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Cardiology, Diabetes and CKD Past Speakers

Dr Chris Arden
After
graduating from medical school in London, Chris Arden spent several years
working on the south coast, on a medical rotation in Portsmouth and,
since 1998, as a GP Principal near Southampton. He works three sessions
a week for Southampton City PCT as a GPSI in Cardiology in an
echocardiography based open access heart failure and atrial
fibrillation clinic, which also provides facilities for ambulatory ECG
and event recorder monitoring. The service is supported by secondary
care colleagues through a mentorship programme, and collaborates with a BHF nurse specialist and cardiac nursing team.
Dr Mark Davis
Mark
Davis is a Principal in General Practice in Leeds. His special clinical
interest is preventing and treating cardiovascular disease. He was a
founder member and former Chair of the Primary Care Cardiovascular
Society and is currently a Director of the society.
Dr Davis was a member of the External Reference Group of the National Service Framework for Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) and is a member of the Department of Health CHD Taskforce. He is also a member of the Professional Executive Committee of East Leeds Primary Care Trust. He holds numerous other appointments including being a member of the Executive of the British Hypertension Society (BHS) and of the BHS Guidelines Implementation Group. He was also a member of the NICE Guidelines Development Groups for Atrial Fibrillation (2006) and the NICE / BHS Hypertension Guidelines (2006).
Dr Davis is on the Secondary Prevention and Rehabilitation Committee of the British Heart Foundation. He is a member of the British Cardiac Society and of the editorial boards for the British Journal of Cardiology and the British Journal of Diabetes and Vascular Disease.
Dr Andrew Krentz
Andrew Krentz is a Consultant in Diabetes and Endocrinology at Southampton University Hospitals and Honorary Senior Lecturer in Medicine at the University of Southampton. His clinical and research interests focus on the pathophysiology and management of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
He has published more than 100 original articles, reviews, and book chapters and serves on the editorial boards of national and international medical journals, including The British Journal of Diabetes and Vascular Disease, Diabetes Obesity and Metabolism, Drugs and Prescriber. He is an invited member of the European Group for the Study of Insulin Resistance and is a founder member of the International Society of Diabetes and Vascular Disease.
Dr Krentz received a British Heart Foundation International Research Fellowship at the University of California, San Diego, USA. He is author of several textbooks on diabetes, metabolism and cardiovascular disease. His latest book is The Metabolic Syndrome and Cardiovascular Disease (Marcel Dekker).
Dr Tim Butler
Tim Butler is a GP with special interest in diabetes in County Durham, running intermediate services in diabetes. He also supports local practices operating diabetes clinics in all surgeries. Tim has an honorary appointment in County Durham and Darlington Foundation Trust Hospitals supporting traditional second care diabetes clinics and is an Honorary Clinical Lecturer in the University of Newcastle Upon Tyne.
Dr Butler a chartered statistician and Fellow of the Royal Statistical Society, was a lecturer in medical statistics. His research interests include insulin secretion rates and primary care diabetes.

Dr Philip Adams
Philip
Adams is Consultant Cardiologist at the Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals
Foundation Trust, appointed in 1987. He trained in Oxford and Newcastle
and as a research fellow at Mount Sinai Medical Centre New York. Dr
Adams has been clinical director of the Cardiothoracic Medical
Directorate, College Tutor and Chair of the Northern Network of Cardiac
Care Clinical Advisory Group. His interests include acute coronary
syndromes, risk factors for late failure of coronary artery bypass
grafting, guideline development and psychological factors in chest pain
and heart failure.

Dr Brian Karet
Brian
Karet has been a GP in Bradford, West Yorkshire for over 20 years. He is a GP
specialist in diabetes and a lecturer on the Diabetes Masters programme
in Bradford for GPs with special interests. He is on the committee of
the Primary Care Diabetes Society. Brian’s main interest is in the
development of the role of GPs with special interests and the way in
which PCTs can effectively use intermediate care diabetes services.
Dr Donal O’Donoghue
Donal O’Donoghue was appointed as National Clinical Director for Kidney Care in January 2007. He
has been consultant renal physician since 1992 and was the Clinical
Director of Renal Services at Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust in
Greater Manchester until 2007.
Dr O’Donoghue is an honorary lecturer at the University of Manchester and publishes regularly on the epidemiology of chronic kidney diseases, progression of kidney disease, renal anaemia, models of service delivery and clinical outcomes.
He has been on numerous kidney service advisory groups and has championed the integration of kidney care into general vascular risk reduction strategies and care plans.
Dr Vinod Patel
Vinod
Patel is associate professor in clinical skills at Warwick Medical
School, University of Warwick and also honorary consultant physician in
endocrinology and diabetes, acute medicine and medical obstetrics at
the George Eliot Hospital NHS Trust in Nuneaton, Warwickshire.
He trained in endocrinology and diabetes at the Hammersmith and
Royal London Hospitals and obtained a doctorate on haemodynamic factors
in the pathogenesis of diabetic retinopathy from the University of
London; he has written many papers on this work. While his area of
research is prevention of diabetic complications, he has a major
interest in clinical diabetes care. He qualified in both hospital
medicine and general practice and is able to work across the primary
care/secondary care interface and improve diabetes care for the local
community. His commitment to clinical education is to help develop
world-class healthcare professionals who can deal with clinical,
managerial and professional challenges.
Dr Patel’s diabetes care
team was instrumental in developing the “Alphabet Strategy” for
patient-centred, evidence-based, multiprofessional diabetes care. This
preventative and treatment-oriented strategy has been taught in
numerous courses and seminars in the UK and internationally. His most
recent venture is the delivery of two workshops in Bahrain sponsored by
the UN Development Programme.
Dr Patel’s work is driven by the belief that a patient-centred, outcome-based, team-working approach can reduce all premature complications of diabetes and, indeed, complications of all long term conditions by at least 50%, thereby significantly improving the quality of life of people in UK.
Dr Nigel Rowell
Nigel Rowell is a GP Specialist in heart failure and a Hospital
Practitioner in cardiology at the James Cook University Hospital. He became a GP Partner in 1988 at the Endeavour Practice in
Middlesbrough. Together with Consultant Cardiologist, Dr Adrian Davies,
he runs an open access one-stop referral service for people with
breathlessness based on N-terminal-pro-brain natriuretic peptide (BNP). Dr Rowell is a Board Observer for the British Society for Heart Failure and a member of the GPSI-in-Cardiology Forum.
Dr Philip Kalra
Philip Kalra is a Consultant Nephrologist and Honorary Lecturer at Hope
Hospital, Salford Royal Hospitals Trust and the University of
Manchester. Dr Kalra graduated from Cambridge University and St
Thomas’s Hospital Medical School in 1982 and after training in
nephrology in Leeds, New Zealand and Greater Manchester, was appointed
consultant nephrologist at Hope Hospital, Salford in 1995. He holds an
Honorary appointment at the University of Manchester, and is actively
involved in research, being best known for work in atherosclerotic
renovascular disease. He has a major interest in postgraduate training
in nephrology and is the editor of a popular textbook used by
candidates preparing for the MRCP.
Go back to speakers in the 2009 Cardiology, Diabetes and CKD series

