Following a year in 1983 as an administrator at the
Royal Association for Disability and Rehabilitation (RADAR), in 1984 she started her career in local government as Equal Opportunities Liaison Officer, in
Greater London Council (GLC) followed by Disability Training Development Officer role, London Boroughs Disability Resource Team (DRT) where she ran the Disability Equality and Awareness training unit. (NCIL) - which she co-founded and co-directed with Frances Hassler. Campbell worked at NCIL for six years before being appointed by the Minister for Social Care to chair the
Social Care Institute for Excellence (SCIE). In 2003, Campbell was awarded an honorary doctorate in law from
Bristol University and another in social sciences from
Sheffield Hallam University. On 3 April 2007, after it was announced by the
House of Lords Appointments Commission she became a
life peer and would sit as a
crossbencher. Her
peerage was
gazetted as
Baroness Campbell of Surbiton,
of Surbiton in the Royal Borough of Kingston upon Thames on 30 March 2007. In her campaigning record, items of public note include the creation and later closure of the
Independent Living Fund (ILF), the loss of some disabled people's welfare benefits, the disproportionate impact of the
COVID-19 pandemic on disabled people's lives, and attempts in Parliament and the appeal courts to change the law on
assisted dying as it impacts on disabled people. ==Personal life==