Patrons and committee members
Patrons
Directors
Greg Wise
Patron
Greg is an actor, filmmaker and writer. He was full-time carer for his sister, Clare, when she was dying of cancer. The blog writings they undertook at the time became a book ‘Not That Kind of Love‘. Greg has spoken at various events on his personal experiences and hopes to bring the conversation around dying and death into everyday life. He is thrilled to become the Patron for Living Well Dying Well and End of Life Doula UK.
You can hear Greg talking about how planning for end of life is an act of love here
Dr Kathryn Mannix
Patron
Kathryn became our Patron when End of Life Doula UK was launched in June 2018. She has worked as a doctor in palliative medicine in UK hospices, hospitals and patients͛ homes for 30 years. Kathryn relished the close teamwork involved in enabling people to feel well, live well and die well. Each team, she believes, should include the patient and their closest supporters at its heart. She observed the patterns and process of dying, and brought this to public attention through her book ‘With the End in Mind.’ She has been pleased to discover that the work of reclaiming normal human dying as a process that can be understood and accompanied in the way the dying person wishes is already flourishing in a variety of ways, including the End of Life Doula movement.
Professor Allan Kellehear
Ambassador Compassionate Communities
Allan is a British-Australian end of life care academic. He founded the ‘new’ public health movement in palliative care – variously known as ‘health promoting palliative care’, or ‘public health approach’ to palliative care, or the ‘compassionate communities’ movement. He is past president of both Public Health Palliative Care International (PHPCI) and the Association for the Study of Death and Society (ASDS). Allan is currently Emeritus Professor at the University of Bradford, and Associate Director of the charity, Compassionate Communities UK. Among his 25 books, he is best known for: Compassionate Cities: public health and end of life care (Routledge 2005), A Social History of Dying (Cambridge University Press 2007), and The Inner Life of the Dying Person (Columbia University Press 2014). His most recent book is Visitors at the End of Life: Finding meaning and purpose in near-death phenomena (Columbia University Press 2020).
Cormac Russell
Patron
Cormac is a social explorer and an author. He is Managing Director of Nurture Development and a faculty member of the Asset-Based Community Development (ABCD) Institute, at DePaul University, Chicago. Cormac’s work and ethos on Community assets is close to our hearts. Cormac says “I am pleased to stand in solidarity with the members and friends of End of Life Doula UK. Their values and contributions to our communities, mirror my own. I believe death is a precious part of life and requires the love, care and respect of a community to become meaningful. End of Life Doula UK, is primarily a caring social movement, as distinct from a clinical or institutional response to death, dying and grief. The value of having a near neighbour journey with us up to the very end, is easily overlooked in commercialized and hyper-individualized societies. End of Life Doula UK are on the frontier of ‘social care as social movement’, and I am very pleased for that reason to join with them and to support their efforts to bring the function of death back to the centre of community life.”
Dr Emma Clare
Director of End of Life Doula UK
Chair & Operations Executive
Emma is a Health Psychology PhD researcher, trainee Health Psychologist and End of Life Doula in training. Based in Yorkshire, she describes herself as an activist and nature lover, with a passion for bringing death and dying out of hospitals and back into compassionate communities wherever possible. She has worked as a home carer supporting people on ‘fast-track’ plans who wished to leave hospital to die at home, in addition to working with looked-after children and in autism, learning disabilities and adult mental health services providing therapy and advocacy. Emma’s current research is focused on supporting individuals (both professionals and the public) to develop death competency – that is, our skills and capabilities in dealing with death and dying.
Penny Merrett
Director of End of Life Doula UK
Penny is a counsellor by profession and has worked in that role and as a counsellor supervisor within the NHS for over 20 years. She was also Bereavement Services Coordinator at her local hospice for 13 years, and when she gave up that job wanted to stay ‘in the field’, discovered the Doula role and decided to do the training.
She lives in Sheffield and is involved with ‘Compassionate Sheffield’ an initiative which is working towards compassionate city status. She is particularly keen to promote death literacy and encourage conversation about dying, death and bereavement, and runs monthly Death Cafes in the city.
Paul Collis
Finance Director
Paul is a chartered certified accountant (qualified 2007) who started his career in audit with PwC. Since moving into industry Paul has spent the last 15 years working for various publicly listed and private companies across many different sectors including property, transport, retail, manufacturing and hospitality. Paul has got vast international finance experience and lived and worked in the Caribbean (2010-2016) before returning to the UK.
Outside of work Paul enjoys spending time with this family, following his football team Burnley FC and is a singer/songwriter.
Louise Piper
Company Secretary
Louise has an MA (Law) and a postgraduate diploma in entrepreneurship from the University of Cambridge.
She spent 20 years working in the Global Financial Markets for JP Morgan in London, New York, and Asia. After retiring from the finance world in 2004, and wanting to get back to her roots in Africa, she co-founded and managed an International Non-Profit Organisation, The Haller Foundation, which addresses the Sustainable Development Goals through a model for economic development, which is sustainable and environmentally sound. Haller is now 20 years old, and she continues to support the charity in an advisory capacity.
In 2019, she co-founded Better Endings, and works as a practising doula. Better Endings provides support for both families, and corporate clients offering programmes to support employee well-being. She is certified by NFCE in the Principles of End of Life Care, and trained as a Doula in the US, with the International Association of End of Life Doulas (INELDA). She holds a TQUK qualification in counselling, is a member of EoLDUK (completing the Foundation and Diploma level programmes with LWDW) and is embarking on an MSc in End of Life Studies with The University of Glasgow.
Lynne Carnie
Membership Coordinator of End of Life Doula UK
Lynne is Membership Coordinator of End of Life Doula UK. Lynne lives in Surrey and after 30 years working in logistics for large corporations, found the training of Living Well Dying Well immensely empowering in supporting others at end of life. She is a volunteer for Princess Alice Hospice and is keen to promote awareness, in the community, of the work of End of Life Doula UK in all things related to end of life. Away from her Doula work, Lynne enjoys getting out in the countryside and immersing herself in nature.
Hilary Scott
Committee Member
Training to be a Doula feels like a natural progression from my career in supporting people through loss, bereavement and change and with their physical, emotional and mental health. I can offer you a grounded, honest, cheerful and kind relationship, to help you feel supported and ultimately empowered to choose the end of life – and death – that you want. As your Doula, I will be alongside you throughout this time, as a compassionate guide, confidant and friend. If you’d like to have a chat to find out more about me and what I offer then please get in touch with End of Life Doula UK.
Jill Armstrong
Committee Member
Jill has recently been co-opted onto our committee to help support End of Life Doula UK with a potential transition to charitable status. She comes with experience of setting up and helping run a new charity in England/Wales and with many years’ experience in University management roles. Jill is retired from academia but finds it impossible to give up her lifelong learning habit. She is an End of Life Doula in training. During the many years Jill worked in various universities she was also responsible for directing over thirty projects, several multi-million and cross sectoral, and most cross universities. She also spent five years working in a UK wide role concerned with enhancing the quality of teaching in higher education.
The death of close family members, their experiences of death and dying, and the subsequent difficult responses of the outside world are a large part of why Jill is called to this work.
Hermione Elliott
Phil Parker
Adviser
Phil comes to End of Life Doula UK not currently as a Doula but as someone who’ll be helping us in our future audio/visual projects. His work as a director includes short documentary GAZE (Channel 4) which highlighted the veil of shame that often surrounds the human body, and for the past 8 years he’s worked with filmmaker and end of life doula Rebecca Kenyon at mote of dust films – one of their films being Holding Space, a short film about the relationship between doula and dying partner. In his spare time he made several short films for charity Together for Short Lives, interviewing young adults on their experiences of living with life limiting conditions. Also, for a number of years, he volunteered at a therapeutic community supporting those recovering from drug and alcohol abuse. Previously, Phil attended Lancaster University; here he gained an MA in Cultural Studies that focussed on the different ways disabled, and queer bodies are represented. Having grown up in deepest, darkest Cumbria, he is now based near Lancaster. He loves to swim and once met Albert Maysles in a lift.
Mary Clear MBE
Advisor Community Activism
Mary is a community activist, her notable accomplishments are the Pushing Up Daisies festival and Incredible Edible in Todmorden. Mary is also an End of Life Doula, a dreamer and schemer. Ultimately she is an Activist, in a hurry to do her bit for a better world. Mary believes you should ‘be the change you want to see’ and thinks nothing can be nicer than feeding a crowd round the kitchen table.
Barbara Bird – Adviser to the Committee June 2018 – Feb 2020 With Gratitude and Rest in Peace