I am committed to spreading innovation to make high quality healthcare available to everyone based on need not financial means.
I was motivated to join Sciana to learn from and alongside health leaders across Europe.
Lawrence Tallon is the Deputy Chief Executive at Guy's and St Thomas' (GSTT) NHS Foundation Trust, the largest and one of the most prestigious healthcare provider organisations in the UK. He joined GSTT in March 2020, at the start of the pandemic, and immediately set to work on securing vital international supplies of medical equipment and PPE for the Trust and the wider UK supply lines.
He led the successful merger of GSTT with the Royal Brompton and Harefield hospitals in 2021, creating a power-house of cardio-respiratory medicine and research. His role includes oversight of the Trust's multiple major strategic changes programmes. Lawrence also leads the Trust's approach to Innovation and Improvement including the creation of the newly formed Centre for Innovation, Transformation and Improvement (CITI). He also sits on the Board of King's Health Partners Ventures, a limited company to accelerate spin out of Med Tech start-ups.
In the decade prior to joining GSTT, Lawrence worked in a range of strategy and leadership roles in university hospitals in the UK and overseas. He was Director of Strategy, Planning and Performance at University Hospitals Birmingham, Managing Director of the Shelford Group of UK university hospitals and Executive Director of Policy at Hamad Medical Corporation in Qatar, one of the leading academic medical centres in the Middle East.
Lawrence began his career working for the UK Government in Whitehall, as a fast stream civil servant at the Department of Health, before working for the Secretary of State for Health and running the headquarters of the NHS Chief Executive. He worked on a range of high profile national policy issues, gaining cross government exposure to No.10 Downing Street, Her Majesty's Treasury and the Cabinet Office, and becoming a senior civil servant within the Department of Health.
He holds Bachelor's and Master's degrees in History from the School of Oriental and African Studies in London, and a Master's degree in Global Health Policy from Imperial College London.