Title: Needs and demands of professionals
1Needs and demands of professionals
- Dr. Ewan Macdonald
- Division of Occupational Health
- Department of Public Health
2What do Professionals Need
- To be competent
- To be confident
- To be capable
- To be consistent
- To be coherent
- To be communicators
- To be caring
- To have capacity
- To be conscientious
3What do Professionals Need
- Mission
- Marketability
- Money
- Maintain registration
4The General Medical Council UKThe GMC comprises
104 members
- 54 elected by the profession
- 25 appointed by the University medical schools
and postgraduate institutions - 25 lay people nominated by the Privy Council
5The GMCThe GMCs functions
- To keep up-to-date registers of qualified doctors
- To promote high standards of medical education
- To guide doctors on standards of conduct, ethics
and performance - To deal firmly and fairly with doctors whose
fitness to practise is in doubt
6GMC - Fitness to practise
Complaints and information
Conduct
Performance
Health
7Performance procedures - the law
- The Medical (Professional Performance) Act 1995
- Gave GMC power to require assessment
- Gave assessors access to medical records
- Enables CPP to impose sanctions on doctors
8Performance procedures - standards of
performance expected of doctors
- The specific standards which apply to practice in
the doctors specialty - Advice in Good Medical Practice on the duties
of doctors
9Standards of performance - Good Medical
Practice
- Examples
- As a doctor you must
- make the care of your patient your first concern
- treat patients with consideration and courtesy
- work with colleagues in ways that best serve
patients interests - recognise the limits of your competence
- keep your knowledge and skills up to date
10Good Occupational Health Practice -Communications
- Providing patients with information to protect
themselves against occupational risk - Advising on control measures
- Advising on health surveillance
- Encouraging employers to accommodate workers with
disability - Advising employers on statutory and other
requirements
11Performance procedures - serious deficiency
- Seriously deficient performance is a departure
from good professional practice - whether or not
it is covered by specific GMC guidance -
sufficiently serious to call into question the
doctors registration that is, a repeated or
persistent failure to comply with the
professional standards appropriate to the work
being done by the doctor or with the GMCs
guidance in Good Medical Practice, particularly
where this places patients or members of the
public in jeopardy.
12The GMCs Fitness to practise procedures in
perspective
- 190,000 registered doctors
- About 3,500 complaints per annum
- About 300 conduct cases per annum
- About 120 new health procedure cases per annum
- 120 performance cases so far, and over 60
potential cases in screening process
13Performance procedures- Committee on
Professional Performance
- Functions
- Assesses complaints about the doctor
- Decides formally whether doctors performance is
seriously deficient - If so, it can
- impose conditions on registration
- suspend registration
- It can also direct doctor to be assessed
14Performance - examples
- Case A
- A series of complaints are received about a
general practitioner, qualified for 25 years the
complaints suggest that - He has refused to visit a number of patients
whose histories and symptoms clearly indicated
that visits were necessary. - He prescribes erratically, often on the basis
of inadequate information. In one case this has
led to a serious adverse reaction. - Case notes, when present, are scanty and
often incoherent. - The doctor also shows a difficulty in
completing death certificates and cremation
forms.
15Performance - examples
Case B Complaints are made to the local NHS
Trust about the circumstances in which two
patients of a surgeon have died within a few days
of routine surgery. This prompts a comparison
of the surgeons mortality rates with those of
five colleagues working in the same field. That
comparison reveals an alarming discrepancy the
doctors rate is about 5 times higher than that
of any of her colleagues. There are also
complaints about the surgeons frequent use of
out-of-date techniques, and concerns have been
expressed by junior doctors and general
practitioners about standards of post-operative
care.
16Performance - examples
- Case C
- A consultant paediatrician displays
clumsiness in carrying out practical procedures. - Also the doctor habitually refuses to listen
to patients or colleagues, and responds
aggressively to expressions of concern. - Time management is a major problem, with no
sense of urgency when responding to requests for
help from anxious juniors. - Despite offers of counselling, Dr C refuses
to accept that there is a problem. (Subsequent
assessment reveals underlying deficiencies in his
basic knowledge and skills.)
17Performance procedures - key principles
- Effective 1 July 1997
- Protection of public is primary aim
- Rehabilitation where possible
- Centre on a comprehensive local assessment
- No referral to Committee if doctor co-operates
and public not at serious risk - Hearing by the Committee on Professional
Performance (if required)
18Complaints received by the GMC about Occupational
Physicians
- Confidentiality and Ethics
- Communications
- Competence
19Performance - types of case
- Patterns of seriously deficient performance
- Deficiencies of
- knowledge
- Skills(eg communications)
- attitudes
20Performance procedures- Stage 2 assessment
- The GMC invites doctor to agree to be assessed
- Trained assessors 2 professional,1 lay assessor
- Assessment based on Good Medical Practice
- Peer review standard approach
- What does the doctor do in practice?
- Tests of knowledge and clinical skills
- Principle of triangulation standard is public
safety
21Performance procedures- Stage 2 assessment
- What if the doctor refuses to be assessed?
- What is the goal of the assessment?
- On what basis are the assessors for each case
chosen? - What if the doctor at first agrees to be assessed
but then does not co-operate with the assessment?
22WHO CORE COMPETENCIES
- Identification and assessment of risks from
health hazards in the work place - surveillance of workers health based on legal
requirements, the magnitude of occupational risks
to workers health or by voluntary agreement - Surveillance of factors in the working
environment and working practices which may
affect workers health - Advising on the occupational health, safety and
hygiene, ergonomics and on individual and
collective protective equipment - Organizing first aid and emergency treatment
- Advising on the planning and organization of work
including the design of workplaces, the choice,
maintenance and condition of machinery and other
equipment, and on substances used in work
23- Participating in and guiding the process of
formulating HES policy based on sound ethical
principles - Promoting the adaptation of work to the worker
assessing disability and fitness for work
promoting work ability - Advising on fitness for work and adaptation of
work to the worker in the special circumstances
of vulnerable groups and specific legislation,
for example the EU Directive on Protection of
Pregnant and Lactating Mothers 92/85/EC - Collaborating in providing information, training
and education in the field of occupational
health, safety and ergonomics to management and
the workforce
24- Contributing to scientific knowledge regarding
hazards to health and safety at work, by research
and investigation into health and work ability
problems at work, following the ethical
principles attached to research work and to
medical research and including an evaluation by
an independent committee on ethics - Advising on, supporting and monitoring the
implementation of occupational health and safety
legislation - Recognizing and advising on hazardous exposure in
the general environment arising from industrial
from industrial activities - Participation in workplace health promotion
programmes - Management of the OHS
- Working as part of a multidisciplinary service
25Needs and demands of Occupational physicians
- Maintain and develop competencies
- Perform consistently well
- Meet needs of workers and enterprises
- Adapt to new hazards
- Influence employers and legislators
- Maintain their fitness to practice
- Meet requirements for REVALIDATION and continuing
registration
26Demands on Schools of Occupational Medicine
- Meet needs of society-teach the relevant
competencies - Produce competent doctors who can perform well
- Maintain and develop their competencies
- Provide appropriate training, specialist,non-speci
alist,and CME/CPD - Enhance communication performance not just what
they know, but what do they DO