Ministers are seeking to recruit a Non-Executive Director to the board of Health Research Authority (HRA).
The Health Research Authority (HRA) is an arm's length body of the Department of Health and Social Care. We protect and promote the interests of patients and the public by making it easy to do health and social care research that people can trust. We ensure research involves the public in its design and conduct, is ethical, safe, legal, more accessible, and transparent; provide timely, reliable approvals; and coordinate the wider system so studies progress smoothly from concept to completion. We have recently launched a new three strategy: Boosting Health research in the UK that will support delivery of the Governments 10-year health plan and growth mission.
The HRA’s Non-Executive Directors (NEDs) play a key role in the effective governance and leadership of the organisation. They contribute to the work of the board, both by actively participating in board discussions and more widely, contributing to the board’s governance, organisational culture, performance management and development of strategy for the HRA.
NEDs contribute to representing the HRA externally, maintaining (or developing where necessary) excellent relationships with a range of key partners and stakeholders such as the NHS, the public, industry, research funders and researchers, research ethics committees, other arms-length bodies and regulators.
They are also expected to contribute across a range of specific areas, including:
- ensuring the board listens to the public and patient voice;
- ensuring appropriate financial controls are in place and risks managed accordingly;
- contributing to the development and holding the board to account in delivery of strategy;
- ensuring that best practice is followed in leadership and people policies and behaviour.
About the HRA
The Health Research Authority is a non-departmental public body, set up in 2011 and established under The Care Act 2014 with a mission to protect NHS patients, their tissue and their data when they are involved in research. We have transformed UK research regulation and governance by simplifying processes, removing duplication and reducing timelines.
HRA has precise statutory duties laid out in the Care Act of 2014 to protect and promote the interests of patients and the public in health and social care research. It administers Research Ethics Committees to assess proposals for health and adult social care research by:
- work with people to understand what they want research to look like and act on this so that they can trust research.
- make sure that people taking part in research are treated ethically and fairly by reviewing and approving health and social care research studies that involve people, their tissue or their data.
- work with other organisations across the UK to make sure that, wherever you are, research studies can be set up smoothly and are always subject to the same scrutiny before they start.
- work with others to coordinate and standardise the way research is set up and managed.
- encourage and support transparency about research so that everyone can find out what research is taking place, and what it found.
- are one of the gatekeepers of patient data making sure that information is protected if it’s used for research.
- put in place and support the digital platforms to help research get set-up and managed in the UK.
How we work
Our 260 staff, who work at home and in our offices in Bristol, London, Manchester, Newcastle and Nottingham, provide specialist advice and learning to researchers about research ethics and governance. They also develop policies concerning research ethics and governance and support our committees and advisory groups to deliver our services. Our staff work with users of our services to design and put in place the digital systems used by the sector to set up studies. and effectively administer the organisation.
We could not operate without our HRA Community. The Community is made up of our Research Ethics Committees (REC) members, Confidentiality Advisory Group (CAG) members, and our Public Involvement Network (PIN) - which includes members of the public who have experience of, or have been impacted by, research.
They all make an invaluable contribution to our work and the experience of people taking part in research. They help us make sure that people can trust the research that we approve, so the research findings can improve care. They give their time generously, enabling the HRA to operate efficiently and respond rapidly when needed.
To deliver our ambition to make it easier to do research that people can trust and ensure that health and social care research is conducted with and for everyone, it is important that we are informed by a range of insights and experiences that reflect the population we serve.
We can make better decisions by working with a diverse group of people and we work with our HRA Community to ensure working with us is a positive experience, open to everyone.
The HRA has a robust
governance framework in place with the Board’s terms of reference set out in
the HRA’s standing
orders and standing financial instructions.
Board meetings are usually held at: 2 Redman Place, London, E20 1JQ.
Upcoming meeting dates:
18 March 2026
20 May 2026
15 July 2026 (private session)
16 September 2026
18 November 2026