Tom Hayhoe

Tom Hayhoe (born 1956) is a director of health sector organisations in the UK including West Middlesex University Hospital where he is currently chairman, a former student union politician and parliamentary candidate, and a prominent offshore racing sailor. He has lived in Hammersmith in West London since 1982.

Contents

Education

Tom Hayhoe's childhood was spent on the Isle of Portland,[1] where he attended primary school before secondary education at Woodroffe Comprehensive School in Lyme Regis and St Paul's School (London). He studied history at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge achieving a double first, and received an MBA from the Stanford Graduate School of Business which he attended on a Harkness Fellowship.

Commercial career

Tom Hayhoe worked as a management consultant with McKinsey & Company before joining W H Smith as Head of Group Planning and Development and later working as a merchandise director in its main retail chain. He then worked with the Ashridge Strategic Management Centre and as an advisor to Coopers & Lybrand before establishing The Brackenbury Group in 1994 as a vehicle to provide management consultancy services and undertake management buy-ins. This was subsequently expanded into retail and consumer consultancy The Chambers.[2] In the mid 1990s he was a non-executive director of SLSS (Oyez Stationers). Between 2000 and 2002 he chaired the board of video games retailer Gamestation through a period of growth that took it from 26 to 70 outlets and negotiated its sale to Blockbuster.[3]

Healthcare

Having studied health policy and economics with Professor Alain Enthoven while at Stanford, Hayhoe was invited in 1981 to join the group that developed health policy for the newly formed Social Democratic Party (SDP),[4] and in 1985 was appointed to the first of a number of appointments as a lay member, non-executive director and finally deputy chairman of health authorities covering the boroughs of Ealing, Hammersmith and Fulham, and Hounslow in West London, serving until 2000.[5] He has since served as chairman of the West London Pathology Consortium (a collaboration between a number of acute hospitals in West London), chairman of the North West London sub-committee of the Advisory Committee for Clinical Excellence Awards,[6] and as a director of MediHome Limited (a provider of out-of-hospital nursing and therapy services). Since 2005 he has been chairman of Building Better Health West London (a Local Improvement Finance Trust company building community and primary care facilities for the NHS in West London[7]). He was appointed Chairman of West Middlesex University Hospital NHS Trust in October 2010.

Politics

While at Cambridge he served as chairman of the university branch of the Tory Reform Group, was a member of the standing committee of the Cambridge Union Society, and following graduation served as president of Cambridge Students' Union.[8]

Tom Hayhoe was a research assistant and adviser to Conservative Party cabinet minister Peter Walker[9] before joining the SDP in 1981 with seven other leading younger members of the Conservative Party, including Adair Turner and Anna Soubry.[10][11]

At the 1987 general election he contested Wycombe as an SDP candidate.[12]

Sailing

Tom Hayhoe has competed at national and international levels in a variety of dinghy, keelboat and offshore classes, including Firefly, 470, International 14, J/24, Laser, Laser 5000, Sigma 33, Prima 38 and Class 40[13][14], and currently races a National 12 and a Laser SB3. He is a former commodore of Ranelagh Sailing Club and Vice Commodore of the Royal Ocean Racing Club.[15] His wife, Natalie Jobling, is a trustee of the Weymouth and Portland National Sailing Academy, the venue for the sailing events at the 2012 Olympic Games.[16]

References

  1. ^ "Top sailor avoids that 'R' word ..." Dorset Evening Echo, December 19, 2008
  2. ^ [1] The Chambers website
  3. ^ [2] Gamestation set to grow with Blockbuster at helm, Retail Week, 18 October 2002
  4. ^ [3] "Letter from Westminster", Br Med J (Clin Res Ed) 1981;283:1556 (5 December),
  5. ^ [4] Hammersmith & Fulham PCT board report 2006
  6. ^ [5] Department of Health list of advisory bodies
  7. ^ [6] Community Health Partnerships website
  8. ^ [7] Cambridge University Students Union website
  9. ^ "Breaking the Mould", Archive on 4, BBC Radio 4, 8th January 2011
  10. ^ Times; Guardian; Daily Telegraph; Sun; Daily Mail; Daily Express; Mirror 12th - 14th August 1985
  11. ^ Timothy Evans: "Conservative Radicalism: a sociology of Conservative Party youth structures and libertarianism, 1970-1992" (Providence R.I.; Berghahn Books, 1996). 24.
  12. ^ Bucks Free Press, 5 June 1987
  13. ^ [8] Class 40 website
  14. ^ [9] Yachting Monthly website
  15. ^ [10] RORC website
  16. ^ Dorset Evening Echo, December 19, 2008