This committee provides expertise and insight on significant physiotherapy practice, learning and development issues.
Committee membership
Dr Mhairi Brandon
Dr Mhairi Brandon is a consultant physiotherapist/musculoskeletal sonographer based at NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde. She has a keen interest in musculoskeletal medicine and recently developed programmes in musculoskeletal diagnostic ultrasound (MSUS) and interventions for allied health professional programmes. She received a professional doctorate in 2012 and was awarded a fellowship by the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy in November 2017.
She has led innovative projects to develop advanced physiotherapy practitioners to implement ambulatory care models. These models establish ‘one-stop clinics’ that incorporate MSUS into practice for the delivery of complete client case management. She has presented widely internationally on the impact of ultrasound imaging on clinical practice across the Caribbean and in Europe, subsequently working in partnership to develop educational teaching programmes.
Matthew Carr (Chair)
Matthew is a senior clinical healthcare leader who currently splits his time across two leadership roles. He is a Clinical Director for the Sussex ICB (NHS Sussex) where he supports a wide range of clinical and care programmes to deliver optimal outcomes and experience for the Sussex population. He is also responsible for enabling the highest standards of integrated care in his role of Clinical Director for East Sussex musculoskeletal services.
Matthew has explored a variety of professional interests including operational management, advanced clinical practice, clinical academic and organisational leadership roles. He has a strong professional interest in understanding and evidencing the impact of health and care services experienced by our populations. He is actively involved in increasing personalisation of healthcare services, ensuring the right services are available for the right people, through needs-based stratification of care.
Matthew remains a long serving core member of the CSP South East Coast Regional Network.
Sanchez Davis
Sanchez graduated from St George's University of London as a Physiotherapist in the summer of 2019 having previously completed a degree in sports and exercise science at the University of Portsmouth in 2014. Upon graduating, Sanchez worked in the NHS for Surrey & Sussex NHS Trust, Horder Healthcare, Oxleas NHS trust & GP @Hand formerly known as Babylon GP, where he progressed from a junior physiotherapist right through to a senior physiotherapist and first contact practitioner until 2021.
Since February 2022, Sanchez has been lecturing at St George's University of London teaching musculoskeletal physiotherapy and sports injuries having specialised in MSK in the private sector in addition to working in professional men's and academy boy's football teams. As well as lecturing at St George's, Sanchez is the course admissions lead responsible for recruitment, outreach and admissions onto the Physiotherapy programmes at St George's trying to increase knowledge and literacy of the profession to the wider population to help bridge the gap in the workforce. Being on the professional committee Sanchez has interest in EDI specifically inclusive learning, health inequalities and discrimination within the profession across all pillars and has written blogs for the CSP during black history month (Your support matters | The Chartered Society of Physiotherapy (csp.org.uk) for microaggressions Microaggressions case study: Sanchez-Jeremiah | The Chartered Society of Physiotherapy (csp.org.uk).
Dr Carolyn Llewellyn
Dr Carolyn Llewellyn is the Head of the School of Sport, Nutrition and Allied Health Professions at Oxford Brookes University. After a clinical career specialising in cardiorespiratory physiotherapy, Carolyn moved into the academic space in 1998. Employed as a Lecturer, Senior Lecturer and Programme Leader in Physiotherapy Carolyn has a long history of working with the CSP through being involved in the admissions forum , the programme leaders forum and the Quality and Enhancement Group. Carolyn has been a CSP education representative for many years, has held external examiner roles at various universities and has represented the CSP as a panel member at numerous accreditation and re-accreditation events.
Carolyn has specific interests in equity and belonging. She has a Doctorate in Education which considered the Black Students’ Experiences of Physiotherapy in Higher Education. She is also an active member of the Council of Deans for Health where she sits on several groups, including the Equity, Diversity and Inclusion group. More broadly she supports and advocates for the students and staff involved in the education of Allied Health Professions within the Higher Education Sector. Carolyn is currently an appointed Governor within the Oxford Health NHS Trust and she is the Co-Director of BOING play, a not-for-profit company which supports practitioners to create playful, active and inclusive spaces to help young children develop their physical literacy.
Dr Jackie Waterfield
Jackie joined Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh, in 2017 as a professor and head of a division of health programmes. After a successful career as a clinical physiotherapist, she moved to education in 1998 and has worked extensively with other higher education institutions (HEIs) in the UK and overseas, both directly and through engagement with the CSP and the Health and Care Professions Council (HCPC). Jackie has been an independent reviewer for the validation of qualifying and postgraduate programmes, and has conducted reviews, and mediated in challenging and complex cases at other HEIs. She was a member of the CSP Council during the governance transformation period and has chaired the education committee. Recently, she chaired the Scientific Committee of the International Education Conference of the WCPT. In 2014, she received a National Teaching Fellowship from the Higher Education Academy.
Sandra Harding
Sandra is a chartered and HCPC-registered physiotherapist with more than 30 years’ experience in the public and private healthcare sector, and has managed several clinical services, an independent hospital and more latterly the national physiotherapy service for BMI Healthcare which covered 58 sites and more than 900 staff.
In 2017, Sandra resigned from a national physiotherapy role to start a clinical advisory service (PAL) supporting other clinicians' evidence regulatory compliance. In 2021, the business rebranded (HCPG) and expanded to support more clinical professions. In January 2022, Sandra will joined the board of an NHS Hospital as an associate non-executive director.
Sandra is also a proud Trustee of POhWER, a national advocacy charity, a long-serving primary school vice-chair of governors, a Winston Churchill Fellow, and a parish councillor. She has a love of family, exercise and food, and alongside her career, is kept busy at home with a menagerie thanks to her daughters!
Sarah Dewhurst
Sarah worked in a variety of clinical settings before specialising in oncology rehabilitation and moving to the Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust in 2010. She completed an MSc in rehabilitation in 2015 and enjoys working in a 'research active' department. Following a two-year secondment with Macmillan Cancer Care, she is now the service lead for 'living with and beyond cancer', which allows her to pursue her particular interest in exercise oncology. Sarah undertook a Churchill Fellowship in 2019 and now leads an informal network of physiotherapists who share her passion for promoting exercise in the field of cancer.
Sarah is also the lead AHP on a programme of work run by the Office of Health Improvements and Disparities (OHID, formerly Public Health England) and is proud to promote the role of AHPs in the public health agenda on physical activity.
Sarah is delighted to have gained a position on the professional committee and hopes to bring her professional and leadership experience to the role in support of the CSP and its members.
Claire George
Claire successfully splits her time working as a rotational physiotherapist at the Robert Jones and Agnes Hunt Orthopaedic Hospital in Shropshire and as a specialist MSK physiotherapist for the Betsi Cadwaladr Health Board in North Wales.
Alongside her clinical role, she is studying for a MSc in health leadership because of her passion for improvement and development through best practice. Additionally, Claire’s recent clinical audit, investigating physical activity levels, has been published and disseminated nationally at Physio UK. Claire is an alumnus of the prestigious Versus Arthritis intern scheme.
Being a core member of the West Midlands Regional Network, Claire has committee experience at a local level. She is now relishing the opportunity to provide expertise and insight on significant physiotherapy practice, learning and development issues and influencing on a national scale.
Adam Gold (Vice-Chair)
Adam Gold is as an advanced practice physiotherapist working in MSK/orthopaedics. He is clinical lead for the interface and first contact practitioner services in North Somerset. He also has a role in secondary care in a specialist shoulder clinic. Adam has a keen interest in the safety and best use of medicines and prescribing and has developed local policies for injection and non-medical prescribing. Adam is now working as a DPS and is working towards being a DPP. Adam is involved with many quality improvement projects and leads on the MSK safety and patient satisfaction group for Sirona.
Vacancy
Dr Laran Chetty
Laran is a senior physiotherapist at the Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust and specialises in occupational health, ergonomics and vocational rehabilitation. He has worked in the NHS, private sector and abroad since 2002. Laran was part of the executive committee of the Association of Chartered Physiotherapists in Occupational Health and Ergonomics and held joint positions as the equality and diversity officer and e-news editor. Laran is also actively involved with the CSP’s BAME network and has represented the network at the TUC Black Workers Conference and at the Annual Representative Conference. In 2020, he was presented with the Outstanding Occupational Health Practitioner Award by the Society of Occupational Medicine.
Ben Herberts
Ben completed a degree in exercise science health and rehabilitation before working as a physiotherapy assistant for many years in a vascular and amputee team. After completing an MSc in physiotherapy, Ben worked in a variety of areas around the country and in a variety of NHS settings. However, he has predominantly worked within community rehab settings. Ben has completed guest lecturing at university institutions and has been a lead educator for students in previous clinical roles.
Ben is currently a clinical lead mental health physiotherapist for Cumbria, Northumberland, Tyne and Wear NHS Foundation Trust. As well as having a keen interest in mental health and physios' impact/role in mental health, he is also interested in falls, amputee rehab and research. Ben has had research published in the Physiotherapy journal and has future ambitions of completing research into mental health in physiotherapy.
Key documents
Professional committee meeting dates
- Thursday 8 February 2024
- Thursday 9 May 2024
- Thursday 17 October 2024