The GMC has responsibility for the approval & re-approval of all postgraduate medical training programmes. All decisions on post and programme approval must therefore be made by GMC. This includes new posts and programmes (including ad personam/flexible programmes) applications for re-approval, where conditional approval was originally given.
The GMC considers training programmes and posts within their publication Promoting excellence: standards for medical education and training.
A learning environment should be safe for patients and supportive for learners and educators. The culture should be caring, compassionate and provide a good standard of care and experience for patients.
The learning environment and organisational culture should value and support education and training so that learners are able to demonstrate what is expected in Good Medical Practice and to achieve the learning outcomes required by their curriculum.
A generic medical training post should:
The duties, working hours and supervision of occupational medicine specialist trainees must be consistent with the delivery of high quality safe patient care. There must be clear procedures to address immediately any concerns about patient safety arising from the training of doctors.
Occupational Medicine training must be quality controlled locally by Deaneries, working with the Faculty, other stakeholders and training deliverers.
With regard to Equality, Diversity and Opportunity postgraduate training must be fair and based on principles of equality. Consideration of equality and diversity matters pervades the whole of the training – widening access and participation, fair recruitment, the provision of information, programme design and job adjustment. Responsibility to ensure that this is applied lies with the Postgraduate Deans and organisations providing training, trainers and trainees, other colleagues working with trainees, other stakeholders and the Faculty RSAs. Evidence of this comes from Surveys, outcome data, Deanery quality control data and visits.
All stages of training programmes must comply with employment law, the Equality Act, Equal Pay Acts, the Human Rights Act and other equal opportunity legislation that may be enacted in the future, and be working towards best practice. This will include compliance with any public duties to promote equality. Information about training programmes, their content and purpose must be publicly accessible either on or via links on Deanery and GMC websites. Deaneries must take all reasonable steps to ensure that programmes can be adjusted for trainees with well-founded individual reasons for being unable to work full- time to work flexibly within the requirements of GMC standards and rules. Deaneries must take appropriate action to encourage Trusts and other training providers to accept their fair share of doctors training flexibly. Appropriate reasonable adjustment must be made for trainees with disabilities, special educational or other needs.
Processes for recruitment, selection and appointment must be open, fair, and effective and those appointed must be inducted appropriately into training.
The requirements set out in the Faculty GMC approved curriculum must be delivered.
Trainees must be supported to acquire the necessary skills and experience through induction, effective educational supervision, an appropriate workload and time to learn.
Education and training must be planned and maintained through transparent processes which show who is responsible at each stage.
The educational facilities, infrastructure and leadership must be adequate to deliver the curriculum.
The impact of the standards must be tracked against trainee outcomes and clear linkages should be reflected in developing standards
The standards cover all postgraduate training programmes after the Foundation Years, for all specialties and to all places where postgraduate medical training is provided. This will include all occupational medicine training posts both within and outside the NHS. All training posts in occupational medicine will therefore need to meet these generic standards. The standards will be reviewed on a regular basis and the current version will be available on the GMC’s website.
The GMC will hold Postgraduate Deans responsible for meeting these standards across the UK and when making decisions on programme approval the GMC will take advice from Deaneries.
The GMC will normally approve training at the level of a programme, which is a series of posts (or rotation) that together enable a doctor undergoing training to acquire the competencies they need for the award of a Certificate of Completion of Training (CCT). Each post in a rotation must meet the generic standards. Where this is not the case, the problems will be addressed at post, programme or Deanery level, as appropriate. Posts within a single organisation are permissible, but it will need to be shown that all competences can be acquired within that post. Any more than 2 sessions per week at a location constitutes a post and so that location would need approval in its own right.
When the GMC approves a post or programme it does not set a time limit on that approval and approvals are therefore open ended.
A Training Post/Programme should provide a balanced and adequate range of instruction and experience in the principles of occupational medicine within a structured programme covering the GMC approved curriculum, with rotations and/or attachments as appropriate. In particular it will provide:
The first year should be an introduction to occupational medicine and the functions of management and employee representatives in the workplace. The trainee should not be expected to spend more than 50% of their time in clinics.
The second year is concerned with enlarging experience and theoretical knowledge. The subject for research/dissertation should be chosen and work on the dissertation protocol started. An initial research proposal should be submitted and accepted by the Faculty before the end of ST4 (i.e. normally by the 24th month of full-time training in occupational medicine, or the part-time equivalent). It is therefore essential that trainees identify a suitable project and submit an initial proposal as early as possible in their training programme.
The third year consolidates the experience gained already and complements any deficiencies by secondments or visits to other industries and occupations.
In the final year, if not already achieved, individual responsibility should be taken for some aspect of the management of an occupational health service. The research project should continue and the dissertation.
Formal visits by the GMC will not normally be required for the approval of training posts.
These visits are risk based, which means the GMC look at evidence and decide which areas of education are most likely to be of concern.
An outcome can be enhanced monitoring to support medical training organisations where there are concerns about the quality and safety of training.
In this circumstance the GMC will require more frequent progress updates from those responsible for managing these. They will be undertaken where possible serious educational failures which need urgent investigation occur and where concerns cannot be satisfied in any other way. They will not be used as a means of following up whether conditions attached to an approval have been met, which will be the role of the local Deanery. They are to investigate a concern or check on progress. The GMC publish information on enhanced monitoring cases on their website and share information with other healthcare regulators where appropriate.
Issues that require enhanced monitoring are those that could affect patient safety or training progression or quality. Issues are usually referred to the GMC if they meet the following criteria:
Concerns may be referred to the enhanced monitoring process by deaneries, local education and training boards, and royal colleges and faculties. The GMC can also escalate a concern to this process as a result of their own evidence or information from other sources (like patients and doctors in training).
Where possible they work with all organisations to address the concern and develop a sustainable solution. Sometimes there is a need to work with other regulators and organisations to make improvements. When local processes fail to address serious concerns, there may be use of legal powers to place conditions on the approval of postgraduate training posts. Conditions may be attached to any approval that have already been given. If it becomes clear that it is unlikely the conditions will be met, then approval for training may be withdrawn.
The responsibility lies with the Deanery and the GMC.
This aide memoire should be read in conjunction with the post application details.
(ie. Individual with overall responsibility for the Training Programme)
(Individual(s) who will provide day to day supervision during each stage/placement on the programme
– N.B. the educational and clinical supervisor may be the same person).
(Individual who will provide day to day educational supervision during each stage/placement on the programme – N.B. the educational and clinical supervisor may be the same individual).
Essential elements of training include:
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