Dame Sally Davies becomes Cambridge’s Trinity College master Published duration 8 February 2019

image caption Dame Sally Davies said it had been an honour to the first female chief medical office and paid tribute to the men and women with whom she worked

England's top doctor has been picked to become the first woman master at Cambridge University's Trinity College.

Dame Sally Davies has been the country's chief medical officer for nine years and was also the first female to hold that post.

She will take up her job as Trinity's 39th Master on 8 October, 40 years after it let women students join.

She tweeted she "will be working relentlessly until I step down at the end of September".

Dame Sally worked in the NHS as a consultant haematologist for 30 years before joining the civil service in 2004.

She was also director general of research and development for the NHS and helped to create Genomics England.

image copyright Geograph/Marathon image caption Trinity College was founded by Henry VIII in 1546 and is generally considered the richest college at Cambridge University

Health and Social Care Secretary Matt Hancock paid tribute to her, saying she "led the fight against antibiotic resistance and public health risks and has pioneered world-leading action across a whole range of areas".

Dame Sally has also advised the UK government in health emergencies, including the Ebola and Zika outbreaks in Africa and Brazil and the Novichok attack in 2018.