![]() ![]() As the Chair of the Integrated Care System Health Inequalities Network, he is working across places to raise awareness and build the capacity and capability in the system to tackle health inequalities.Īde is Co-Chair for the Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic Staff Network of NHS England and NHS Improvement and was awarded an MBE for services to Global Health policy. ![]() In Bradford District and Craven, he is working with organisations, community partnerships and primary care networks to embed a population health management approach to reduce health inequalities and develop the district inequalities action plan alongside public health colleagues and system partners to address the wider determinants of health. Sohail is passionate about system working and harnessing the power of communities. He holds the fellowship of the Royal College of General Practitioners, membership of the Royal College of Physicians, MSc in diabetes and an executive MBA. He is also a GP partner in Bradford City and a GP with special interest in diabetes. ![]() Sohail has been working in the NHS since 2003 and has previously worked as the Clinical Chair of Bradford City Clinical Commissioning Group and Clinical Director of Community Services in Salford Royal Foundation Trust. ![]()
0 Comments
![]() ![]() Even though Paz does not take up that much space as the novel progresses, the invisible force of her character pulses throughout the rest of the novel and is indeed both structurally and thematically its linchpin, a figure who allows us to see people on two sides of the “immigrant experience”-those from poor working-class backgrounds and those from moneyed families. We learn later that this sentence introduces the story of Paz, the wife of protagonist Hero’s uncle Pol, from her early childhood in the Philippines to the moment she births her daughter, Roni, in America. The sentence also reads as a simple musing, a hypothetical that asks you, the reader, to mold yourself into another figure. The tone is quite casual, and the narrator feels close, sagacious, and hauntingly prophetic. In fact, we can begin with the novel’s first sentence: “So you’re a girl and you’re poor, but at least you’re light-skinned-that’ll save you.” ![]() ![]() Upon finishing Elaine Castillo’s America Is Not the Heart, you will likely ask yourself, What makes this book so good? The answer: many things, reader. ![]() ![]() ![]() There is so much believable conflict and angst that hinders their relationship that I found very refreshing to read. I don't particularly like romance in books, but in this one I was shipping the main couple with all of my heart. However, they did grow on me and I absolutely loved Lira and Elian by the end. As I'm the sort of reader to whom character development is more important than the plot, I was initially unsure because both the perspectives weren't instant favourites. I really enjoyed the characters in this book. She promises to help him find the key to destroying all of sirenkind for good.īut can he trust her? And just how many deals will Elian have to barter to eliminate mankind's greatest enemy? When he rescues a drowning woman in the ocean, she's more than what she appears. Hunting sirens is more than an unsavoury hobby - it's his calling. The ocean is the only place Prince Elian calls home, even though he is heir to the most powerful kingdom in the world. Robbed of her song, Lira has until the winter solstice to deliver Prince Elian's heart to the Sea Queen or remain a human forever. ![]() To punish her daughter, the Sea Queen transforms Lira into the one thing they loathe most - a human. Until a twist of fate forces her to kill one of her own. With the hearts of seventeen princes in her collection, she is revered across the sea. ![]() Princess Lira is siren royalty and the most lethal of them all. Dark and romantic YA fantasy for fans of Sarah J Maas - about the siren with a taste for royal blood and the prince who has sworn to destroy her ![]() |