Alan Taman: CV Phone: Website: 07870 757309 www.alantaman.co.uk e-mails: aptaman@aol.com healthjournos@gmail.com Facebook: Twitter: Date of birth: http://www.facebook.com/AlanTamanCopywriter http://twitter.com/#!/Wordsmith19 1957. Clean driving licence. Non-smoker. Qualifications University Master of Arts (MA) in Health Journalism. University of Coventry. Awarded September 2013. Grade: Distinction (80%+ grade average). Units passed include contemporary issues in health, media law and ethics, multiplatform journalism practice, journalism themes and issues, and research dissertation on the ethics of public relations (PR) in the NHS. Advised to continue research on PR and healthcare as PhD – but no funding. Bachelor of Science (BSc (Hons)), University of London King’s College. Awarded September 1978. Grade: Third (with very little effort!) Units passed include organic chemistry, intermediary metabolism, biochemical genetics, ecology, microbiology, immunology, and experimental design. IT, educational and secretarial Industry-level IT skills Adobe Indesign and Photoshop, full layout manipulation and editing for print media. Microsoft Office – Word, Excel, Powerpoint, Publisher, Access. Wide experience, taught at FE level. Content management systems (CMS) for website manipulation/administration (including Twitter). Publisher/administrator authority and organisation-wide responsibility, several bespoke systems. Educational City & Guilds 7307/8 Certificate in Teaching (FE). Awarded June 2000. Level 4 Admin & IT London Chamber of Commerce and Industry Private and Executive Secretary’s Diploma (LCCI PESD). Awarded July 1998. Levels 3 and 2 Admin & IT Spreadsheets. Awarded January 1999. Integrated Business Technology. Awarded August 1998. Desktop Publishing. Awarded June 1998. RSA Diploma in Text Processing (Dip RSA). Awarded June 1998. Distinction, all elements. Alan Taman BSc(Hons), MA – aptaman@aol.com. 07870 757 309 Employment and education (see also résumé and showcase sections, www.alantaman.co.uk) Occupation since first degree (1978) 7% 8% 6% 6% SMPJ - freelance 51% 22% Health PR Teaching Secretarial SMP - in house Full-time student (SMPJ = scientific or medical publishing and journalism; PR = public relations) September 2013 to date: Campaigning and freelance work. Communications lead for Doctors for the NHS (from March 2015) and Keep Our NHS Public (May 2015) following short-term comms lead for the Campaign for the NHS Reinstatement Bill 2015 (Jan-May 2015). Developed comms strategies, e-campaigning strategies, comms resources, fund-raising resources, media liaison, local and national group development and collaboration. Wrote three chapters (two on PR, one on interpreting medical research reports) for First, Do No Harm (Libri Publishing, published May 2014), for journalists on health reporting. First book of its kind to be published in UK. Co-organised international conference of the same name, University of Coventry, May (archived details: www.europeanhealthjournalism.com). Contributor on health to PR professional network Comms2point0. Wrote freelance articles on information about cancer intended for the public, for ESMO (European Society for Medical Oncology), following contribution to Making Sense of Cancer, a guide for journalists on writing about cancer (thanked in Acknowledgements). Passionate believer in the NHS and in preventing its privatisation; evidence-based campaigning with ethical principles at its heart; and ethical standards, training, and networks in health journalism and PR. September 2012 – September 2013: Full-time MA in health journalism at University of Coventry. Graduated with Distinction (mark average 80%+) after researching ethics of NHS public relations. Advised to do PhD. January 2012 – September 2012: Agency work as a medical secretary while waiting to begin MA course. January 2006 – January 2012: ‘Communications Editor’ at Birmingham Children’s Hospital. Represented the hospital as a spokesman to local and national media on many occasions, some of them live and as a crisis, with little or no warning. Produced several hospital magazines, including the trust staff magazine, Grapevine, for print and intranet. Authored hospital ethics policy on approaching the media. Helped set up and edit the content of the hospital intranet. Responsible for checking and sending out global e-mails to all 2,500 staff. On call for press, 1 in 3, which meant advising senior managers, writing statements or giving live interviews. Wrote content and edited new website, which included feeds from Twitter and Facebook. Wrote comments for hospital and interviewed patients. The post was made redundant and the financial settlement created the opportunity to use this experience for postgraduate education. October 2005: Started writing ‘Ask Alan’ weekly column for the Birmingham Mail, a Q/A column on any aspect of child health. First time any NHS Communications professional has run a column in the region while in post. Popular. Free publicity for the Trust every week without fail for 4 years, until the paper’s format changed. Also wrote several features for the Mail as trust spokesman. January 2004 – January 2006: Press Officer for Birmingham Children’s Hospital. Dealing with the press and producing Grapevine. Writing press releases, advising staff, patients and families. Set up and managed trust global e-mail system and first ever trust intranet. Advised senior management on need for website development, and edited website content. Gave TV and radio interviews as hospital spokesman. Alan Taman BSc(Hons), MA – aptaman@aol.com. 07870 757 309 July 2003 – January 2004: Secretarial Team Manager, Birmingham Children’s Hospital, managing team of 15. January 2003 – July 2003: Left teaching to return to writing. Published articles on forensic science (for The Lady, Police Review and Dogs Today) and on dogs (Dogs Today). Advised several outlets on forensic science of leading cases. Made ends meet with agency work as a medical secretary, Birmingham Children’s Hospital. 1999 – 2002: College Lecturer, Sutton Coldfield FE College. Writer of then Lecturer in National Diploma in Forensic Science: the first course of its kind in the country. Also taught IT skills (MS Office, DTP), science (‘A’ level), and secretarial and business administration (to level 3). 1998 – 1999: Agency work as a medical secretary, full time. Worked at all city-centre trusts in Birmingham, as well as in Sutton Coldfield, Solihull, and Staffordshire. Specialities included cardiology, orthopaedics, paediatrics, rheumatology, geriatrics, palliative care, anaesthetics, nursing management, urology. 1997 – 1998: Qualified as an executive PA, and in RSA Level 3 and 2 word processing, level 3 DTP. This was to allow working while a single parent after the collapse of the freelance market in publishing in the mid-1990s. 1980 – 1997: Freelance editor and writer in health education, medicine and science (working for ButterworthHeinemann, OUP, among others). Included subediting, copy editing, proofreading, PR and broadcasting (eg subeditor on Teachers’ Weekly, national spokesman for the Medical Campaign Against Nuclear Weapons, 198490) as well as writing. Every medical specialty, from public information to postgraduate level. Books, journals, leaflets, magazines, radio and TV interviews. Health education material for schools and the public. The 1990s recession severely limited freelance opportunities in publishing and coincided with becoming a single parent. 1979-80: Subeditor, British Medical Journal, London. The best possible in-house training. Learned how to liaise with the medical profession, and a great deal about medical politics. Learned the language of the print trade when most of it was manual. Went freelance to avoid daily long-distance commute while family were young. 1978-79: Editorial Assistant, Pergamon Press, Oxford. Writing life-science abstracts. 1978: BSc(Hon) Biochemistry, King's College, London. I did not want to spend my life in a lab or working for pharmaceutical companies – the commonest destinations for biochemistry graduates then. I had wanted to be a journalist before becoming fascinated with science (thanks mostly to Bronowski’s The Ascent of Man and an inspirational science teacher). I went into publishing. Prior to that: 4 GCE ‘A’ levels (A,B,B,C), 11 GCE ‘O’ levels. Referees Former tutor/now work colleague Dr John Lister 3 Brookview Oxford OX4 7UR Tel: 07774 264112 johnlister@healthemergency.org.uk Former line manager/now work colleague Professor Sue Richards Keep Our NHS Public Unit 12-13, Springfield House 5 Tyssen Street London E8 2LY Tel: 020 7226 4615/ 07407 379194 profrichards@tiscali.co.uk Former work colleague Paul Nash Senior Chaplain Birmingham Children’s Hospital Steelhouse Lane Birmingham B4 6NH Tel: 0121 333 8527 Paul.nash@bch.nhs.uk Alan Taman BSc(Hons), MA – aptaman@aol.com. 07870 757 309