The benefits of a UK fellowship trainee include expanded exposure to salivary gland pathology and surgical management of oral cancer. The candidate will be offered advanced training and hands-on exposure to all aspects of Maxillofacial Surgery, including (but not limited to) surgical head and neck oncology.
PRINCIPAL ELEMENTS OF THE POST WILL BE
This post is to work within the Maxillofacial Department at the Leicester Royal Infirmary NHS Trust.
The Maxillofacial Department is a busy and expanding department, which undertakes the full range of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery services in Leicestershire for a population of over one million. There is a large volume of routine oral surgical referrals and maxillofacial trauma. Special interests of the department include Head and Neck Oncology, Oral and Facial Reconstruction, Facial Deformity including Cleft Lip and Palate problems, and Oral and Craniofacial Implants.
The fellow will work closely with the consultants designated above.
The fellow will work closely with the Head and Neck consultant team in the field of head and neck surgery.The fellow will be mentored in head and neck patient management, decision making protocols and contemporary management. The fellow will be mentored in surgical techniques including tumor ablation and neck dissection. They will spend a period of two weeks with the Head and Neck oncologists at the LRI.
Critically, the service also provides the full scope maxillofacial surgery, such as deformity, trauma, and Salivary gland surgery as well as Oral surgery. The attraction for the fellow will be the enormous volume and variety of maxillofacial pathology this department attracts.
Our new strategy, developed with the support and feedback of colleagues, patients, and partners, is our compass for the next seven years (2023-2030).
We have four primary goals:
• high-quality care for all,
• being a great place to work,
• partnerships for impact, and
• research and education excellence
And we will embed health equality in all we do - taking active steps to reduce the avoidable differences in healthcare that some people face, working in partnership with communities.
Our strategy is underpinned by new values and we will work to ensure they are an everyday reality for all:
• we are compassionate,
• we are proud,
• we are inclusive, and
• we are one team
This is an exciting moment as we look to the future with clarity on what we already do well and where we need to focus our energies to make an even bigger difference for the people we serve.
About the University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust:
The Leicester Royal Infirmary is an acute hospital with beds for each of the main specialties and contains the only Accident and Emergency Unit in the District.
The University Hospitals of Leicester are celebrating the opening of a new £48 million state-of-the-art Emergency Department in April 2017. The ED is the busiest single-site service in the UK.
There is a suite of 16 operating theatres with a 24 hour recovery area, and in addition there are 3 other outlying theatres.
The Sandringham Building which opened in 1980, provides Pathology, Medical Physics and Physiological Measurement departments, and separate, purpose built laboratories for Histopathology, Chemical Pathology and the Public Health Laboratory Service.
Medical Physics and Physiological Measurement occupy two floors, with accommodation for Radio Isotopes, E.C.G. diagnostic reporting service, E.E.G., E.N.T. measurements and many special procedures.
A large clinical skills centre is housed within the Robert Kilpatrick Clinical Sciences Building(RKCSB) of the University of Leicester is situated on the Royal Infirmary site. The ground floor of the RKSCB building is being converted into a dedicated simulation facility which will include state of the art facilities for delivering undergraduate simulation teaching and examinations. The new centre will open in Jan 2016.
The RKSCB also houses offices, including the Postgraduate Dean's Office, and research laboratories for the greater part of the University Departments of Medicine, Surgery, Psychiatry, Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Paediatrics, Community Health, Pathology, Pharmacology and Therapeutics.
The Windsor Building opened in November 1992, includes Acute wards, The Children’s Hospital, Integrated Medicine wards, Haematology and Bone marrow transplant wards, X-Ray, Pharmacy, Mortuary, Medical Illustration, Ophthalmic Outpatients, Child Development Centre, Staff Changing, and Kitchen/Dining area.
The Osborne Building opened in October 1997. It provides an integrated service including the Departments of Haematology and Oncology. New radiotherapy equipment has been installed and outpatient, inpatient and hostel facilities are available within the building. Regular meetings and lectures by invited speakers take place in the seminar suite within the Osborne Building.
Obstetric and all other women’s and neonatal services have been combined into the Women’s Hospital which opened in 1997. The centralisation of all these services is designed to improve the provision of women’s health in Leicestershire.
The Trust is currently planning a major reconfiguration of its services. This involves proposals for a Centre for Planned Care on the site of the Leicester General Hospital with the establishing of the Leicester Royal Infirmary and Glenfield Hospitals as sites delivering emergency services. The detail of services to be placed on each of these sites is currently the subject of debate with the particular involvement of clinicians.
DEPARTMENT OF MAXILLOFACIAL
BACKGROUND
The Department is based at the Leicester Royal Infirmary in the City Centre. There are dedicated clinic rooms onsite with support from nursing teams and other allied health professionals. The department also has its own dedicated prosthesis laboratory and technicians with a state of the art 3D printer and facilities.
The service has 14 theatre sessions per week, day case patients recover in the Ambulatory Surgical Unit (ASU) on level 2 of the Balmoral Building whilst our inpatients are on Level 3 in Ward 9 or within the Kinmonth Unit (high dependency step down unit).
MEDICAL STAFF
Mr Nahul Patel Head of Service for Maxillofacial, Orthodontics and Restorative
Dentistry
Ms Hazel Busby-Earle Consultant for Facial Trauma & Salivary Gland Diseases, Clinical Director for MSS
Mr Chris Avery Consultant Oral & Maxillofacial Surgeon
Mr Manish Mair Consultant in Head and Neck Surgery
Mr Phillip Ameerally Consultant in Head and Neck Surgery
Mr Sundarraj Laksmiah Locum Consultant in Head and Neck surgery
Mr Christopher Vinall Consultant for Orthonathic Surgery
Mr Raghav Kulkarni Consultant Consultant Oral & Maxillofacial Surgeon
Consultant Vacancy Consultant in Head and Neck Surgery (post filled from Feb 2025)
1.0 wte Speciality Fellow (H&N)
7.5 wte Speciality Doctor
8.0 wte Trust Grade
1.0 wte Trust Grade Rational Post (This post rotates th
This advert closes on Tuesday 8 Apr 2025