Tina Woods

Tina Woods is a mission-driven social entrepreneur and system architect bringing diverse stakeholders together in shared endeavours to improve and level up health, working at the cross-section of science, technology, investment and policy/government. She is Co-Founder and CEO of Business for Health, a business-led social venture developing a Business Framework for Health including metrics and methodologies to help employers, businesses and investors enhance and level up health, bringing in ‘Health’ into ‘ESG’ mandates to support long-term sustainable innovation and investment in preventative health and care.  She is also Founder and CEO of Collider Health and works with private, public and third sectors. She is the Healthy Longevity Champion for the National Innovation Centre for Ageing, aiming to accelerate ageing intelligence and secure UK Research & Innovation's strategic aims to ensure better health, ageing and wellbeing in the UK and globally. Tina’s book, ‘Live Longer with AI: How artificial intelligence is helping us extend our healthspans and live better too' was published in October 2020. Tina sits on various advisory groups, including the BSI standards group for AI in health and care, and the Ada Lovelace Advisory Board on Health Inequalities.  She is also a trustee for the British Society for Research on Ageing.

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Keeping a healthy workforce thriving in a hybrid world

There has been a transformational shift in the way the workforce and businesses define work culture. Borne out of developing technology but massively accelerated by the onset of the pandemic, nearly half of the UK’s workforce has now embraced hybrid working.

How can businesses bust the January blues?

While the festive period is typically associated with joy and celebration, the start of the year is marked by the ‘January blues.’

Flexibility will be the key to employee retention

The UK faces a crisis in the workforce as record numbers of people leave employment and increasing levels of economic inactivity make the cost-of-living crisis even more challenging for the most vulnerable people.