Child
- About
- Meet The Team
- Dr James Oliver
- Dr Fiona Willcoxson
- Dr Shuba Barwick
- Dr James R. Bentham
- Dr Elspeth Brown
- Dr Antigoni Deri
- Dr Dominic Hares
- Dr Helen Michael
- Dr Daniel Velasco-Sanchez
- Miss Carin Van Doorn
- Mr Imre Kassai
- Mr Giuseppe Pelella
- Cat Brown
- Kathryn Ashcroft
- Christine Helm
- Lyndsay Bamford
- Emily Exall
- Mike Fresson
- Grace Innes
- Beth Lunn
- Marie Wray
- Bianca Mhlanga
- Sarah Hibbert
- Alix Dunlop-Jones
- Jan Forster
- John Hobbs
- Hannah Shaw
- Rosie Brakefield
- Sara Moore
- Sam Bainbridge
- Dr Sara Matley
- Jayne Slack
- Conditions
- Dental Practitioners: Dental care in children at risk of Infective Endocarditis
- Looking after your child’s oral health
- Coming for an echocardiogram
- Outpatient Appointments
- Preparing to Come into Hospital for Surgery
- On Admission to the Children's Ward
- Visiting
- Operation Day
- Children's Intensive Care
- Daily Routine on Intensive Care
- Managing your child's discomfort
- Going Home
- Children's Cardiac MRI Scan
- Cardiac Catheter
- Reveal Device
- Ablation Procedure
- Pacemakers
- INR and Warfarin
- Lifestyle and Exercise Advice
- School Advice
- Attachment
- Yorkshire Regional Genetic Service
- Advice & Support Groups
- Your Views
- Monitoring of Results
- Second Opinion
Dr James Oliver
Lead Clinician for Congenital Cardiology
Area of expertise
General Adult Congenital Heart Disease
Pulmonary hypertension in Adult Congenital Heart Disease
Heart disease in pregnancy
Biography
Qualified in Birmingham in 1996.
Trained in Clinical Pharmacology at the University of Edinburgh from 2001 to 2006
Awarded PhD in 2007 from the University of Edinburgh
Trained in general cardiology in Sheffield from 2006 to 2009 and in Adult Congenital Heart Disease in Leeds from 2009 to 2012
Worked as a locum consultant in Adult Congenital Heart Disease in Leeds for almost a year before taking up a substantive consultant post in July 2013
Specialist interests within your profession
Pulmonary hypertension
Co-investigator for the AIMS UK trial in Marfan Syndrome.