Governance Conference 2025

📅 20-21 May 💻 online, via Zoom

Discover 

Ensuring the NHS is fit for the future is necessary and urgent. 

Join us online for this year's Governance Conference, on 20 and 21 May to explore practical strategies for meeting the challenges ahead. 

With effective leadership of strategy and assurance, your board plays a crucial role in meeting organisational and system objectives while mitigating risk. This year's conference theme, Good governance: Anchoring in a shifting landscape, provides a platform to explore strategies for navigating an evolving context. With lessons from other sectors and peer insights, the sessions are designed to support and sustain good governance. 

Who should attend

This event is designed for NHS board members and governance professionals to come together and is the only one of its kind. The event is an opportunity to: 

  • Reflect on the implications of government policies for your organisation and system.
  • Discuss practical strategies to sustain good governance, or improve it. 
  • Share experiences and challenges with peers in a supportive environment. 

 

Book now

 

Programme


09.45

Registration

10.00

Welcome

Introduction and chair's welcome

10.10

Plenary 1

Governance fit for the future

Our opening session provides an overview of current health strategy and policy, and the latest on the political context. With a focus on implications for provider governance, we will set the scene and look to the future, exploring the changing context in which NHS trust boards lead, and the government's improvement agenda including the 'three shifts': care closer to home, from treatment to prevention, and analogue to digital.

Speaker: TBC

 

11.00

Break

11.10

Peer Exchange 1

Achieving integration to deliver the 10 Year Plan

It has long been agreed that integrating health and social care services is desirable for patients, staff and wider system flow. Join this session to reflect on the government's ambitions for integration that is key to supporting the government's three shifts and the development of a Neighbourhood Health Service. Our panel will share their experiences of navigating mismatched governance policy, funding and regulatory landscapes, and will explore the enablers of effective and sustainable integration. They will also share learning, and discuss what would be needed to enable routine, well-governed integration to improve population health long term.

Chair: TBC

Speakers: TBC

 

12.00

Lunch

14.00

Plenary 2

The changing role of directors

Explore the changes over the past decade that have impacted directors' roles and consider the likely leadership qualities that will be required to govern well in coming years.  The expert panel will consider wide-ranging issues which may include leadership styles in a collaborative NHS, the implications of increased complexity for the director skillset, and how board members might manage the competing demands of the evolving NHS.

14.55

Afternoon break

15.05

Peer Exchange 2

Leading for the future: The changing role of directors

Hear from governance practitioners and directors with experience of, or ideas about, addressing some of the issues explored in the preceding plenary. In this facilitated discussion, our panel will share their practice and learning to help you reflect on your own leadership and that of your board. 

Chair: TBC

16.00

Close


09.45

Registration

10.00

Welcome

Introduction and chair's welcome

  

 

10.10

Plenary 3

Assuring patient safety in the NHS

Explore evidence-based approaches honed through decades of patient safety research to address the complexities of managing risk in the NHS. This session will focus on how boards can measure and monitor safety, navigating risks both within their control and those that are systemic. We will also discuss how healthcare regulation supports safety and where it may hinder improvement efforts.

Chair: TBC

11.00

Break

11.10

Peer Exchange 3

Managing risk and assuring patient safety in systems

This session will focus on the importance of aligning risk management with the realities faced on the frontline, ensuring that strategies reflect the actual challenges. The session will also examine the value of risk sharing across the healthcare system, and whether and how collective responsibility and collaboration can enhance patient safety.

Chair: TBC

Speakers: TBC

 

12.00

Lunch

14.00

Plenary 4

Learning from inquiries

Gain insights from experts experienced in investigating systemic failures and contributing to public inquiries, including the Grenfell inquiry and the Mid Staffordshire investigation. This session will explore how boards can recognise key characteristics that help avoid failures, assure themselves that lessons are applied, and foster a culture of safety. Drawing on decades of healthcare and regulatory experience, the panel will discuss learning from significant cases, the role of boards in addressing system risks and practical strategies to reduce harm and drive improvement.

Chair: TBC

14.55

Afternoon break

15.05

Peer Exchange 4

The board's role in culture change

Explore how far board activities and behaviours can influence organisational culture within trusts. This session will discuss the impact of self-reinforcing sub-cultures, the complexities of local and system-wide partnerships, and the challenges of stretched board capacity on cultural leadership. The panel will reflect on what boards can do to understand, shape, and sustain cultures that support the delivery of effective care in this evolving landscape.

Chair: TBC

16.00

Conference close

Speakers

Alison Cottrell
Alison Cottrell

Non-executive Director

East London NHS Foundation Trust

 
Alison Cottrell is a non-executive director (NED) at the East London NHS Foundation Trust. Prior to this she was the chief executive officer of the Financial Services Culture Board, a not-for-profit body established following the financial crisis to help banks manage organisational culture.

Alison began her career as a City economist before joining HM Treasury where she held a number of policy and leadership roles. She is also a NED at LINK (the UK's cash access and ATM network) and a trustee of Phoenix Futures.

Alison will be joining us as a speaker at our 'The board's role in culture change' peer exchange session.
Bernadette Thompson
Bernadette Thompson

Director of Equality, Diversity and Inclusion

King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust

 
Bernadette Thompson will be joining us as a speaker at our 'Leading for the future: The changing role of directors' peer exchange session.
Crishni Waring
Crishni Waring

Chair

Northamptonshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust and Leicestershire Partnership NHS Trust

 
Crishni was first appointed as chair at Northamptonshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust in 2016. She has a wealth of senior level experience in change management, organisational development and leadership across a variety of sectors. She is a fellow of the CIPD and has been chairing the NHS England Midlands Regional People Board since its establishment in 2020.

In 2022, Crishni was appointed as integrated care board chair for NHS Herefordshire and Worcestershire and in 2023, joint-chair of the Leicestershire Partnership and Northamptonshire Healthcare Group.

Crishni Waring will be joining us as a speaker at our 'The board's role in culture change' peer exchange session.
Dr Rosie Benneyworth
Dr Rosie Benneyworth

Chief Executive Officer

Health Services Safety Investigations Body

 
Dr Rosie Benneyworth joined the Healthcare Safety Investigation Branch in August 2022 and is now the interim chief executive officer of the Health Services Safety Investigations Body, having led the transition to the new arm's length body.

She has a longstanding interest in improving the quality and safety of care that people receive and has held several senior leadership roles in health. This has included chief inspector of primary medical services and integrated care at Care Quality Commission, managing director of the Southwest Academic Health Science Network, and as a clinical commissioner with Somerset Primary Care Trust and Clinical Commissioning Group. Rosie has a background in primary care and worked as a GP in Somerset for 15 years.

Rosie also has significant non-executive experience, and is currently a non-executive director on the board of University Hospitals Bristol and Weston NHS Foundation Trust. She has also held roles as a non-executive director and vice chair of the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence and a trustee of the Nuffield Trust.

Rosie will be joining us as a speaker at our 'Learning from inquiries' plenary session.
Paul Corrigan
Paul Corrigan

Special Advisor

Department of Health and Social Care

 
Paul Corrigan will be joining us as a speaker at our 'The changing role of directors' plenary session.
Professor Charles Vincent
Professor Charles Vincent

Professor of Psychology at University of Oxford, Emeritus Professor Clinical Safety Research at Imperial College London and Emeritus Fellow at Jesus College Oxford

 
Professor Charles Vincent trained as a clinical psychologist and worked in the NHS for several years. Since 1985, he has carried out research on the causes of harm to patients, the consequences for patients and staff and methods of improving the safety of healthcare.

He established the Clinical Risk Unit at University College in 1995 where he was professor of psychology before moving to the Department of Surgery and Cancer at Imperial College in 2002. He is the editor of Clinical Risk Management (BMJ Publications, 2nd edition, 2001), author of Patient Safety (2nd edition 2010) and author of many papers on medical error, risk and patient safety. With René Amalberti, he published 'Safer healthcare: strategies for the real world' Springer, Open Access (2016).

From 1999 to 2003 he was a commissioner on the UK Commission for Health Improvement and has advised on patient safety in many inquiries and committees including the recent Berwick Review.

In 2007 he was appointed director of the National Institute of Health Research Centre for Patient Safety and Service Quality at Imperial College Healthcare Trust. He is a fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences and Emeritus National Institute of Health Research Senior Investigator. In 2014 he took up a new post as Health Foundation professorial fellow in the department of psychology, University of Oxford where he continues his work on safety in healthcare and led the Oxford Region NHS Patient Safety Collaborative and was director of Oxford Healthcare Improvement.

Charles will be joining us as a speaker at our 'Assuring patient safety in the NHS' plenary session.
Professor Naomi Chambers
Professor Naomi Chambers

Professor of Health Management

University of Manchester

 
Professor Naomi Chambers' range of academic interests include healthcare leadership, board governance and primary care. Drawing from her experience, Naomi has an ongoing working relationship with senior NHS leaders, boards and think tanks.

Recent research projects comprise changes in board-level leadership practices in hospitals in England following the Francis Report (completed 2018), the evaluation of the NHS Well-Led framework (completed 2020), curated patient stories for the book 'Organising care around patients' (published in 2021) and editorship of the 'Research handbook on leadership in healthcare' (2023). Current projects include an analysis of recent maternity services public inquiry reports from the perspective of frontline staff, using labour process theory.

Naomi will be joining us as a speaker at our 'The changing role of directors' plenary session.
Professor René Amalberti
Professor René Amalberti

Director

Foundation for an Industrial Safety Culture

 
Professor René Amalberti is a psychiatrist by training and has specialised in human error, governance and systems approaches. He was seconded in 1992-99 at the European Civil Aviation Safety Agency, and was in charge of human factors and aviation safety.

René was the director of the national research program on land transport safety (1998-2008), and special advisor on patient safety to the director of the HAS (2007-17, French Accreditation agency), as well as director of the Foundation for a Culture of Industrial Safety (since 2007). He is a member of the National Academy of Technologies of France (since 2016).

René will be joining us as a speaker at our 'Assuring patient safety in the NHS' plenary session.
Professor Sir Terence Stephenson
Professor Sir Terence Stephenson

Chair

NHS Providers

 
Professor Sir Terence Stephenson is Nuffield professor of child health at the Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health, University College London. He is the chair of NHS Providers since 1 February 2025, and prior to that he was chair of the Health Research Authority for England until 31 January 2025.

Professor Sir Terence was knighted in the 2018 New Year Honours for services to healthcare and children's health services. He was selected as an National Institute of Health Research Senior Investigator for four years from April 2022.

Professor Sir Terence was chair of the UK General Medical Council (GMC) from 2015-2018. Before the GMC role, he was chair of the UK Academy of Medical Royal Colleges 2012-2014 and President of the UK Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health 2009-2012. In these roles he has worked with five Secretaries of State for Health in Westminster governments of three different parties.

He has been elected an honorary fellow of eleven national colleges or academies, in the UK, Ireland, Hong Kong and Australia. He is also an honorary consultant in paediatrics at University College London Hospital and Great Ormond Street Hospital London and has co-authored seven textbooks.

Professor Sir Terence will be chairing the conference, also joining us as a chair of the 'The changing role of directors' plenary session.
Rachel Evans
Rachel Evans

Chief People and Strategy Officer

Oxleas NHS Foundation Trust

 
Rachel Evans will be joining us as a speaker at our 'The board's role in culture change' peer exchange session.
Sandra Igwe
Sandra Igwe

Chief Executive Officer

The Motherhood Group

 
Sandra Igwe is a thought leader in black maternal health, TEDx speaker, and femtech founder who is revolutionising support for black mothers through innovative digital solutions and community-driven initiatives. As the founder of Blackmums, her ability to build trust and create meaningful connections serves as a vital bridge between black mothers, pregnant women, families, and the healthcare system, bringing together practitioners, researchers, and stakeholders to create lasting change.

As the founder and chief executive of The Motherhood Group, Sandra leverages community engagement, technology and advocacy to create a comprehensive ecosystem of support for the black maternal experience. Her deep understanding of the community's needs and her ability to foster trust has enabled her to facilitate crucial dialogues between families and healthcare providers, leading to more effective and culturally sensitive care.

Through The Motherhood Group, Sandra delivers impactful community-based events like Black Mum Fest, maternal training workshops, and the Black Maternal Health Conference UK. She spearheads national campaigns such as Black Maternal Mental Health Week UK and oversees culturally sensitive programmes commissioned by NHS England. The organisation also maintains a community hub in Lambeth Town Hall, providing a safe space for black mothers and families.

Sandra is also co-chair of the national inquiry into racial injustice in maternity care and a trustee of Birthrights Charity. Her book, 'My black motherhood: mental health, stigma, racism and the system', amplifies the voices of black mothers and challenges healthcare professionals to listen, believe, and understand their experiences.

Sandra will be joining us as a speaker at our 'Learning from inquiries' plenary session.
Scott Greer
Scott Greer

Professor of Health Management, Policy and Global Health

University of Michigan

 
Scott Greer will be joining us as a speaker at our 'The changing role of directors' plenary session.
Siva Anandaciva
Siva Anandaciva

Director of Policy Events and Partnership

The King's Fund

 
Siva Anandaciva is the director of policy, events and partnerships at The King's Fund. Prior to being appointed director, Siva was the chief analyst in the policy team, leading on projects covering NHS funding, finances, productivity and performance.

Before joining The King's Fund in 2017, Siva was head of analysis at NHS Providers. He has also worked on medicines policy and urgent and emergency care in the Department of Health and Social Care in England.

Siva is a member of the Office of Health Economics policy committee and the steering group of the BRACE Rapid Evaluation Centre and chaired the National Payment Strategy Advisory Group for NHS England. From January 2025 he will join Barts Health NHS Trust as an associate non-executive director.

In 2020, 2023 and 2024 Siva was included in the Health Service Journal list of the 50 most influential Black, Asian and minority ethnic figures in English health care.

Siva will be joining us as a speaker at our 'The changing role of directors' plenary session.
Steve McGuirk
Steve McGuirk

Chair

Warrington and Halton Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

 
Steve McGuirk has had an expansive and broad career, first as a firefighter, then chief fire officer and chief executive officer in the fire and rescue sector. Joining the service in 1976, he rose through the ranks to lead multiple organisations, retiring in 2015 after nearly four decades of dedicated service.

Additionally, he advised the Local Government Association and the National Employers' Organisation and provided critical evidence to numerous select committee and public accounts inquiries.

Recognised for his exceptional contributions, Steve received the Long Service and Good Conduct Medal (1996), the Queen's Fire Service Medal (2002), and a CBE (2005). Since 2011, he has also served as a deputy lieutenant for Greater Manchester.

After leaving the Fire Service, Steve embarked on a second, 'portfolio' career. One key focus has been healthcare leadership, serving as chair of Warrington and Halton Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust for nearly a decade, guiding it through the unprecedented challenges of the Covid-19 pandemic and leading its ongoing recovery and improvement.

At the same time, Steve has remained deeply connected to the fire sector. He served as an expert witness to the Grenfell Tower Fire Public Inquiry and is advising the Scottish Procurator Fiscal.

Steve will be joining us as a speaker at our 'Learning from inquiries' plenary session.

Why attend

This conference offers a blend of expert-led sessions, practical discussions and peer exchanges to help you navigate today's governance landscape and prepare for future demands. The programme includes four dedicated sessions where speakers will share real-world successes and lessons learned, followed by facilitated Q&As to deepen understanding. 

You'll leave equipped with tools and strategies to address critical issues such as:

  • governance fit for the future,
  • the changing role of directors,
  • assuring patient safety, and
  • the board's role in culture change.

With opportunities to engage in discussions, ask questions and share experiences, this event will empower your board to lead with confidence and impact. 

Book your place

Free tickets for NHS Providers members (NHS trusts and foundation trusts)

Book your free place


NHS Providers associate members (partners and integrated care boards)
: tickets at £150 plus VAT. 

Purchase your ticket

If you are unsure of your membership status, please get in touch at events@nhsproviders.org  

Peer exchange sessions

These sessions are your chance to connect with peers, learn from their experiences and ask the questions that matter to your organisation's success.

 

Our interactive peer exchange sessions will tackle key challenges in NHS governance: Our four sessions will explore:

  • Achieving integration to deliver the 10 year plan
  • The board's role in culture change
  • Managing risk and assuring patient safety in systems
  • Leading for the future: the changing role of directors

 

sponsorship opportunities

Share your organisation's products, services or solutions with key leaders from NHS trusts, system partners and industry stakeholders by becoming a conference partner. 

If you work in, or with, NHS board members and governance professionals, we offer a range of packages to enhance your visibility and drive meaningful connections.

Contact our event team at events@nhsprovides.org to discuss how you can get involved.

Contact us

For further information or for any questions relating to the conference, email our events team at events@nhsproviders.org. You can also follow us on Bluesky and LinkedIn and see our hashtag #Governance25 to see conference updates.