Title: MRCGP preparation course Written Paper 1
1MRCGP preparation courseWritten Paper 1
- Mark Williams
- GP Trainer - Selby
2WRITTEN PAPER
- 3 hrs (additional time for source material-
usually around 30 mins) - Examiner marked
- Answers legible, concise and short notes
encouraged - 12 questions (or more)
- 15 mins per question including reading through
3WRITTEN PAPER
- Combined question and answer booklet
- May use reverse side
- Implications
- Repetition
- Candidate number
- Answer all questions
4WRITTEN PAPER
- Four question types
- test of general practice literature knowledge
(CRQ) - test of evaluation of written material (CRQ)
- test of ability to integrate and apply
theoretical knowledge and professional values
(MEQ) - new formats
5Test of literature knowledge
6TESTS OF LITERATURE KNOWLEDGE
- Majority of marks for demonstrating understanding
of current views on a topic and the general
evidence on which they are based - Higher marks for quoting sources
- Higher marks still for including a brief critical
appraisal - references without understanding is not impressive
7For example- B.P.H.
- Alpha blockers are better than placebo
- 5-alpha reductase inhibitors are better than
placebo - (understanding of current views on a topic and
the general evidence on which they are based)
8- Two systematic reviews for alpha blockers and one
for 5-ARI - Eur Urol 1999 and 2000
- (Higher marks for quoting sources)
9- High number of patients unaccounted for
- Considerable number of adverse effects
- (brief critical appraisal)
10Tests of literature knowledge - examples
- Discuss the primary prevention of osteoporosis in
general practice
11Tests of literature knowledge - examples
- Evaluate the evidence for the effectiveness of
drugs after discharge from hospital following an
uncomplicated MI
12Tests of literature knowledge - examples
- Summarise the available evidence for and against
the use of antibiotics in otitis media
13Tests of literature knowledge - examples
- Other recent questions
- drugs in the management of chronic asthma
- recognition of depression
- methods to help people stop smoking
- childbirth without consultant obstetricians
- current thinking on drugs for hypertension
14TESTS OF LITERATURE KNOWLEDGE
- REVISE COMMON CLINICAL PROBLEMS AND THEMES RATHER
THAN CONSECUTIVE JOURNALS
15- sources include
- BMJ / BJGP
- Clinical Evidence
- Bandolier, EBM, DTB, Effectiveness Matters
- RCGP occasional papers
- Guidelines of national status
- books! seminal papers of yrs ago
16Evaluation of written material
- Each paper has had 3 of these type of questions
17EVALUATION OF WRITTEN MATERIAL
- analyse audit
- interpret the results - power of studies, p
values, confidence intervals, NNT, odds ratio,
sensitivity, specificity and predictive value - no calculations required but you must understand
what the terms mean
18EVALUATION OF WRITTEN MATERIAL
- apply results to a clinical scenario
- apply EBM approach to clinical scenario question
/ search / appraisal / application - critically appraise presented material, a
clinical study, systematic review, guidelines
19CRITICAL APPRAISAL
- Recognising the main issues raised.
- Commenting on study design.
- Discussing the implications and practical
application of the results to general practice.
20COMMENTING ON STUDY DESIGN
21Study design
- Does the paper address a question relevant to
your practice? - Where did the research take place and who are the
authors? - Do they have a vested interest?
22Study design
- What type of study and is it appropriate?
- How were subjects / controls selected?
- Were they randomised if so, how?
- What were the outcome measures?
- Are they clinically relevant?
- Do the sample numbers appear to be appropriate?
23Study design - results
- Are all the subjects accounted for?
- How are the results presented?
- Is the statistical analysis present and
appropriate?
24Study design- conclusions
- Are the conclusions reasonable in the light of
the results? - Do the authors address the limitations of the
study? - Are the results believable?
25Study design
- Concurrence with other studies
- Concurrence with own experience
- Implications for me
26Checklists
- eBMJ
- editors checklist
- peer reviewers checklist
- statisticians checklist
- qualitative research checklist
- drug points checklist
- economic evaluation
27Checklists
- http//www.rcgp.org.uk/rcgp/journal/referee/method
.asp - (qualitative research)
- http//jama.ama-assn.org/info/auinst_trial.html
- (RCT/Consort)
28Checklist - CONSORT statement
- CONsolidated Standard for Reporting Trials
- Chicago 1995 - published 1996
29(No Transcript)
30IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE
- Personal Patient Management
- Practice Policies
- Practice Organisation
- Practice Finances
- Work Of PHCT Members
- Referral Patterns
- Prescribing
- Contracts / Purchasing / Commissioning
- Consultants Other Hospital Staff
- District Resources E.G.. Pathology
- Own Workload / Free Time
- Society As A Whole
31Implications for practice - 4S study
- PPM- case finding/education/compliance
- PP- guidelines for doctors and nurses
- PO- impact on apts., lipid and LFT measurement
- PF- use of staff special clinics help from
reps? - R- inc.. awareness may inc.. referral for ETT
angio - Rx- inform PCT
- CPC- inc.. angios dec mortal dec. MI dec
emerg.admiss. - DR- path lab
- WL- dec no of MI (early a.m.) inc. workload in
total - SOC- dec. cardiac morbidity and mortality
32Problem-solving questions
33PAPER ONE -problem solving questions
- Complex situations or difficult patients - no
right or wrong answers - Answers will be evaluated for grasp of CONSTRUCTS
34Problem solving questions
- Read question carefully - answer what is asked
- Think broadly but realistically
- Avoid jargon and cliché - a good tip is to give
examples (e.g. I.C.E. In M.S.) - More marks for management of problem than factual
knowledge
35THE EXAMINERS LOOK FOR......
- A DIVERSITY OF APPROACH-
- Detailing a range of options and selecting the
most appropriate, justifying selection with
reference to the literature. - Considering experiences and circumstances other
than those personally experienced. - Showing consideration for patients health
beliefs and feelings, relatives, co-workers and
self. - Awareness of non-medical aspects of the problem.
36- A DIVERSITY OF APPROACH-
- Detailing a range of options and selecting the
most appropriate, justifying selection with
reference to the literature. - Considering experiences and circumstances other
than those personally experienced. - Showing consideration for patients health
beliefs and feelings, relatives, co-workers and
self. - Awareness of non-medical aspects of the problem.
37- A DIVERSITY OF APPROACH-
- Detailing a range of options and selecting the
most appropriate, justifying selection with
reference to the literature. - Considering experiences and circumstances other
than those personally experienced. - Showing consideration for patients health
beliefs and feelings, relatives, co-workers and
self. - Awareness of non-medical aspects of the problem.
38- A DIVERSITY OF APPROACH-
- Detailing a range of options and selecting the
most appropriate, justifying selection with
reference to the literature. - Considering experiences and circumstances other
than those personally experienced. - Showing consideration for patients health
beliefs and feelings, relatives, co-workers and
self. - Awareness of non-medical aspects of the problem.
39PAPER ONE -problem solving questions
- Andrea Bachelor, 26, presents with a vaginal
discharge. - How do you arrive at a diagnosis?
- What makes a partners meeting a success?
40PAPER ONE -problem solving questions
- Norman Griffiths is an introspective 47 yr old
man who suffers from long-standing fatigue. He
tells you he has seen a television documentary
suggesting that the mercury in amalgam dental
fillings is toxic. He is wondering whether to
have his fillings removed, and asks you for your
views. - Describe your thoughts
41IMPLICATIONS OF MARKING SCHEME
- Broad impressions count.
- Layout and presentation important.
- Relatively small differences in quality of
content or presentation can make a real
difference. - Relatively easy to get bulk of marks up to pass
level.
42Time spent vs marks gained
43Skeletons
44CONSULTATION BEHAVIOUR
- EXPLORE patients knowledge, ideas, concerns,
expectations. - EXPLAIN symptoms and signs, diagnosis and
prognosis. - CONSIDER treatment options.
- CONSIDER patients preference, involve patient in
management plan.
45CONSULTATION BEHAVIOUR
- Presenting Problems
- Continuing Problems
- Help Seeking Behaviour
- Opportunistic Health Promotion
46TREATMENT OPTIONS
- DO NOTHING
- Follow up at patients discretion or formally
arranged. - DO SOMETHING
- Discuss, negotiate, counsel, advise.
- Discuss other management options, obtain implied
or informed consent. - Prescribe drug and / or appliance.
- Arrange or carry out procedure.
- Follow up.
47REFERRAL OPTIONS
- WITHIN PHCT
- SECONDARY CARE
- In patient, out patient, domiciliary visit,
pathology, radiology, physiotherapy, day
hospital, occupational therapy. - Consider NHS / private, local / regional /
national, PCGs. - SOCIAL SERVICES
- Social worker, day centre, meals on wheels, home
helps, part III accommodation, disabled parking
badge, welfare benefits, citizens advice.
48REFERRAL OPTIONS
- OTHER AGENCIES
- Self help groups, voluntary groups, local and
national hospice movement, Marie Curie
Foundation, WRVS. - ALTERNATIVE THERAPIES
49IN A CONFLICT SITUATION
- AGREE
- DISAGREE
- REFER
- NEGOTIATE
- COUNSEL
- EDUCATE
50GIVING BAD NEWS
- ANXIETY
- What are the the patients fears and worries?
- KNOWLEDGE
- How much does the patient know and understand
already? - EXPLANATION
- Diagnosis, prognosis, treatment and follow up (in
terms the patient understands). - SYMPATHY
- SUPPORT
- FOLLOW UP
51DEALING WITH ANGER
- AVOID CONFRONTATION.
- FACILITATE DISCUSSION.
- VENTILATE FEELINGS.
- EXPLORE REASONS FOR ANGER.
- CONSIDER REFERRING OR INVESTIGATING.
- APOLOGISE (IF APPROPRIATE).
52THE INFINITE POTENTIAL OF THE CONSULTATION- I
- HISTORY- ideas, concerns, expectations physical,
psychological, social - EXAMINATION
- DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- INVESTIGATIONS
- FORMULATE MANAGEMENT PLAN WITH PATIENT /- FAMILY
- ARRANGE HELP - family, PHCT, social services,
voluntary organisations - REFER
53THE INFINITE POTENTIAL OF THE CONSULTATION-
contd
- PRESCRIBE
- ANTICIPATE FUTURE PROBLEMS
- PREVENTION / HEALTH PROMOTION
- FOLLOW UP
- LIAISE WITH OTHER AGENCIES
54SKELETONSTHE INFINITE POTENTIAL OF THE
CONSULTATION
NOW SOON FUTURE
HISTORY EXAMINATION DIFF.DIAG. INVEST. MAN.PLAN HE
LP REFER PRESCRIBE ANTICIPATE PREVENT. FOLLOW
UP LIAISE AUDIT
55BUZZ WORDS
- DOCTOR-PATIENT RELATIONSHIP
- DEPENDENCE, CONTROL, MANIPULATION, COLLUSION,
TRANSFERENCE, HEART-SINK - DOCTOR
- ELICITING, FACILITATING, EMPATHISING, COUNSELING,
OPEN / CLOSED QUESTIONS, REFLECTED ANSWERS,
AUTHORITARIAN, REJECTING - PATIENT
- AUTONOMY, INVOLVEMENT, VENTILATION OF FEELINGS,
GUILT / BLAME, LIFE EVENTS, COMPLIANCE, SOMATIC
FIXATION, SELF HELP GROUPS
56TRIADS
- PHYSICAL, PSYCHOLOGICAL, SOCIAL
- HISTORY EXAMINATION, INVESTIGATION
- IMMEDIATE, SHORT TERM, LONG TERM
- PATIENT, FAMILY, COMMUNITY
- CULTURE, STATUS, IMAGE
- DOCTOR, PARTNERS, PHCT
- IDEAS, CONCERNS, EXPECTATIONS
57New Format
- peak flow chart
- family tree
- letter from consultant
- fill in the gaps
- MCQ
- Extended matching item
58EXAMPLES
- Mrs Dara Thakerar, a 35-year-old teacher consults
you with headaches. - How would you assess her problem?
59- Quantitive systematic review of randomised
controlled trials comparing antibiotic with
placebo for acute cough in adults - --------------------------------------------------
----------------- - Main outcome measures
- Proportion of subjects with productive cough at
follow up (7 11 days after consultation with
general practitioner) - proportion of subjects who had not improved
clinically at follow up - proportion of subjects who reported side effects
from taking antibiotic or placebo.
60- The above reading is the title and part of the
summary of a recently published systematic
review. - Critically appraise the choice of outcome
measures given above and evaluate possible
alternatives
61- We included studies of patients aged greater than
12 years who were attending a family practice
clinic, community based outpatient department, or
an outpatient department attached to a hospital.
We included patients who complained of acute
cough with or without purulent sputum that had
not been treated in the preceding week with
antibiotic. Patients with chronic obstructive
airways disease were excluded. The included
studies were prospective trials in which
antibiotic was allocated by formal randomisation
or quasi-randomisation, such as alternate
allocation to treatment and placebo groups. Only
placebo controlled trials were included
comparative studies between different classes of
antibiotics were excluded. Categorical and
continuous outcomes were reported in the
randomised controlled trials we concentrated on
the three most commonly reported outcomes the
proportion of subjects reporting productive
cough, the proportion of subjects who had not
improved clinically at re-examination, and the
proportion of subjects who reported side effects
from taking antibiotic or placebo.
62- Comment of the inclusion and exclusion criteria
shown above.
63EXAMPLES
- In conducting such a review where should authors
search for data?
64EXAMPLES
- The Boldison family of five has had twelve
out-of-hours visits during the last month. - What issues does this raise?
65EXAMPLES
- What are the challenges of implementing clinical
governance within a Primary Care setting?
66EXAMPLES
- Alison Lippett, one of your practice nurses, asks
whether the practice will support her in
undertaking a nurse practitioner course. - What issues does this raise?
67EXAMPLES
- How does the evidence contribute to the
management of sore throats in Primary Care
68- "There are people who strictly deprive themselves
of each and every eatable, drinkable and
smokeable which has in any way acquired a shady
reputation. They pay this price for health. And
health is all they get out of it. How strange it
is." Mark Twain - What dilemmas does this quotation suggest for
health promotion in modern Primary Care?