Working as a government doctor in
Lucea, Jamaica, caused Fenton to concentrate on
public health. He earned an
MPH from the
London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine in 1992 and a doctorate in
epidemiology from
University College London. Fenton became a senior lecturer on HIV epidemiology and honorary consultant epidemiologist at the
Communicable Disease Surveillance Centre of the UK's
National Health Service and a lead researcher on the second
National Survey of Sexual Attitudes and Lifestyles in 2000 and 2001. In 2002 he became director of the centre's Health Protection Agency HIV and Sexually Transmitted Infections Department. Fenton left CDC, and the US, in 2012 to join the new English national public health body,
Public Health England, as head of its directorate of health improvement and population healthcare, renamed health and wellbeing shortly before April 2013's official commencement of the organisation. As of 2015, Fenton was paid a salary of between £175,000 and £179,999 by the department, making him one of the 328 most highly paid people in the British public sector at that time. In February 2017, he was announced as
Southwark Council's new director of health and wellbeing, working on secondment from Public Health England. That same year he received an honorary doctorate in health from the
University of Bath. As of 2020, Fenton is Public Health England's regional director of public health for London. His work in this role combatting the
COVID-19 pandemic was recognised by ranking second in the
2021 edition of the annual
Powerlist of the most influential Black Britons. Fenton's work during the pandemic focused on supporting hard-hit
BAME communities, including two reports highlighting the health inequalities faced by minority British people. Fenton was appointed
Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the
2022 New Year Honours for services to public health. ==References==