speakers

Discover the speakers presenting at the RCM conference 2025.

Adeyanju Pinheiro-Aina

Performance and Resourcing Coordinator ,

Manchester City Council

Adeyanju is a Performance and Insight Consultant passionate about helping women and youth grow with intention and impact.

She supports women through clarity, insight, and strategic execution to build careers and businesses that are sustainable, profitable, and aligned with purpose.

Alongside her consulting, she leads a non-profit organisation focused on women and youth empowerment, delivering programmes that foster leadership, confidence, and economic independence.

She is married with two children, loves reading and traveling.

Adey’s involvement with the PROMISE Study centers on addressing the critical need for maternal health research for Black women. As a Black woman, she values this work because it provides an opportunity to change the narrative and contribute to improving maternity healthcare outcomes for Black women.

Alejandra PƩrez Avila

Midwife ,

Lewisham and Greenwich NHS Trust/UCL

Alejandra is a registered midwife and global health professional specialising in sexual and reproductive health, health inequities, and qualitative research. She holds an MSc in Global Health and Development from University College London. Her academic work focuses on the intersection of gender, race, and health policy, with her research project, a qualitative meta-synthesis on informed choice for women living with HIV in Brazil. Alejandra has four years of clinical experience in the NHS at Lewisham and Greenwich Trust, caring for diverse populations across community and hospital maternity settings. She has taken part in service improvement initiatives, including the Birth After Caesarean Section (BACS) Team, supporting informed decision-making for women whom have had a previous caesarean in the borough of Greenwich. She has worked at the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) Latin America and Caribbean Regional Office in Panama, contributing to regional analyses on sexual and reproductive health outcomes among Afro-descendant, Indigenous, and adolescent populations. Her work spans policy-oriented evidence review to address adolescent fertility rates and HIV amongst young people, as well as stakeholder engagement. Alejandra is committed to advancing equitable and culturally responsive health systems through research, policy, and practice.

Alice McInnes

Director of Midwifery,

NHS Tayside

Alice is currently the Director of Midwifery for NHS Tayside, a post she has held since February 2025. Prior to this, Alice worked as a Consultant Midwife both in Scotland and in London, having spent the majority of her career to date in South East London. Alice is passionate about ensuring high-quality midwifery care is accessible to all women, and believes strongly that we must create a better working environment for midwives to enable high quality care to be delivered. Women’s birthing conditions are midwives working conditions, and you cannot improve one without the other. Alice holds a Masters in Public Health, and it was through this that she began to research the psychological trauma midwives are exposed to through their work, and the long term impact this has on midwives well-being and how it changes the way in which we practice. She is keen now to look forward at how we can bring about real changes to support midwives to flourish and be supported in their careers both in Scotland and across the UK.

Alice Pooley

Medical Student,

Imperial College London

Alice is a medical student at Imperial College School of Medicine, and is currently in her fourth year, undertaking a BSc in Reproductive and Developmental Sciences. Her recent project has been featured in the CMV Congress 2025 in Naples, Italy. Alice is pursuing her interest in paediatric infectious diseases and aims to become involved in similar projects outside of her studies. At this conference she will share her findings on midwifery knowledge and practice experience of congenital cytomegalovirus.

We are unfortunately unable to allow your attendance to the RCM Conference

If you would like more information on pharmacy, please refer to the NHS website.

Visit the NHS website?

Cookie options

Some of these cookies are necessary to make the site work. We’d also like to use optional cookies to help improve your experience on the site. You can manage your optional cookie preferences below. Using this tool will set a cookie on your device to remember your preferences. Your preferences can be changed at any time.
For more detailed information about the cookies we use, see ourĀ Privacy Policy

Necessary Cookies

Necessary cookies enable core functionality. The website cannot function properly without these cookies, and can only be disabled by changing your browser preferences.

Analytical Cookies

Analytical cookies are used to collect and report information on how our website is used. This helps us to improve the website based on the needs and behaviour of our visitors.

Marketing Cookies

We use marketing cookies to help us improve the relevancy of advertising campaigns you receive.

This is intended for UK Healthcare professionals only.

Are you a UK Healthcare professional?

This site uses cookies to store information on your computer

Royal College of Midwives uses cookies for website functionality purposes. For more information, please review our privacy notice or review the settings tab.