Board members
Dignity in Dying
your life, your choice
Board members


Professor Nick Moore  - Chair

Nick is an academic and a consultant with over thirty years experience in the areas of information strategy and policy, workforce development, the management of higher and further education, and international development. He has worked with organisations such as the Department of Health, the RNIB, the National Association of Citizens Advice Bureaux, and UNESCO. He has chaired the Dignity in Dying Board of Directors since 2006.


 

Ms Rowena Ironside -  Vice Chair

Rowena Ironside is a senior technology industry executive with many years experience managing IT businesses.  She has a MSc. in Management from the London Business School (Sloan Masters).  Rowena currently enjoys a portfolio career, which includes non-executive roles in the commercial and not-for-profit sectors and fundraising for a micro-finance charity. Rowena joined the Board of Dignity in Dying in 2006.

 

Mr Edward Turner - Treasurer

Edward joined the board of Dignity in Dying as treasurer in 2006.  He is a chartered accountant and works for an international financial services organisation.  He has previous experience of working as treasurer in the not-for-profit sector. Edward joined Dignity in Dying after witnessing the peaceful assisted death of his mother at the Dignitas clinic in Zurich in 2006.  It contrasted with the more harrowing, but more normal, death of his father in a nursing home 4 years earlier.  Edward believes that terminally ill people should have the option of an assisted death in the UK, rather than being forced to travel abroad before their time to die in a foreign country.


Paul Devlin

Mr Paul Devlin

Paul joined Dignity in Dying when Debbie Purdy's case first made the headlines, and became a Director in 2007. He has over 20 years experience of working for charities in fields where people face great challenge, including HIV/AIDS, drug use, and disability. As well as working for a national charity, Paul is a Non-Executive Director of a Primary Care Trust.


 

Ms Sharon Grant

Sharon comes to the Dignity in Dying Board from a varied background, first in academic life as a Senior Lecturer in Social Policy, and from many years working and campaigning close to inner city communities as a Councillor and Parliamentary Aide. Most recently she has chaired the statutory Commission for Patient and Public Involvement in Health and also sits on the boards of two further charities focused on equal opportunities. She chairs her local Citizens Advice Bureau and holds a further public appointment as a member of the Food Standards Agency's Advisory Committee on Consumer Engagement.


 

Lady Goodhart

Celia began her career in the civil service before moving into teaching, later becoming the principal of a girls secondary school. She was involved nationally in setting up the Social Democrat Party and the Liberal Democrats and stood for Parliament in Kettering.  She has chaired two major national charities and the Oxford University Alumni organisation, and is on the Council of Goldsmiths University of London and is a Governor of Compton Verney.  She is also an Honourable Fellow of St. Hilda's College Oxford and City & Guilds and is an Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts.  She is married to Lord William Goodhart QC and has seven grandchildren.


 

Dr Isky Gordon

Isky has been a member of Dignity in Dying for over 10 years after discussions with his parents-in-law convinced him of the need for patient choice at the end of life. He was a consultant at Great Ormond Street Hospital for over 30 years, where he was involved in end of life issues on a weekly basis. He was Director of Clinical Services for 3 years and Director of Radiology for 6 years, and was on the Board of Governors of an inner-city comprehensive school and a nursery. He has recently retired and now works in research. Since being on the Board of Dignity in Dying he has lectured medical students on end of life issues and given talks to Age Concern.


 

Mr James Humble OBE

Jim was a professional rugby player in his youth, followed by a career in trading standards as a Director and Chief Executive of a variety of public service, and central and local government organisations. He is an experienced campaigner and consultant for new laws and Private Members Bills, and has successfully promoted improved levels of consumer protection, fair-trading, child safety and food standards. He has created professional co-operatives across Europe and has held appointments as Chairman EC and Council of Europe Working Groups. He has also held Non-Executive Directorships of National Consumer Council and Wine Standards Board. 


 

Ms Ann Leedham

Ann's background is in nursing, primarily caring for people suffering from cancer. She was regional and secretary to the Royal College of Nursing Board and was a Board member for Birmingham and the Black Country Workforce Development Confederation. Over the years she has campaigned on many issues, most recently for minority groups to be properly recognised in the workplace and has also spent time as a school governor and a borough councillor for the Labour Party.


 

Ms Marion Schoenfeld

Marion has been interested in end-of-life issues ever since the death of her parents, as she feels that both would have benefited from the option of assisted dying. She has an MA in Medical Ethics and Law, which focused particularly on end-of-life decision-making, including Advance Decisions. She also ran a medical market research agency for several years.


 

Dr John Stephen

John is a retired family doctor. He worked for 32 years in both Norfolk and Somerset, and has been a member of Dignity in Dying for over 18 years. During his working life he cared for many terminally ill patients, the great majority under his personal care in a cottage hospital. For the past 3 years he has been a member of the Dignity in Dying Board.


 

Niccola Swan

 Niccola spent many years working for Barclays Bank, ending her career in 2005 as Regional Director for the North-East. She has been a non-executive director of Leeds Partnerships NHS Foundation Trust since 2006, where she serves on the main board and the Audit Committee, and chairs the Resources Committee. She has recently completed two years as deputy chief executive of the Employers Forum on Disability and is now a member of the governmental Disability and Employment Advisory Committee. She is also a magistrate in Bradford and a Home-Start volunteer in Leeds.