I
first met Mike Pittilo in the mid 1990s during the early
days of the development of the Prince of Wales Foundation
for Integrated Health (PFIH). He and I found ourselves
working side by side on the Education and Training Working
Group, one of four groups set up at the suggestion of
the Prince of Wales to consider how orthodox and complementary
and alternative medicine (CAM) might work more closely
together. I was immediately struck by Mike’s lovely
sense of humour, easy manner (he was always insistent
that it was ‘Mike’ never ‘Professor’),
great enthusiasm and profound knowledge of all aspects
of medical training - all put to good use as the group
developed its guidelines for integrating CAM and conventional
medicine for the benefit of patients. The work done
then formed a cornerstone of the seminal Discussion
Document, “Integrated Healthcare: a way forward
for the next five years?” published by the
fledgling PFIH in 1997. When the House of Lords
Select Committee on Science and Technology published
its report on CAM in 2000, the Department of Health
(DH) responded to the call by the Select Committee to
bring in statutory regulation of herbal medicine practitioners
and acupuncturists by deciding to set up two independent
regulatory working groups, one on acupuncture and one
on herbal medicine to see how best to implement this
policy. As Chair of the European Herbal and Traditional
Medicine Practitioners Association, I was asked by the
DH to sit on the interviewing panel to select the chair
for the new DH Herbal Medicine Regulatory Working Group
(HMRWG) on Herbal Medicine. When I received the DH’s
list of those on the shortlist for the job, I immediately
saw there was a glaring omission – the name of
Mike Pittilo was missing. I have never ceased to thank
my lucky stars that my request to add Mike’s name
to the list of interviewees was accepted by the DH.
In the interview, he was simply outstanding and the
decision to offer him the job was unanimous: what an
inspired choice he turned out to be! The Civil Servant
in charge at the time was called Gordon Brown which
sometimes made for some hilarious misunderstandings
when we on the regulatory working group casually dropped
into the conversation that the two men working out our
professional future were Gordon Brown and Michael Pittilo. Over
the next decade as the path towards statutory regulation
of this sector underwent a series of twists, turns and
reversals, Mike used good humouredly to tease me about
that interview saying that we had underplayed just what
a tough job it would turn out to be. When he asked our
Gordon Brown how much time he would have to allocate
to the project, the Civil Servant replied, “Oh
perhaps just a few hours a week at the most.”
The reality was that over the next nine years, it was
for Mike often another full time job on top of his extremely
busy academic career.
When
he accepted the role of Chair of the HMRWG, he was foundation
dean of the faculty of health and social care sciences
at Kingston University and St George's Medical School,
part of the University of London. Shortly afterwards
in 2001, he was appointed pro vice-chancellor at the
University of Hertfordshire where his responsibilities
included academic planning, quality assurance and learning
and teaching, along with the establishment of a postgraduate
medical school and a school of pharmacy. In September
2005, when the work on regulation was about to enter
a new and yet more demanding phase, he took up the position
of principal and vice-chancellor at Aberdeen's Robert
Gordon University (RGU). How on earth he managed it
all, none of us involved with the regulatory working
groups will ever know. Despite taking on the onerous
role of Chair of the DH Steering Group on the statutory
regulation of practitioners of acupuncture, herbal medicine
and traditional Chinese medicine in June 2006, he simultaneously
managed to transform his university’s standing.
RGU was quoted as the best modern UK university in The
Times Good University Guide for 2009 and 2010 and
Mike reinvigorated the university's research strategy
so that RGU achieved outstanding results in the Research
Assessment Exercise 2008, with more than 70 per cent
of its research classified as of international quality.
At the same time, from 2003 until last year, he was
also a hard-working trustee of the PFIH.
In
the meantime, Mike was coping with the constant demands
of the often turbulent process of bringing about regulation
of herbalists, acupuncturists and practitioners of traditional
Chinese medicine. The Steering Group he chaired for
almost two years, needed the skills of a top negotiator
since it involved brokering agreement between groups
who for many years had been at loggerheads. In addition,
it needed a good knowledge of medicines law, of Government
health regulation policy, of standards of education
and a clear view at all times of the interests of patients
who wished to access these CAM modalities. Mike discharged
these duties with lightness of touch and good humour
that diffused difficulties and brought people to their
senses and together. Throughout 2007 and through the
early part of 2008, not only did he chair meetings every
three weeks of the DH regulatory steering group, but
he also managed to find time to write the steering group’s
final report, overseeing its editing and publication
in May 2008. According to Mike’s obituary in The
Scotsman, his report to ministers from the Department
of Health steering group on "Statutory Regulation
of Practitioners of Acupuncture, Herbal Medicine, Traditional
Chinese Medicine and other Traditional Medicine Systems"
remains one of the most downloaded publications from
the Universities Institutional Repository.
What
very few people around him knew was that all the time
Mike was chairing the DH steering group, he was being
treated for kidney cancer that had spread first
to his hip and then to his brain. Never for a moment
did he complain about his illness or the chemo and radiotherapy
he was enduring. When I went with him to present the
steering group report to the Health Minister, Ben Bradshaw,
in June 2008, Mike left University College Hospital
on crutches to come to the meeting. Three weeks earlier,
his hip had fractured whilst he was staying in a London
hotel. He told me that whilst lying prone on the floor
in his room, he rang down to reception to ask for help
and if they could kindly give him his bill. In the event,
the bill was pushed under the door and he had to phone
again to get the ambulance he needed to get him to A&E.
I said to him that sometimes it paid to make a fuss;
he just laughed it off!
He
never allowed any of this to interfere with his chosen
tasks. On 9th February, a week before he died, he wrote
a letter to The Times which reiterated the
reasons why statutory regulation of practitioners of
herbal medicine and acupuncture was essential... it
is worthwhile reproducing it here:
'In
June 2006 Jane Kennedy established a steering group
convened by myself to prepare the ground for the regulation
of those using acupuncture and herbal medicine along
with other traditional medicine systems practised in
the UK. We reported in May 2008.
There
was a great deal of criticism of the report and a public
consultation by the DH has recently been completed.
The report’s recommendations are entirely consistent
with health policy over the past decade. A previous
consultation on regulating herbal medicine and acupuncture
received overwhelming support resulting in a timeframe
for regulation being set by the DH that has not been
adhered to.
Resistance
comes mainly from scientists who say that statutory
regulation will give credit to disciplines where the
evidence base is very thin. The forceful nature of the
criticism has resulted in some universities withdrawing
programmes, even where there was scientific content
that would have helped to inform critical appraisal
of evidence. The steering group placed high emphasis
on improving the evidence base, even stating that it
should be mandatory for NHS funding.
This
should, however, proceed alongside implementing statutory
regulation and not as a prerequisite to it. There is
very high public demand for herbal medicine and acupuncture.
The public deserve to be protected as much as possible.
Statutory regulation will enable this.'
Mike
Pittilo was a man of many parts and popular wherever
he went. He was the author of publications on parasitology
and atherosclerosis. In his spare time - how did he
find it? – he enjoyed hill-walking, photography
and was a expert clay pigeon shot as well as enjoying
good wine and company. He will be sorely missed by those
who knew him as an inspiring leader, close colleague
and warm-hearted friend. We in the Integrated Medicine
Community owe him a huge debt of gratitude and we extend
our sincerest condolences to his wife Carol, a practising
GP.
Michael
McIntyre
26/2/10
|
| Please
report broken links on this page to secretary@bhma.info
Some of the documents
referred to on this page are pdf documents.
They
can be viewed using Adobe Acrobat viewer which
can be downloaded free from www.adobe.com.
|
|