make Britain stronger, fairer and
more equal. The aim is that by 2011, 50% of new
appointments will be women, 14% will be disabled
people and 11% will be ethnic minorities.
"Clearly, this represents
a significant opportunity for BME Women to adapt
and learn a new set of skills by applying their
own experience and talent for the benefit of the
public" explains Mrs Lopa Patel MBE, Founder
of Redhotcurry.com, "but we need to not only
inspire them to apply for posts, but also to give
a much clearer picture of what to expect and how
they can ensure they provide the best return-on-investment
for the taxpayer who funds the Public Sector".
Patel
has been working with the 12-strong Hindu Council
UK Public Appointments Taskforce and the Council
for Ethnic Minority Voluntary Sector Organisations
(CEMVO), who have sponsored the 'BME Women into
Public Appointments' seminar on Wednesday 18th
November 2009 in London where Naaz Coker will
be speaking about her career and role as Chair
of St George's NHS Trust.
For further information on
CEMVO, visit www.cemvo.org.uk
Click here for Professor
James Nazroo's seminar on health inequalitites.
(Nov '09)
Click here to read
about The
Equality Bill (27 April 2009)
Click here to read
about diversity
in Public Appointments (17 June 2009)
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