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European Working Time Directive and its impact on training Medical Education England Independent Enquiry Chair Professor Sir John Temple June 2009
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European Working Time Directive (EWTD) Healthcare ;- is always supervised, and is usually delivered by trained doctors
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What is a ‘Trained Doctor’? MB Ch B or equivalentX Membership/Fellowship of Royal CollegeX Certificate of Completion of Training -CCT
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Concern about the ability of the NHS to deliver training in 48hr week Review the impact of the EWTD on the training of – Dentists – Doctors – Healthcare Scientists – Pharmacists
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Time for Training A review of the impact of the European Working Time Directive on the quality of training Professor Sir John Temple
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A comprehensive review process (Dec 2009 – April 2010)
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Evidence v Assertion Real evidence is lacking Repeated –Assertion –Opinion or –information was taken as a proxy for evidence Trainees perceptions were very important!
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EWTD impact is greatest when workload involves;- – high emergency and/or – out of hours cover
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High Quality Training can be delivered in 48 hours This is precluded when: trainees have a major role in out of hours service
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EWTD impact Training & service are inextricably linked 48 hrs leads to > in shift working Shifts require > doctors to maintain cover Rota gaps > frequent
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Rota Gaps Loss of elective training X2 Enforced rest Generality Rota Gaps not Speciality (usually out of hours) Limited learning Poorly supervised
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The effect of service on training
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Just how much training is provided in the current working week in the UK? In a 7 year training programme with 48hrs/week There are 15, 000 hours potentially available
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Who covers the nights?
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Findings – Consultant Expansion Trainee increases have enabled retention of existing services and configurations
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Findings Consultant ways of working often support traditional training models Traditional service and training models waste learning opportunities
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Comparisons Population Med students Residents UK 60 m8,00050,000 Canada 30 m3,50010,000
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Make every moment count -1 Training must be;- –Planned –Focused Handovers must be;- -effective -safe -supervised
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Make every moment count -2 Accelerate learning by using:- –Simulation –Role play –Video consultation –Other technologies In controlled environments before practising on patients
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Skills Lab
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Use of simulation accelerates the acquisition of skills
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Effective implementation of EWTD results in – Improved work/life balance – Enhanced supervision – Reduced loss of daytime elective training – Improved handovers This produces safer patient care
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EWTD can be a catalyst for change Service reconfiguration Hospital at Night Consultant & Trainee contract flexibility Training simulation and new technologies
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The case for change Reliance on trainee doctors to deliver a 24/7 service has to change Increasing – hours/length of training now will simply maintain the present system
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Recommendations - 1 Implement a consultant delivered service Service delivery must explicitly support training Learning must continue to be service based Make every moment count
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Consultant delivered service C T
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Consultant delivered service (CDS) Readily available Graded supervision Resident CDS Only when service load demands) Viable sized teams No other duties (when on call) Service re-organisation
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Consultant delivered service Lead to closer supervision by consultants; – Increase learning opportunities – Improve, diagnosis & treatment – Enhance patient safety And reduced patient costs
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What is a fully Trained Doctor? Completed a training programme Certificate of Completion of Training (CCT) Appointed to a Consultant position in NHS
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Consultant delivered service –Trainee programme 7yrs –Consultant 25-30yrs Consultant:trainee alignment –Consultant : Trainee 3:1
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Consultant delivered service Action > Consultants < Trainees Service Teaching Not all consultants or services will have trainees
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Consultant delivered service 24 hr presence or ready availability for direct patient care More flexible working of the consultant contract Multi disciplinary Team - not ‘Firm’ approach Mentoring of all consultants
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Recommendations - 2,3 & 4 Some service redesign is necessary Recognise, develop and reward training Training excellence requires regular planning and monitoring
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Public Expectation Right Healthcare ;- is always supervised, and is usually delivered by trained doctors
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High quality training can be delivered in 48hrs To achieve this the NHS needs: – Fundamental changes to training & service – Clear Leadership – An explicit implementation plan Action is needed now
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We must produce Competent, confident and safe doctors who will embrace life long learning. ‘Training today is patient safety for the next 25-30 years’
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EWTD – the fine points Introduced 1998 Full implementation – 48 hrs – 1/8/09 Working time includes – on the job training on call at the workplace Junior doctors are not classed as night workers Simap & Jaegar rulings
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Time for Training A review of the impact of the European Working Time Directive on the quality of training Professor Sir John Temple
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