Regional Director of Public Health (East of England)
The Regional Director of Public Health (RDPH) is DHSCs senior public health representative in the East of England. As both the DHSC (OHID) and NHS Regional Director of Public Health and the NHS Regional Director of Public Health, the role requires public health expertise and exceptional leadership ability. Reporting to the Deputy Chief Medical Officer and to the NHS Regional Director (East of England), the RDPH leads the regional OHID and NHSE public health teams and provides strategic expertise on health improvement, healthcare quality and health inequalities.
The DHSC Office for Health Improvement and Disparities (OHID) leads the Governments health improvement and inequalities work. Under the professional leadership of the Chief Medical Officer (CMO), OHID develops and delivers crossgovernment action to improve health outcomes, focusing on the shift to prevention and reducing health inequalities. The RDPH plays a vital role in the development and delivery of national OHID policy and programmes.
As part of the regional NHS East of England Executive team, the RDPH provides senior public health leadership across DHSC, OHID and NHSE, leading on regional population health strategy. They provide a public health perspective to performance and oversight including impact on population outcomes, reducing inequalities and shifting to prevention.
Main duties of the job
The role ensures alignment between national policy and regional and local delivery, working with mayors, local government, NHS partners and Integrated Care Boards (ICBs).
The key areas of focus for the interim role includes -
1. Leadership and management of the DHSC/OHID and NHSE Public Health teams to ensure business continuity and delivery of current organisational objectives.
2. Managing the ongoing transformation programme, particularly the implementation of the NHSE Regional Model Blueprint.
3. Strengthening the "one Public Health East of England" way of working across the DHSC/OHID and NHSE Public Health teams.
4. Enhancing partnership and collaborative initiatives with stakeholders across the wider regional health systems including ADPH, ICBs, academia and VCSE.
About us
The Office of Health and Disparities (OHID) in theDepartment of Health and Social Care (DHSC) drives the Governments healthimprovement agenda. Under the professional leadership of the Chief MedicalOfficer (CMO), OHID will lead the development and delivery of the Governmentswork to improve and level up health outcomes with a clear focus on publichealth, prevention and health disparities. This includes cross-governmentaction on the wider determinants of health.
To apply, please submit:
1. A CV setting out your career history, with key responsibilities and achievements. Please ensure you have provided reasons for any gaps within the last two years.
2. A Statement of Suitability (no longer than 1000 words) explaining how you consider your personal skills, qualities and experience provide evidence of your suitability for the role, with particular reference to the essential criteria in the person specification.
*Please copy your CV, followed by Statement of Suitability into the text box available on NHS Jobs. There is no option to upload separate documents* Please ensure that both documents contain your full name.
Failure to submit both documents will mean the panel only have limited information on which to assess your application against the essential criteria.
Job responsibilities
Overseeing and steering an effectiveprogramme of action across the regionthat delivers on OHIDs national priorities for prevention and health disparitiesand NHSEs objectives for prevention in the regions.
The RDPH will workclosely with national health improvement policy and system strategy teamstosupport the translation and delivery of national public health priorities inplaces and assure the effective delivery of public health programmes. Thisincludes acting as a regional lead on specific national programmes on behalf ofother RDsPH and working with local system partners to deliver them, developinginnovative solutions to complex challenges and sharing best practice.
Person Specification
Qualifications
* Qualifications:
* Registration with the GMC Full and Specialist Register (with licence to practise), GDC Specialist List, or UKPHR is required for Public Health Specialists.
* Membership of the Faculty of Public Health by exam or exemption is essential.
* Must meet the Faculty of Public Health Person Specification for consultant appointment and demonstrate completion of minimum CPD requirements.
Knowledge and Skills
* Communication - Skilled in navigating politically sensitive environments, managing media, presenting to large groups, and handling complex public situations for DHSC and NHSE. Delivers clear, concise communications to ministers, senior leaders, and stakeholders.
* Policy and programme development - Demonstrates a strong grasp of national policy and its impact on local delivery across DHSC and NHS. Leads complex programmes using advanced analytical skills to advise ministers and senior leaders, even with incomplete information. Shows strategic vision, political awareness, and adapts plans across varying timeframes in dynamic environments.
* Leadership - Demonstrates integrity, inclusivity, and champions diversity. Maintains self-awareness and cultural sensitivity while modelling professionalism. Sets direction, develops talent, and supports teams across OHID, NHSE regions, and partners. Develops and maintains strong relationships with ministers, colleagues and partners; inspires confidence at all levels. Effectively balances strategic and operational needs through delegation and management. Shows resilience, sound judgment, and adaptability in complex settings.
* Values - Maintains high professional and civil service standards. Prioritizes quality, impact on public health outcomes and reducing inequalities. Works well with others and encourages teamwork. Works collaboratively with both external and internal partners. Continuously improves performance using effective strategies and new ideas.
Disclosure and Barring Service Check
This post is subject to the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act (Exceptions Order) 1975 and as such it will be necessary for a submission for Disclosure to be made to the Disclosure and Barring Service (formerly known as CRB) to check for any previous criminal convictions.
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