He is married to Lesley Doyal and they have two children and four grandchildren. He lives in central London and in Perugia, Italy.
Early career
Doyal worked for over two decades at Middlesex University (then Middlesex Polytechnic), developing and teaching a course on the natural and social sciences, political and moral philosophy, as well as politics and philosophy of technology.
In 1986 he was made Principal Lecturer in Philosophy and the same year he published Empiricism, Explanation and Rationality, coauthored with Roger Harris, a popular introduction to philosophy of social sciences.
Medical ethics and law
In the 1980s he became interested in ethics and law applied to medicine and at University College and The Middlesex Hospitals joint medical school he organised and jointly taught on a part-time basis on the subject.[1] The Nuffield Foundation gave him a grant to produce, write and direct a video library and associated teaching materials on informed consent, which was published in 1990.[1]
Doyal's areas of academic interest in clinical ethics concern the moral foundations of the duties of clinical care, informed consent, medical research, passive and active euthanasia, the rationing of scarce health care resources, the rights of children and the boundaries of respect for confidentiality.
Until his retirement, Doyal was an honorary consultant to the Royal Hospitals Trust.[1] He has also consulted, written and lectured extensively.[1]
In 1996, he established the Trust Clinical Ethics Committee, including writing Terms of Reference and drafting policies concerning good professional practice.
Lecture cancelled because of disruptive protestors
In April 2009, a lecture by Doyal and debate in Cork University Hospital were cancelled after protesters took up positions in the lecture theatre.[5] Father Paul Kramer, a Catholic priest, was among the protesters and ordered Doyal to leave Ireland.[6] The police who were present made no attempt to stop the protesters. Doyal had to be escorted out by hospital security guards. The talk had been criticised by Bishop John Buckley, Senator Jim Walsh and Senator John Hanafin, though Senator David Norris accused Senator Walsh of scaremongering.[5][7] The Health Service Executive said the lecture was cancelled for safety reasons.[8]
Books
Empiricism, Explanation and Rationality (with Roger Harris)