Public Service:
Dr. Rupert
Whitaker is the founder and executive chairman of the Tuke
Institute. For almost 30 years, he has worked in the fields of
medicine and community advocacy with a keen focus on empowering
individuals to care for their own health. Following the death of
his partner Terry Higgins from AIDS in 1982, he co-founded
the Terrence
Higgins Trust—now Europe’s leading
HIV and sexual health charity—and helped establish the prevention,
mental health, and peer-led social services there. He has been a
leading civil advocate for people with HIV and chronic illness,
appearing on television and in the news-media with his expertise
and personal experiences since the early 1980s. Based on seminal
papers of his in public health that he presented at the Montreal
and San Francisco International AIDS Conferences, and his
appearance on the prime-time McNeil-Lehrer News Hours in New York
as an immigrant with HIV, he lead the international response to
anti-HIV immigration laws in the USA and elsewhere. He is a
long-term survivor with HIV disease and stroke, which have caused
permanent disability requiring extensive treatment. From this, he
brings both his personal and professional knowledge of chronic
illness to his work with the Tuke Institute in the development of
patient-centred medical services. It is his vision for relevant
medical services that has driven his community and civil work for
the last three decades.
Training and practice:
Dr. Whitaker
undertook 14 years of clinical and scientific training in the UK,
Canada, and USA, qualifying as a doctor in psychiatry, neurology,
and immunology. He was a University Scholar at Boston University
for five years in the nationally prestigious University Professors
Program, and was awarded a national American Fellowship in Public
Health, followed by three post-doctoral Fellowships at Tufts New
England Medical School, the University of Michigan Medical School,
and the University of California San Francisco School of Medicine.
His university positions have been as a senior consultant, honorary
senior research fellow, instructor in medicine, and staff
scientist, working in the UK and USA, in community services,
hospitals, and private clinics. Dr. Whitaker is a clinical
specialist in biobehavioural medicine and chronic illness. His
scientific expertise lies primarily in clinical and laboratory
research in psychiatry, neurological and viral immunology, public
health, and medical service-systems.
Media history:
Dr. Whitaker
has been a leading community advocate for people with HIV and
chronic illness, appearing on television and in the news-media with
his expertise and personal experiences since the early 1980s. At
the age of 19, he first went on television (Granada TV) as an
openly gay man with what was then symptomatic Gay-Related Immune
Deficiency to raise awareness about the coming problem of HIV in
Britain. Over time, he has appeared in news articles,
documentaries, and commentaries in various media including: Channel
4 and the Discovery Channel (“A Time of AIDS”, Nov. 1993), BBC2
(Horizon), BBC1 (Panorama), BBC Radio 2 (“Flared Brightly, Died
Young”), Radio 4 (“Reunion”; “PM Programme”), BBC Radio 5 Live, and
the McNeil-Lehrer News Hour (New York), and has also
been interviewed by various newspapers, including The Independent
(1, 2), The Independent on
Sunday, BBC
News online, The Guardian newspaper, and the Radio
Times.