Black History Month is an opportunity for everyone in all walks of life to celebrate the contributions of our black colleagues, to educate one another on the inequalities experienced by people from BAME backgrounds and to inspire one another to maintain and further develop an inclusive and diverse culture in society which is supportive and welcoming for all.

At North Cumbria Integrated Care NHS Foundation Trust we are proud of our International employees every day.

NCIC project manager Dolapo Olaniyan, who works at Parkhouse in Carlisle, and Consultant Ajibade Adeleke (Femi), who works at the Cumberland Infirmary, explained what Black History Month means to them.

Dolapo grew up in Nigeria and has an BSc (Hons) in microbiology from the University of Lagos and an MA in Power, Participation and Social Change from Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex.

She said: “Currently, I work with the Delivery Support Team (PMO) at North Cumbria Integrated Care NHS Foundation Trust, as a Programme Manager. I currently manage the Outpatients Improvement Programme, as well as Cost Improvement Programme for Emergency Care and Medicine.”

Dolapo really enjoys working with stakeholders across different care groups, services, specialities and improvement teams.

She said: “I enjoy collaborating with diverse people from different backgrounds, and teaming up with professionals to transform services, processes and ensure sustainable change is achieved for the main purpose of improving patient care and attaining outstanding service delivery.”

Dolapo is a keen advocate of Black History Month.

She said: “For me, Black History Month is a reminder of the authenticity of my story, my journey, and the chance to tell them in my own words. It’s a time to find the missing chapters and acknowledge the current chapters of my heritage and culture as I share them with the world. It’s an avenue for critical consciousness; educating the minds of others to demystify stereotypes or ideas they have misconstrued about black people, their origin and culture.

“For instance, like I have told my story briefly here, other young, black women like me will see no barriers, nor ceilings blocking their goals. They see that their ambitions and goals are valid, and impostor syndrome is but a thing of the mind. There is no impossibility!

Dolapo added: “Though some people think celebrating BHM marginalizes us, I see it as an opportunity to tackle racial discrimination head-on within our society by encouraging government, institutions, and corporations to advocate for diversity, equality, and inclusion.

“Campaigning for racially-inclusive curriculums, activities, and languages in schools, at events, as well as non-discriminatory workplace and government policies is another way to go.

“The NHS is one of the top five employers in the world, and the representation of black people is significantly low. In a century characterised by the most novel advances, as well as global responses to issues we have ever seen as humans, workplace discrimination, racism, is still a huge issue even within the NHS. Health inequalities also impact the wellbeing of many black people out there. It’s time to do better and find humanity where we lost it. We need to pay attention to these issues. 

“Let’s tell more success stories from black people, to encourage those who feel they have no chance due to their skin colour. Let’s be the best ally and by-stander, and consciously look out for one another. Celebrate the achievements of black people whose stories have been lost in the history curriculum, and how they have shaped culture, history, economic development.”

Dolapo says the values she mostly relates to at NCIC are ambition and collaboration.

She said: “I constantly seek new ways to improve not just my performance but that of the projects/programmes I am handling, with the overall goal in mind. So, when there’s a problem, I’d rather find a way around it or provide a solution to address it as soon as possible. While maintaining professionalism in all I do, I also like to stretch my confidence by trying new approaches to what I am doing, learning from others who are better at those approaches, and improving my capacity to deliver wherever I find myself.”

Femi

Adeleke Ajibade, who is known at NCIC as Femi, is originally from Lagos in Nigeria.

He started out in the NHS in 1998 at Central Middlesex Hospital, London. He has been at NCIC in Carlisle since July 2020.

His current role is Consultant in Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Lead for Risk Management and Pregnancy Loss Lead and Maternity Champion.

He described what Black History Month means to him.

He said: “Black History Month gives me the opportunity to appreciate the privileges and opportunities that have come my way in life and be grateful for those.”

Femi spoke about what his current job entails. He said: “I look after patients with fertility problems. Diabetes in pregnancy, women conceiving after pregnancy loss and intrapartum care.”

He described what he enjoys about his job. He said: “The opportunity to make a difference to the wellbeing of your patients with knowledge and clinical experience acquired over your carrier. I have always and will continue to enjoy obstetrics especially intrapartum care. The more I read and learn about it, the more fascinating it becomes despite the pressure of the job.” 

Femi is also on the GMC specialist register and a GMC & RCOG recognised clinical educator.