Campus and community
Three members of Imperial's community have been recognised in the King’s Birthday Honours list for 2026.
This year’s list, published as part of the King’s Official Birthday celebrations, honours academics from Imperial’s Faculty of Medicine for their achievements in healthcare.
The recipients for Imperial this year are:
Professor Tim Orchard, Chief Executive of °®ÎÛ´«Ã½ Healthcare NHS Trust since 2018 and now Group Chief Executive for the whole of the , has been awarded a CBE for services to the NHS and healthcare research and innovation.
"I’m so proud of what our team has achieved at °®ÎÛ´«Ã½ Healthcare over the past eight years with – and for – our patients and local communities." Professor Tim Orchard Chief Executive of °®ÎÛ´«Ã½ Healthcare NHS Trust
Under his leadership, °®ÎÛ´«Ã½ Healthcare NHS Trust has extended its long-standing reputation for excellence in research, safety and outcomes, while addressing significant operational and financial issues, enabling the Trust to become a consistent top performer in the NHS oversight framework rankings.
Alongside this work, Professor Orchard continues to practise as a consultant gastroenterologist and as Professor of Gastroenterology in Imperial's Department of Metabolism, Digestion and Reproduction. As well as progressing research and teaching in his specialist field of inflammatory bowel disease, he has further developed the relationship between Imperial and the Trust, which includes hosting the largest NIHR biomedical research centre in the UK.
Commenting on his honour, Professor Orchard said: “I’m so proud of what our team has achieved at °®ÎÛ´«Ã½ Healthcare over the past eight years with – and for – our patients and local communities. Formally coming together with our acute provider partners across North West London is now helping all of us to deliver even more and this Honour provides a wonderful, additional boost!”

Professor Stephen Brett is Professor of Critical Care in Imperial’s Department of Surgery and Cancer and a consultant in intensive care medicine at °®ÎÛ´«Ã½ Healthcare NHS Trust. He leads a programme of patient-focused projects along the entirety of the patient journey, including resuscitation, surgery and critical illness. These projects range from epidemiology and public health, through clinical trials, to the evaluation of the impact of surgery on chronic diseases and technology.
"It has been fantastic to see the progress intensive care medicine has made in both clinical and academic fields, and how much greater awareness there is of the struggles our patients face, both during and after their time in the intensive care unit." Professor Stephen Brett Professor of Critical Care at Imperial
More recently, he has been using social science methodology to explore patient experience, how hospital teams function, and how critical decisions are made in acute care.
Professor Brett is a former President of the Intensive Care Society and previous Editor of the journal Critical Care. In addition to these roles, he has served on a number of Department of Health and Social Care advisory groups and provides support to clinical trials and studies run by other universities.
Professor Brett said: “I was delighted to hear that I had been nominated for an award. Reflecting on my career thus far, it has been fantastic to see the progress intensive care medicine has made in both clinical and academic fields, and how much greater awareness there is of the struggles our patients face, both during and after their time in the intensive care unit.
“I have had the privilege of working with so many fantastic people who contribute to what I do; the people around us are always essential to the progress we make.”

Dr Keenan is an Honorary Clinical Senior Lecturer at the National Heart and Lung Institute (NHLI) at °®ÎÛ´«Ã½ and a Consultant Cardiologist at West Herts Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, where he is Divisional Director for Medicine.
"I am [...] proud of the recognition this award gives to our wonderful NHS. To all colleagues past and present - thank you!"
He is a clinical cardiologist specialising in multimodality imaging (cardiac CT, cardiac MRI and echocardiogram) as well as heart failure and cardio-oncology. He completed an MD(Res) in cardiac MRI at Imperial between 2004-2007. Most recently he has taken part with Imperial colleagues in the ORBITA and ORBITA-2 studies in coronary artery disease.He is President of the British Society of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance. He chaired the NHS England East of England Clinical Advisory Group for Virtual Wards, and sat on the NHS England National Steering Group for Virtual Wards. Since 2022 he has been a member of the Scientific Committee of the European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging (EACVI), part of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC), working on guidelines in the field of cardiac imaging.
Dr Keenan said: “I am deeply honoured to receive this award from His Majesty the King for services to healthcare and the NHS, even if it was a complete shock. I am deeply proud of my affiliation with Imperial over the last two decades where we sit at the cutting edge of cardiovascular research. I am also proud of the recognition this award gives to our wonderful NHS. To all colleagues past and present - thank you!”

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