Mari Lloyd-Williams FLSW FRCP is a Welsh nurse who specialises in palliative care. She taught at the University of Liverpool for more than two decades before moving to Liverpool John Moores University in 2022.
Mari Lloyd-Williams was born to Margaret Winter Davies and county councillor Lloyd Williams. [1] She was educated at Leicester Medical School. [2] In 2000, she became a Consultant and Honorary Senior Lecturer for the University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust and LOROS Hospice after completing her palliative medicine training with them. [2] In 2002, she moved to the University of Liverpool, where she became a Senior Lecturer and was later granted a personal chair at the School of Population, Community and Behavioural Sciences in 2003. [2] In 2022, she moved to Liverpool John Moores University and became Professor of Palliative and Supportive Care. [3] She also holds an honorary consultant position in palliative medicine with the Marie Curie Hospice, Liverpool and the Liverpool clinical commissioning group. [3]
As an academic, Lloyd-Williams specialises in palliative care. [3] [4] Among her work in palliative care includes the leadership of a project involving more than a hundred elderly people in a rural village. [5] With the support of The Prince's Countryside Fund, she was granted a Churchill Fellowship in 2019 for the purposes of traveling to the Faroe Islands and Ireland to "[develop] volunteer-led palliative care facilities in rural communities". [4] She told the Denbighshire Free Press that she would use the Fellowship funds for a visit to Giljagarður, an elderly community in the Faroese town of Leirvík. [5]
She was elected Fellow of the Learned Society of Wales in 2011. [6] She is also a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and a Fellow of the Royal College of General Practitioners. [6]
Mari Lloyd-Williams FLSW FRCP is a Welsh nurse who specialises in palliative care. She taught at the University of Liverpool for more than two decades before moving to Liverpool John Moores University in 2022.
Mari Lloyd-Williams was born to Margaret Winter Davies and county councillor Lloyd Williams. [1] She was educated at Leicester Medical School. [2] In 2000, she became a Consultant and Honorary Senior Lecturer for the University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust and LOROS Hospice after completing her palliative medicine training with them. [2] In 2002, she moved to the University of Liverpool, where she became a Senior Lecturer and was later granted a personal chair at the School of Population, Community and Behavioural Sciences in 2003. [2] In 2022, she moved to Liverpool John Moores University and became Professor of Palliative and Supportive Care. [3] She also holds an honorary consultant position in palliative medicine with the Marie Curie Hospice, Liverpool and the Liverpool clinical commissioning group. [3]
As an academic, Lloyd-Williams specialises in palliative care. [3] [4] Among her work in palliative care includes the leadership of a project involving more than a hundred elderly people in a rural village. [5] With the support of The Prince's Countryside Fund, she was granted a Churchill Fellowship in 2019 for the purposes of traveling to the Faroe Islands and Ireland to "[develop] volunteer-led palliative care facilities in rural communities". [4] She told the Denbighshire Free Press that she would use the Fellowship funds for a visit to Giljagarður, an elderly community in the Faroese town of Leirvík. [5]
She was elected Fellow of the Learned Society of Wales in 2011. [6] She is also a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and a Fellow of the Royal College of General Practitioners. [6]