Professor Joan Condell joins senior UK leaders from academia, the NHS and industry to shape future medical science career pathways
Ulster University has welcomed the appointment of Professor Joan Condell to a major new UK-wide taskforce established to secure the future of medical science careers.
Launched by the Academy of Medical Sciences, the UK Medical Science Careers Taskforce brings together senior leaders from academia, the NHS, MedTech and the pharmaceutical industry to identify and address gaps across clinical and non-clinical career pathways.
Professor Joan Condell, Professor of Intelligent Technologies at Ulster University, is among a select group of experts from across the UK appointed to shape a national plan for strengthening the medical science workforce.
READ MORE: Northern Ireland’s Next AI Leap: From Experimentation to Maturity
Professor Joan Condell said:
“It is an honour to be asked to join such a prestigious taskforce with senior leaders from academia, the NHS, MedTech and the pharmaceutical industry. We will work together to specifically identify and address gaps across clinical and non-clinical career pathways.
“As a Professor in Intelligent Technologies I look forward to providing input from a discipline which is non-clinical, to help create a cohesive broader understanding to address the diverse needs of the UK healthcare system. This clinical and non-clinical taskforce fosters a culture of shared governance and collaborative leadership, which is vital for the success of healthcare organisations.”
Addressing critical workforce challenges
The taskforce has been convened at a pivotal time for UK medical science. Rapid advances in artificial intelligence (AI), data science and novel therapeutics are transforming medical research and creating new opportunities to improve patient outcomes and strengthen the UK’s global leadership in life sciences.
At the same time, the workforce is under significant strain. Career pathways for data scientists, research technicians and professionals working across MedTech and the pharmaceutical sector remain fragmented, with limited movement between the NHS, academia and industry.
Vacant clinical academic posts have risen by 71% in the past decade, there are 24% fewer researchers at senior lecturer level, and almost a third of clinical research staff are considering leaving UK clinical research within five years.
Dr Tony Wood FMedSci, Chief Scientific Officer at GlaxoSmithKline and co-chair of the taskforce, said:
“We’re at a pivotal moment for medical science as cutting-edge technology and innovative science come together in new ways to transform the field. Capitalising on this requires modern medical science careers that foster the right skills and enable people to thrive while building rewarding careers that help us tackle the health challenges we face today and in the future. This taskforce is an important opportunity to work across academia, industry, and the NHS to support more people moving into both clinical and non-clinical research careers and explore how we build the way forward together.”
Professor Sir Munir Pirmohamed FMedSci, NHS Chair of Pharmacogenetics at the University of Liverpool and co-chair of the taskforce, added:
“Supporting the next generation of medical scientists is essential, especially as they will become the future leaders driving medical innovation at a time of extraordinary advances in cutting-edge technologies. Yet current career pathways are far from ideal. If we are serious about realising our ambitions, we need a clear map of where the gaps lie and a plan for how to address them.”
Professor Andrew Morris CBE FRSE PMedSci, President of the Academy of Medical Sciences, said:
“Medical science is one of the UK’s greatest strengths. Our researchers have developed life-saving treatments, our clinical trials infrastructure played a defining role in the pandemic response and our life sciences sector is a genuine engine of economic growth across the country.
“Sustaining this position requires investment in the talented people who make it possible. The pipeline of clinical academics is under serious strain, career pathways between the NHS, academia and industry are fragmented, and without concerted action, the UK risks ceding ground to countries that are making workforce development a deliberate national priority.
“The Academy’s ambition is to make the UK the best place in the world to have a career in medical sciences, and this taskforce will provide the clarity and coordination that our life sciences sector needs. For the first time, we will have a detailed national map of where the gaps are, and a delivery plan backed by the organisations with the power to act on it.”
The taskforce will draw on evidence, stakeholder consultation and international comparisons to produce a national ‘gaps and fixes’ career pathways map and inform a fully endorsed cross-sector plan by December 2026. An open consultation will launch in spring 2026.
READ MORE: Legal Tech, AI and the Future of Justice: Why Northern Ireland Has a Global Opportunity
Taskforce Members
In addition to Professor Joan Condell of Ulster University, members of the UK Medical Science Careers Taskforce include:
Professor Wiebke Arlt FMedSci, Director of the MRC Laboratory of Medical Sciences, Medical Research Council
Dr Ben Challis, VP and Head of Translational Science & Clinical Development, AstraZeneca
Dr Miles Congreve, Chief Scientific Officer, Isomorphic Labs
Mark Cubbon, Chief Executive, Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust
Professor Dame Anna Dominiczak FMedSci, Regius Chair of Medicine, University of Glasgow and Chief Scientist (Health), Scottish Government
Professor Muzlifah Haniffa FMedSci, Deputy Chief Executive and Institute Director, Wellcome Sanger Institute
Dr Ruth McKernan CBE FMedSci, Senior Advisor, SV Health Investors
Professor Sir Munir Pirmohamed FMedSci, NHS Chair of Pharmacogenetics, University of Liverpool
Roland Sinker CBE, University of Cambridge
Professor Rosalind Smyth CBE FMedSci, Vice-President (Clinical), Academy of Medical Sciences and Professor of Child Health, UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health
Dr Kelly Vere MBE, Director, UK Institute for Technical Skills & Strategy, University of Nottingham
Dr Tony Wood FMedSci, Chief Scientific Officer, GlaxoSmithKline
Ulster University will play an active role in shaping the future of medical science careers across the UK, ensuring that expertise in intelligent technologies and data-driven innovation contributes to national workforce planning and healthcare transformation.
Sync NI's Spring 2026 magazine explores innovation and collaboration transforming Northern Ireland's technology ecosystem
This issue features exclusive insights from industry leaders on AI transformation, cybersecurity evolution, legal technology innovation, and how strategic partnerships between academia and business are accelerating real-world impact across the region.
Read the Spring 2026 edition free online →
Stay connected with NI's tech community: