Michael Dixon (doctor)


Michael Dixon LVO, OBE, MA, FRCGP was chair of the NHS Alliance from 1998 to 2015 and is a past President of the NHS Clinical Commissioners. He also chairs the College of Medicine. He is a Visiting Professor at University College London and the University of Westminster and National Clinical Champion for Social Prescribing.

Career

Dixon studied psychology and philosophy at Oxford University before studying medicine at Guy’s Hospital. He is Senior Partner at College Surgery in Cullompton, Devon, where he has practiced as a GP since 1984. In 2007 he and his GP partners in Cullompton, Devon created the “Culm Valley Integrated Centre for Health”, which has been seen as a model for the future of general practice and was rated outstanding by the Care Quality Commission in 2015.
His national appointments have included membership of the National Leadership Network for Health and Social Care, the National Stakeholder Forum and National Steering Group for GP Commissioning. He is an Honorary Senior Fellow in Public Policy at HSMC University of Birmingham, Honorary Senior /Lecturer in Integrated Health at the Peninsula Medical School.
He has been active in the commissioning movement since the early 1990s, when he co-founded the Mid Devon Family Doctors Commissioning Group. Since then he has campaigned for the right of GPs and practices to have a role in improving local health and services and been a prime mover in developing GP commissioning models that will allow them to do so. He sat on the National Executive of the National Association of Commissioning GPs - founded in 1993, and was a co-writer of its document “Restoring the Vision”, which was commissioned by the then Minister of Health, Alan Milburn. When NACGP became NHS Alliance in 1998, he was elected Chairman and has continued in this role by annual election until he announced his retirement in 2015. He is a frequent speaker and national advisor on GP commissioning and co-author of a number of books and chapters in this area and A Practical Guide to Primary Care Groups and Trusts.
Past ministerial appointments include Chair of the NHS LifeCheck Board and Practice Based Commissioning Advisor to Lord Darzi. He is a past President of the Health Writers Guild and was previously Senior Advisor of the King’s Fund and Steering Group member of the King’s Fund Enquiry on General Practice
Since 2010, he has been Chair of the College of Medicine, which emphasises the importance of non-biomedical interventions in health and care, which include social prescription, lifestyle interventions and complementary and traditional approaches.
He was listed in the top ten most influential clinical leaders in the Health Service Journal 2013. He has been listed among the Pulse most influential GPs for several years.

Honours and appointments

He has pioneered social prescribing in his Devon GP practice for several years, arguing it is an answer to over medicalisation and soaring health costs. Social prescription facilitates patients with a range of social, psychological and physical problems to access a wide range of local interventions and services provided by the voluntary and volunteer sectors and others. In 2015 he co-founded the National Social Prescribing Steering Group, which he co-chairs. This leads a network created in 2016, which has over 500 members active in social prescription with eight Clinical Commissioning Groups now offering universal provision. In June 2016 he was appointed National Clinical Champion for Social Prescription and his ambition is that social prescription should be available to every patient and GP.

Complementary medicine

His other main field of interest is complementary medicine. Co-author of The Human Effect, he believes in “patient centred medicine” and the role of the patient in self healing. Reviewing the book, David Short, Emeritus Professor of Clinical Medicine at the University of Aberdeen writes "the authors urge doctors to move beyond the idea of the body as a machine. If doctors do indeed regard their patients in this way, then this book is timely. One cannot help feeling that what is advocated is really a return to best practice of family doctors of an earlier generation. Perhaps the authors recognise this in saying 'what is called for is less of a revolution and more of a revival'"
Dixon describes his approach to medicine in the BBC Radio 4 programme which especially focuses on prevention and looking at the whole lives of patients. He argues that it is beneficial to 'break down the boundaries' between orthodox and complementary medicine, and that an increasing number of GPs are doing so.
In a paper for the British Journal of General Practice he writes "it seems that the physician healer is now poised to rise again like a phoenix, not on a wave of nostalgia, but because modern science demands it. Placebo research and psychoneuroimmunology are beginning to clarify a role in which caring is no longer an act of compassion or indulgence but has everything to do with curing or in the preferred modern term 'effectiveness'.
He was the medical director of The Prince's Foundation for Integrated Health, which closed in 2010 after its finance director was arrested for stealing £253,000 from the organisation. Dixon is a director of the College of Medicine which opened in 2010 with former Chair of the General Medical Council Sir Graeme Catto as its President. He has been criticised by professor of complementary medicine and alternative medicine campaigner Edzard Ernst for advocating the use of complementary medicine. Ernst said that the stance of the NHS Alliance on complementary medicine was "misleading to the degree of being irresponsible." Ernst had previously been sympathetic to building a bridge between complementary and mainstream medicine, co-writing an article with Michael Dixon in 1997 on the benefits of such an approach. Ernst and Dixon write "missed diagnoses by complementary therapists giving patients long term treatments are often cited but in the experience of one of the authors are extremely rare. It can also cut both ways. A patient was recently referred back to her general practitioner by an osteopath, who was questioning, as it turned out quite correctly, whether her pain was caused by metastates. Good communication between general practitioner and complementary therapist can reduce conflicts and contradictions, which otherwise have the potential to put orthodox medicine and complementary therapy in an either/or situation."

Publications

In his free time, he gardens and fishes whenever possible. His wife, Joanna, is a professional artist and they have three children, two of whom are GPs and the other working in health and science policy.