theMEDICALSTUDENT
December2013
The voice of London's Medical Students/www.themedicalstudent.co.uk
STARSurg
A student-led first >> page 4
2020 Medicine
Are you being prepared? >> page 13
Cycling in the Capital
What needs to be done? >> page 11
2013 Film Roundup
We rank the best >> page 16
Foundation Programme Oversubscribed for Fourth Consecutive Year Krishna Dayalji It’s your final year at medical school. Electives, Foundation programme applications, SJT exams and finals are just a handful of items on your checklist, all in the hope that you will graduate with the ability to think and act like a doctor. But what happens when you cannot secure your first job? For the fourth consecutive year, the foundation programme is oversubscribed. The UK Foundation Programme Office (UKFPO) released a statement last October confirming there are more applicants than foundation programme posts available for those students commencing work in August 2014. The UKFPO, jointly funded and governed by Health Education England (HEE) and three other UK Health Departments, facilitates the two-year programme, enabling newly qualified, eligible doctors
from both the EU and the UK to provisionally register with the General Medical Council (GMC). The main problem lies in the fact that only on successful completion of the first year of the programme are eligible doctors able to apply for full GMC registration. This was first introduced through the Medical Act of 1950 with the prime aim of protecting patients. Previously, all eligible applicants from UK medical schools have been able to secure a place on the Foundation Programme as the number of posts exceeded the number of applicants, and therefore they have had the opportunity to achieve full registration with the GMC and go on to practise as a qualified doctor. The converse has been true for the past three years. When applicants exceed the number of vacancies available, the UKFPO place the top scoring applicants (for the number of posts...[cont’n on page 2]
London’s Doors Remain Open Peter Woodward-Court Readers of our November issue will recall that the University of Cambridge have made the decision to stop all students from transferring to London for their clinical studies from 2017. In late November, The Medical Student received exclusive news that all the five London medical schools will continue to be receptive to transfer students despite Cambridge’s decision. Since Cambridge currently accepts new students on a 3
year, and not a 6 year, course it remains unclear whether students will be permitted to leave the university after their preclinical medical sciences degree against Cambridge’s will. London remarked: “We confirm that London’s clinical transfer doors for Cambridge and Oxford clinical students will remain open beyond 2017, in the firm belief that students should continue to be permitted the opportunity to make considered decisions about experiences available for their clinical training.”
Shape of Training Review Krishna Dayalji October saw the Shape of Training Final Report be published. However, there seems to be some confusion surrounding how well the report has been received. Based on Sir John Tooke’s 2008 report Aspiring to Excellence, The Shape of Training Report offers an approach in the hope that all doctors are trained to the highest standards and prepared to meet changing patient needs. The report was primarily written by key figures of the General Medical Council (GMC) and Medical Education England (MEE), with a number of stakeholders sponsoring the review. It is believed that this report will provide a framework to help
deliver changes with minimal disruption to the existing health service and that the approaches described will be fit for purpose for many years. The three main aims of the report were to ensure we continue to train effective doctors who are fit to practise in the UK, provide high quality and safe care, and meet the needs of the patient and service now and in the future. It was believed that the review was needed to ensure UK medical education and training was complementary to society’s everchanging needs. Driven by a growing number of people with multiple co-morbidities, an ageing population, health inequalities and increasing patient expectations, there is a need for
more doctors who are capable of providing general care in broad specialties across a range of different settings. As a result, the report argues that we need doctors who are trained in more specialised areas to meet local patient and workforce needs. Postgraduate training needs to adapt to prepare medical graduates to deliver safe and effective general care in broad specialties. Medicine has to be a sustainable career with opportunities for doctors to change roles and specialties throughout their careers, and local workforce and patient needs should drive opportunities to train in new specialties or to credential in specific areas. The report further adds that doctors...[cont’n on page 4]