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Published byAriel Lowrance Modified over 9 years ago
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Martin Hart Assistant Director Education Case study on accreditation: the GMC’s perspective
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Agenda What GMC does How doctors are educated and trained How we accredit and quality assure Strengths of our process Issues and challenges
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Our purpose ‘to protect, promote and maintain the health and safety of the public by ensuring proper standards in the practice of medicine’
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Our aim To secure a regulatory system which: Enhances patient safety Fosters professionalism Commands the confidence of all stakeholders Is independent, fair, efficient and effective
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General Medical Council A new council took office at the beginning of 2009: All appointed by the Appointments Commission
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Our functions Education Standards and Ethics Fitness to Practise Registration
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Medical School (4-6 years) F1 year (1 year) F2 year (1 year) Special ty/ GP training (3-8 years) Speciali st/GP register Provisional registration Full registration Certificate of completion of training (CCT) Medical School (4-6 years) F1 year (1 year) Career stage Employment/ regulatory status Student, not licensed Employed, in training, licensed by GMC Employed, licensed Structure of UK education and training Education standards
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The GMC’s role in medical education Responsible for promoting high standards of medical education In April 2010 PMETB will merge with the GMC For the first time, one organisation will be responsible for regulating all stages of medical education and training
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Medical School (4-6 years) 32 medical schools in the UK 35,000 medical students (60% female) Have own approaches to curricula, teaching, assessment etc But must all meet standards and outcomes in Tomorrow’s Doctors Subject to fitness to practise, graduates receive provisional registration with GMC GMC quality assures (QABME)
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Foundation Programme F1 year and F2 year (2 years) Foundation programme is a two year programme of general training with placements within various specialties and healthcare settings (hospital bias) Foundation Programme has national application scheme (UKFPO) and is overseen by postgraduate deaneries Curriculum developed by Academy of Medical Royal Colleges, approved by GMC and PMETB F1 has outcomes set by the GMC which must be achieved to receive full registration GMC and PMETB jointly quality assure Foundation Programme (QAFP) 14,000 junior doctors in Foundation Programme (2009)
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Specialty training Specialty/GP training (3-8 years) Medical royal colleges draw up criteria for specialist and GP training and assessments, which are approved by PMETB National competition for selection, training overseen by postgraduate deans PMETB* certifies completion of training, leads to entry on GMC GP or specialist register and eligibility to work as a consultant PMETB* quality assures specialist training *GMC from 2010
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Maintaining Standards: Quality Assurance Two quality assurance processes: Foundation Programme (QAFP) Medical Schools (QABME) Focussed on the institution, not students and trainees Key elements are analysis of documentation, interviews with academic staff, students and clinicians Quality assurance of specialty training currently undertaken by PMETB
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Quality Assurance of Medical Education Make sure institutions comply with standards Identify examples of innovation and good practice Identify concerns and help to resolve them. Identify changes institutions need to make to comply with and a timetable for their implementation Promote equality and diversity in medical education
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QA Visit Processes QABME Medical Schools Quality Management Curriculum content Examination framework 8 – 10 visitors Minimum 4 days visit over 6 months QAFP Joint process with PMETB Postgraduate Deaneries quality management 6 visitors 4-day visit over 4 sites in one week QA Reports and institutions’ replies publish on website
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QA Visit Teams Undergraduate/ postgraduate deans & school/deanery staff Medical education specialists Clinicians Students/ junior doctors Lay Visitors All are ‘full and equal members’ of visit teams
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QA visit teams Consistent approach to recruitment Same contracts (responsibilities, payment and time) Mandatory annual training Same performance management framework Annual appraisal Share competencies
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QA Monitoring Process Targeted action plans & updates Annual Returns of information PMETB Survey of Trainees (for QAFP) Data from all three sources published on GMC website
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Strengths of QABME at the end of 5 years In depth evaluation of School Wide range of team expertise Interactive with School Triangulation from multiple sources Seen as important and generally supportive by Schools Transparent process and status of schools’ progress on requirements is available to students and the public
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Strengths of QAFP midway through Has galvanised postgraduate deaneries to evaluate and demonstrate improvements in quality management Has given trainees a greater voice in the quality management and assurance of their training Has identified areas where improvements are needed particularly in the supervision of trainees Postgraduate deaneries have reported the process as challenging and helpful – perhaps particularly the self assessment
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Issues in GMC accreditation QABME & QAFP: Resource intensive – GMC and institutions Maintaining team focus/knowledge over cycle Potential variability of teams Potentially insufficient involvement of employers and patients in the QA process Disseminating good practice/innovation
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Challenges for accreditation generally Is the QA focus on institutions sufficient for maintaining a register of professionals? Sanctions – ‘nuclear option’: removal of accreditation Reliance on others: can the GMC’s QA processes effectively identify areas of poor practice? Deaneries and Schools measure the quality of individual students and junior doctors Health systems regulator measures quality of care (and by extension doctors)
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Issues for the future: Student Registration? Medical students are not registered with the GMC BUT guidance for schools and a significant programme of student engagement Has the challenge of keeping in touch with students and instilling professional values been met? Could student registration strengthen the link between the GMC and students?
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www.gmc-uk.orgwww.gmc-uk.org/education
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