Paul Woodward

Paul Woodward

Paul Woodward joined the then-Sue Ryder Care in March 2007 as CEO following a highly successful international career in the pharmaceutical industry. The charity has since been renamed Sue Ryder.

Paul qualified as a chartered accountant in the early 70s and after a spell in the investment world in the City joined healthcare giant Beecham in its international division. The next 14 years were spent developing international markets and in 1990 he became business development director in Europe for the newly-formed SmithKline Beecham plc.

In 1995 Woodward was appointed marketing director for Schering AG in the United Kingdom and in 2000 became CEO and a member of the European Board. In 2006 he was awarded an Honorary Fellowship of the College of Pharmacy Practice and in 2007 a trustee of the FPA. Paul has attended the business schools of INSEAD, Oxford and Harvard.

He had a long history of involvement with voluntary sector organisations before joining Sue Ryder, with a special interest in family-planning issues.

 

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Health Bill amendment raises prospect of VAT victory

The House of Lords has voted for an amendment to the Health and Social Care Bill requiring government to report to Parliament on the VAT treatment of supplies used by charities providing healthcare services on behalf of the NHS. 

Paul Woodward, chief executive, Sue Ryder

Sue Ryder is to sell off its English homecare business to Allied Healthcare, the Nasdaq-listed health and social care provider, in a move that will see the charity totally exit the social homecare market in England after nearly 20 years.

Paul Woodward, chief executive, Sue Ryder Care

Sue Ryder has launched its own campaign to battle red tape on VAT announcing that it will lose £1m in irrecoverable VAT following the increase to 20 per cent beginning today.

Paul Woodward, chief executive, Sue Ryder Care

The latest Who’s Who encyclopaedic annual has been published with 16 new members from the charity sector.

Why weren't the staff given the chance to turn the home care component into a social enterprise? A social enterprise model would have almost guaranteed the same standard or better of care as is being currently delivered.

» Sue Ryder to sell English homecare business to private provider

Paul Woodward, chief executive, Sue Ryder Care

As Sue Ryder Care prepares for a period of great change and planned expansion over the next five years, Paul Woodward, the charity's chief executive, explains its strategy for future service provision.

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