Food Standards Scotland (FSS) has confirmed the appointment of four new Board members, who will help drive the organisation’s work in protecting consumers from food safety risks and promoting healthy eating.

Appointed by The Minister for Public Health, Women’s Health and Sport, Maree Todd MSP, the new Board members, Mrs Christina Bichan, Dr Paula Charlesworth, Mr Phillip Couser and Miss Kate Richards, will all serve for four years.

Mr Couser took up the role on November 14th, while Mrs Bichan, Dr Charlesworth and Miss Richards will begin their appointments from April 1st 2023.

Heather Kelman, chair of the FSS board, commented: “I am extremely pleased with the quality of candidates who put themselves forward during the recruitment process and believe we have found excellent new Board members, who will really help to shape the work we are involved in going forward.

“The four new members will bring a range of perspectives to the organisation, complementing the skills and experience of the Board members who shall continue beyond March 2023, and hopefully filling some of the gaps we shall experience when our three founding Board members step down.

“This is an extremely important time for our organisation, as Scotland continues to feel the impacts of our departure from the EU and the implications this has on consumer safety, and the cost of living crisis affects many aspects of our relationship with food. Our new appointments’ breadth of expertise will help ensure that we continue to protect Scottish consumers and promote healthy eating during these challenging times.”

The new Board members

Phillip Couser MBE has worked at senior levels in the NHS in Scotland since 2013. He is currently a non-executive director on the Board of NHS Lanarkshire. He was appointed as the Director of Data Driven Innovation in Public Health Scotland (PHS) on its formation in 2020; before retiring from this post in July 2021, he led PHS’s initial data and digital contribution to the pandemic response. Prior to PHS, Phillip was director for Public Health and Intelligence in NHS National Services Scotland, leading both Information Services Division and Health Protection Scotland.

Christina Bichan has over 20 years’ experience within the public sector, working both in a remote and rural island location and at a national level. With a Masters degree in Public Health and experience of leading performance, planning, quality improvement and governance functions within the NHS, Christina is based in Orkney and involved in a family owned food business. 

Kate Richards has experience of agriculture and food production in the public and private sectors. A farm vet in Aberdeenshire, she was also an official veterinarian to the Grampian Country Food Group and other commercial businesses. Leaving clinical practice, Kate provided advice on livestock health to the UK subsidiary of a global pharmaceutical company before joining Defra as a farm animal welfare veterinary advisor where she was promoted to scientific secretary to SEAC, the scientific advisory committee formed in response to the growing BSE crisis.

Dr Paula Charlesworth is a registered dietitian with a PhD in nutrition and physiology. She has worked in frontline NHS services, research and academia and brings regulatory experience, having served terms as a professional partner for the Health and Care Professions Tribunal Service, sitting on their Fitness to Practise, Investigatory Committee and Appeals Panels. Dr Charlesworth is currently a lay member and director of the Scottish Solicitors Discipline Tribunal and Lead Visitor for the Health and Care Professions Council, Education and Training Committee, reviewing academic programmes for education providers.