Dame Sarah Gilbert and Baroness Floella Benjamin receive Honorary Fellowships from FDS
08 Mar 2022
Dame Sarah Gilbert and Baroness Floella Benjamin today received Honorary Fellowships from The Faculty of Dental Surgery (FDS) at the Royal College of Surgeons of England1, for their contributions to dentistry. They were given the prestigious awards at the FDS’s Diplomates Ceremony2, at the College’s flagship building in Lincoln’s Inn Fields, London.
Dame Sarah, a Professor of Vaccinology at the University of Oxford, co-created the Oxford–AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine. It has widely been credited with saving countless lives in the UK and around the world. By January 2022, a year after the vaccine was first administered, 50 million AstraZeneca vaccines had been given in the UK, and around 2.5 billion doses had been distributed to more than 170 countries.3
Baroness Floella Benjamin became well known for her role as a much loved children’s television presenter, most notably on Play School. In 1987 Baroness Benjamin founded her own television production company and produced hundreds of children’s programmes, several of which have received nominations and awards. Since 1973, Baroness Benjamin has been campaigning for diversity both in front of, and behind, the camera. She advises the BBC on its diversity policies and sits in the House of Lords, where she passionately promotes children’s welfare.
Baroness Benjamin was awarded her Honorary Fellowship of the Faculty of Dental Surgery for her campaigning work on children’s oral health. She has raised awareness in parliament of the need to improve children’s oral health on a number of occasions, and supported the Faculty’s call to introduce tooth-brushing schemes in nurseries. For instance, in 2017, Baroness Benjamin held a debate in the House of Lords to find out what action the Government was taking to address the problem of child tooth decay, in light of an oral health survey that showed 25 per cent of five-year-olds had experienced dental decay.4 Then, in 2019, Baroness Benjamin questioned what the Government planned to do to tackle the oral health problems of “hard to reach children”, especially those in deprived areas of the country.5
Mr Matthew Garrett, Dean of the Faculty of Dental Surgery at the Royal College of Surgeons of England, said: “Both Dame Sarah and Baroness Floella Benjamin are richly deserving of their Honorary Fellowships. Dame Sarah has saved countless lives by spearheading the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine. The pandemic exacerbated existing health inequalities, including in children’s oral health. It caused enormous disruption to dentistry. In March 2020, all routine treatments such as fillings and check-ups were suspended. Services only began to resume last summer. The vaccination rollout has helped us to get services up and running again and to start to tackle the huge backlog that has built up, particularly in specialist dental services for children and vulnerable adults.
“It is difficult to overstate the importance of Dame Sarah’s work to our profession, our practice and our patients’ health and wellbeing. We are hugely indebted to, and grateful for, the brilliant work she and her team at Oxford undertook to develop the vaccine. On behalf of all of our Fellows and Members, I would like to say a sincere and heartfelt thank you to Dame Sarah and her team at Oxford.”
Mr Garrett added: “Baroness Floella Benjamin has been a tireless advocate for the welfare and education of children around the world. Through her role as a much-loved children’s television presenter, writer, actress, working peer and Vice President of Barnardo’s, she has campaigned for and supported children. This includes her work in promoting children’s oral health. She has also fought to reduce inequality in society. We are delighted to welcome her as an Honorary Fellow at the Faculty of Dental Surgery.”
On receiving her prestigious award, Dame Sarah Gilbert said: “I am very grateful to the Faculty of Dental Surgery, at the Royal College of Surgeons of England, for recognising the work that I carried out with the support of a fantastic team. It is wonderful to receive recognition from another part of the healthcare service in this way.”
Baroness Floella Benjamin said: “This is a special achievement. I am thrilled to be appointed an Honorary Fellow. Childhood lasts a lifetime and good oral health is one of the most important things doctors and dentists can influence by empowering and supporting young patients.”
The ceremony, which welcomed new Members and Fellows to the FDS, also saw Professor Kevin O’ Brien made an Honorary Fellow. He is Emeritus Professor of Orthodontics at the University of Manchester and a recently retired Honorary Consultant Orthodontist at the Manchester Dental Hospital. He has an international reputation for research excellence in orthodontics, which has been recognised through numerous international research awards. In addition, Professor Derek Portwood, who founded the Centre for Unemployment Studies, was made a Fellow by election.
Notes to editors
1. The Faculty of Dental Surgery at the Royal College of Surgeons of England is an independent professional body committed to helping the entire dental team achieve and maintain excellence in practice and patient care. It provides world-class courses and its qualifications are internationally recognised, including its new Membership of The Faculty of Dental Surgery (MFDS) examination.
2. The Honorary Fellowships are awarded by the Faculty of Dental Surgery for those who have been outstanding in dental science or a related science, or have been of singular service to the Faculty. They are awarded at Diplomates Ceremonies welcoming new Members and Fellows to the Faculty.
3. One year anniversary of UK deploying Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine - GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)
4. Children: Oral Health - Question: 4 Dec 2017: House of Lords debates - TheyWorkForYou
5. Children: Oral Health - Question: 12 Mar 2019: House of Lords debates - TheyWorkForYou
6. The Faculty of Dental Surgeons (FDS) surveyed over 300 dental surgeons between 10 June 2021 and 25 July 2021 for its report ‘A resumption of dental services – one year on'. It found that four in ten (39%) dental surgeons from the Faculty of Dental Surgery (FDS) at the Royal College of Surgeons of England (RCS England) predicted it will take at least a year to clear the backlog of patients waiting for dental care, in the wake of COVID-19. A quarter (25%) of respondents said that most patients on their waiting lists were children. The press release and full report can be read here: Four in ten dental surgeons say it will take at least a year to clear the backlog from COVID-19 — Royal College of Surgeons (rcseng.ac.uk)
7. For more information, please contact the RCS England Press Office: Tel. 0207 869 6052/6047; or email: pressoffice@rcseng.ac.uk. For out-of-hours media enquiries, please telephone: 0207 869 6056