Zahid Chauhan
Zahid Chauhan | |
---|---|
Oldham Council Councillor for Alexandra Ward | |
Assumed office 2013 | |
Mayor of Oldham | |
In office May - August 2023 | |
Deputy Mayor of Oldham | |
In office 2022 – May 2023 | |
Personal details | |
Political party | Labour |
Occupation | Physician, politician |
Dr Zahid Chauhan OBE, FRCGP is a British general practitioner and Labour Party politician who has been councillor for Alexandra Ward on Oldham Council since 2013.[1] He served as mayor from May to August 2023, stepping down when his wife became ill. His office and chamber were at the Civic Centre near the town centre of Oldham.[2][3]
Political career
Dr Chauhan has been a Labour Councillor for the Alexandra Ward in Oldham since 2013.[4]
Dr Chauhan served as Cabinet Member for Health and Social Care from 2018 - 2022.[5]
During his tenure as Cabinet Member for Health and Social Care Dr Chauhan campaigned to invest more into mental health programmes to get people the support they need and make mental wellbeing a priority for the council with 16 programmes of work receiving funding.[6]
In 2020, Dr Chauhan introduced 'Ground-breaking health checks' for the people of Oldham, targeting local residents more at risk to deliver earlier intervention.[7]
He went on to serve as the Deputy Mayor of Oldham for the municipal year of 2022 - 2023.[8] Dr Chauhan donated his full year Deputy Mayoral allowance as a gesture to spur the Government into action to create the kind of society where no one, including hardworking low-paid workers, have to rely on donations to feed their family.[9]
Dr Chauhan was also the Parliamentary Candidate for Cheadle in the 2019 General Election.[10]
In 2022, the Liberal Democrats accused Dr Chauhan of failing to declare a series of payments from Oldham Council. Dr Chauhan responded to this, saying "I consider the false allegations made by the Liberal Democrats nothing but an attempt to smear my reputation. I vehemently deny any wrongdoing."[11]
Dr Chauhan was involved in a controversial incident in 2023 when he liked a tweet referring to Savid Javid as a 'coconut'. Dr Chauhan apologised for any distress caused and claimed it was an 'acknowledgment' of a tweet reply to an article he had posted earlier in the year, not an endorsement.[12]
In May 2023, Dr Chauhan was up for election for the fourth time in the Alexandra Ward, as part of the all out elections in Oldham. Chauhan was elected with the highest number of votes being 1,462[13] In August, he announced that he was stepping down from his role as mayor to care for his ailing wife.[3]
Charity
Dr Chauhan is the founder of the registered charity Homeless Friendly.[14]
In 2019, Dr Chauhan launched the 'Food banks for GP Surgeries' Scheme, designed to help patients in need. Dr Chauhan said 'By staging a foodbank, surgeries are not only improving health but taking a lead in raising awareness of the crippling poverty many people are now living in.'[15]
He campaigned during the COVID-19 pandemic in England to ensure that people who are homeless were vaccinated and organised clinics to vaccinate rough sleepers at high risk from the virus.[16][17][18] Dr Chauhan considers this work vaccinating people who are homeless as a 'badge of honour' and having done the right thing to save lives.
He was named by The Big Issue as one of their Changemakers for 2021 for vaccinating people who are homeless two months before their vulnerability was recognised in government advice.[19]
Honours and Distinctions
Dr Zahid Chauhan was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) for his "services to people who are homeless" in the 2020 New Year Honours[20] and was invested by Charles, Prince of Wales, on 12 March 2020.
He was also named as the Asian Business Leaders, Business Solving a Social Problem at their awards in 2018 [21]
In 2020 Dr Chauhan was listed as an Unsung GP Hero by Pulse Today for his tireless work in Practice, working out-of-hours shifts on top of remote consultations, and speaking with the media to help answer questions from the local community.[22]
Dr Chauhan was elected to Fellowship of the College of General Practitioners in 2021.
The Northern Asian Powerlist for 2022[23] was revealed in October with Dr Zahid Chauhan being named as 2022's Inspiring Professional.
Campaigns
He was the initiator of the campaign to set up a commemorative plaque at the Royal Oldham Hospital for the two nurses involved in the in vitro fertilisation of Louise Brown.[24]
In January 2021, Dr Chauhan wrote to the Government asking them to prioritise people who are homeless to receive the COVID vaccine. This letter was signed in support by The Big Issue, Depaul, Emmaus, Crisis and Homeless Link.[25] Dr Chauhan's campaign worked and the UK's Joint Vaccination Committee released new guidance in March 2021 saying people who are homeless should be prioritised in the rollout.[26]
Research Work
Dr Chauhan was the first volunteer recruited to the new Manchester Genes & Health study. He said: "British South Asians are underrepresented in research and have had terrible outcomes from the COVID pandemic. I am delighted to be the 50,000th volunteer for Genes & Health and the first for Manchester, bringing the research spotlight to health inequalities across England".[27]
During the COVID-19 pandemic, "It became apparent early on that ethnicity could be an independent risk factor for Covid-19 and that black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) people were facing worse outcomes than white people."[28] A group of GPs produced a risk tool called the Safety Assessment and Decision Scorecard to commemorate their deceased colleague Dr Saad Al-Dubbaisi. The scorecard was designed to allow GPs to decide their own risk.[28]
In January 2021, Dr Chauhan was part of a team that developed the published guidelines "to [support] the recovery and rehabilitation of adults with confirmed or suspected COVID-19 in Greater Manchester".[29]
General Practices
In 2022, a GP surgery co-run by Dr Chauhan was rated "requires improvement".[by whom?] Royton Medical Centre stated that the feedback had been picked up on and was being actioned.[30] Subsequently, the practice was reinspected in May 2023 and rated as "good".[31]
References
- ^ "Zahid Chauhan OBE". Oldham Council. 2021. Retrieved 11 January 2022.
- ^ "About the Mayor". Oldham Council. Retrieved 4 September 2022.
- ^ a b "Oldham Mayor steps back from duties after his wife is diagnosed with 'a very serious illness'". Oldham Evening Chronicle. 23 August 2023. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
- ^ Alexandra by election results 2013
- ^ New Cabinet Member for Health 2018
- ^ 'Real results' in Oldham's mental health mission
- ^ Ground-breaking health check launched for people of Oldham
- ^ Mayoral announcement 2022 - 2023
- ^ Deputy donates to the foodbank which “shouldn’t have to exist at all”
- ^ Cheadle Constituency Candidates for 2019
- ^ Oldham deputy mayor denies wrongdoing after Lib Dems make allegations
- ^ Oldham deputy mayor apologises for liking offensive tweet
- ^ Oldham Council local elections 2023- full list of results
- ^ Homeless Friendly
- ^ GP surgeries to host foodbanks in local scheme
- ^ "Oldham: Homeless prioritised for Covid-19 vaccine in UK first". Oldham Times. 13 January 2021. Retrieved 11 January 2022.
- ^ "Zahid Chauhan: Why we prioritised the homeless for Covid vaccination". Local Government Chronicle. 27 January 2021. Retrieved 11 January 2022.
- ^ "Covid-19: Oldham prioritises homeless in vaccine roll-out". BBC. 14 January 2021. Retrieved 11 January 2022.
- ^ "Changemakers 2022: Housing and homelessness". Big Issue. 10 January 2021. Retrieved 11 January 2022.
- ^ MEN New Years Honours List
- ^ Oldham Times, Asian Business Leaders Awards
- ^ Pulse Today - Unsung GP Hero
- ^ The Business Desk, Northern Asian Powerlist 2022
- ^ IVF Nursing Times
- ^ Government has ‘moral duty’ to give homeless priority on vaccines
- ^ Meet the Doctor on a quest to get the homeless vaccinated against COVID-19
- ^ British South Asian genetic study reaches record volunteer numbers
- ^ a b BAME GPs at higher risk
- ^ A guideline to supporting the recovery and rehabilitation of adults with confirmed or suspected COVID-19 in Greater Manchester
- ^ GP practice co-run by ex-Oldham cabinet member for health told to improve
- ^ GP Practice: Chapel Street[not specific enough to verify]