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Fitness to practise at the point of provisional registration for UK graduates Richard Amison Head of Registration Applications Rebecca Morris UK Applications.

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Presentation on theme: "Fitness to practise at the point of provisional registration for UK graduates Richard Amison Head of Registration Applications Rebecca Morris UK Applications."— Presentation transcript:

1 Fitness to practise at the point of provisional registration for UK graduates Richard Amison Head of Registration Applications Rebecca Morris UK Applications Manager

2 What is provisional registration  Provisional registration is defined in the Medical Act as: “…enabling persons wishing to complete an acceptable programme for provisionally registered doctors to participate in such a programme.”  It restricts those holding it to only working in an ‘acceptable programme’ as defined by the GMC. This is the UK Foundation Programme year 1.

3 Requirements for obtaining provisional registration  Must have successfully graduated from a GMC recognised UK medical school.  Fitness to practise must not be impaired. If these two criteria are met an applicant has an entitlement to provisional registration under section 15 of the Medical Act 1983.

4 UK application assessment process overview

5 The test of fitness to practise  Based on the test for registered practitioners  BUT differs in several key ways:  No conditional registration  No transferrable undertakings  ‘Clean slate’ at the start of registration

6 Factors to consider  How long ago?  How severe?  Single incident or part of a pattern?  Already considered by medical school?  Remediation – possible or already happened?

7 Case study one  Applicant accepted a caution for sexual activity with a minor immediately prior to entering medical school  Unblemished five years at medical school  Fully supportive references  Caution not spent given the nature of the offence

8 Case study 2  Conviction for speeding  Appeared before medical school FTP committee on allegations of violent behaviour and driving under influence of drugs – not upheld  History of substance misuse and depression  Recent history of methadone and cannabis use  Substance misuse and depression not declared on initial application

9 Why we changed our FTP questions  Changes to the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act (ROA) introduced, May 2013  Nacro made us aware of this November 2013  We consulted legal and policy and developed new guidance and FTP questions  We introduced the new question and guidance to applicants April 2014

10 What we’ve changed in our FTP questions  We no longer ask applicants to declare cautions and convictions that are protected under ROA  There is a list of offences that can never be protected (sexual/violent), on DBS website  The onus is on the applicant to use the guidance to see if an offence is protected  We are not experts – contact Nacro for support

11 Rebecca Morris – UK Applications Manager Email: rmorris1@gmc-uk.org / Phone: 0161 923 6376 Richard Amison– Head of Applications Email: ramison@gmc-uk.org / Phone: 0161 923 6609 Frances Conway– Head of Investigation and Intelligence Email: fconway@gmc-uk.org / Phone: 0161 923 6629rmorris1@gmc-uk.orgramison@gmc-uk.orgfconway@gmc-uk.org Further questions?


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