Title: Broadening the Foundation Programme Workshop
1Broadening the Foundation Programme Workshop
- Jan Welch
- Director, South Thames
- Foundation School
2Aims for the morning
- Current understanding of Broadening
- Local actions
- Sharing good practice
- How can we help?
- Current understanding of Broadening
- Local actions
- Sharing good practice
- How can we help?
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6Previous targets
- Stated that, by 2014, LETBs should have
demonstrated credible progression towards
existing targets for placements in general
practice and psychiatry, in both F1 and F2. - 22.5 of F1 doctors in psychiatry
- 22.5 of F2 doctors in psychiatry
- 55 of F2 doctors in the community or primary
care - 5 of doctors in an academic placement
- 10 of F2 doctors in shortage specialties
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9Implications for STFS
- Increase in community posts
- Developments of integrated community placements
- Increases in psychiatry posts (some are community
based, so contribute to both targets) - Medical posts including community-facing
experience - Reductions in surgical foundation doctor (FD)
posts - Â
10What is a community placement?
- A four month placement with a named clinical
supervisor - Primarily based in a community setting, such as
general practice, community paediatrics,
palliative care or community psychiatry - Defining community is challenging
- The named clinical supervisor must be based in
the community.
11What is an integrated placement?
- A four month placement with a named clinical
supervisor where the foundation doctor is
primarily based in a community setting. - The named clinical supervisor must be based in
the community.
12What is a clinical supervisor?
- A registered and licensed medical practitioner,
responsible for overseeing a foundation doctors
clinical work and providing oral and written
feedback during a training placement - Clinical supervisors must have adequate training,
support and resource to undertake their training
role, including adequate time in their job-plan - Cover for absences important
13What is a community facing placement?
- A four month placement in which the foundation
doctor is primarily based within an acute setting -
- The placement should include opportunities to
develop holistic skills including long-term
conditions and the increasing role of community
care
14Timing of community placements
- Typically community placements take place during
the F2 year - F1 doctors are consolidating acute skills and can
be at risk of isolation if distantly community
based, especially for their first placement - F1 posts based in the community should include
opportunities to attend host acute trust for
teaching and maintenance of acute clinical skills
15Where can newcommunity placements be developed?
- GP excellent but capacity limited
- Psychiatry expansion underway most posts have
community supervisors - Existing community eg sexual health, palliative
care - New services eg musculo-skeletal
- Trusts with strong community links in good
position to develop innovative community based
placements (can include some time in acute
trusts, eg in on call rotas)
16What activities can FDs carry out in
community placements?
- Sections of Foundation Doctor Curriculum 2012/14
- 1 Professionalism (p17-19)
- 2 Relationship and communication with patients
(p20-22) - 4 Ethical and legal issues (p25-26)
- 7 Good clinical Care (p30-37)
- 8 Recognition and management of the acutely ill
patient (p40-41) - 10 Patients with long-term conditions (p44-47)
17Other necessary provision for training placements
- Access to e-portfolio during working dayÂ
- Robust departmental induction, in addition to
that provided by the employing trust and at a
different time, so that the FD can attend both - FDs must be able to attend weekly teaching at
their host acute trust. At least one hour a week
of departmental teaching in the community
placement should also be provided - Time to complete SLEs and staff to supervise
- Engagement with employing acute trust foundation
faculty group/FD monitoring processes - Involvement in ARCP process
- Administrative support
- Â
18Supervision and safety
- Foundation doctors must never be left without
appropriate clinical supervision - good safety of foundation doctors in community
placements also crucial - eg many new doctors cannot drive, and so should
not be expected to cover several different sites
at night, along country roads, by bicycle - Local guidance on safety is on http//www.stfs.org
.uk/sites/stfs/files/Safety20of20foundation20do
ctors20Final20-20February202014.pdf
19Covering the workload
- Significant numbers of surgical post reductions
- Posts will move away from acute trusts
- Workload will need to be provided differently
- Crucial both for patient safety and avoiding
impact on other trainees - Other staff will need to be recruited and trained
- Solutions will depend on whether
- fewer doctors to be supported in some activities
- doctors to be replaced entirely
20Fewer FDs roles providing support
- Many common FD activities are unnecessary for
their training, eg - routine phlebotomy
- finding medical records
- portering samples, forms and patients
- organising meetings
- filing
- Others are more valuable but can be carried out
by others eg IV cannulation - Arranging scans etc and reviewing results require
clinical input but workload reduced by effective
EPR systems
21Support roles (Skills for Health role directory)
- Role level 1 (14,294 15,013 pa Band 1 AfC
scale ex HCA) - Support worker role based care
- Support worker, phlebotomy
- Role level 2 (14,294 17,425 pa Band 2 AfC
scale ex HCA) - Phlebotomist
- Role level 3 (16,271 19,268 pa Band 3 AfC
scale ex HCA) - Integrated support worker
22Clinical activities of foundation doctors
- Important activities contributing to service work
include - history taking, examination and differential
diagnosis - management of acute and chronically ill patients
and diagnostic testing - prescribing
- clinical skills eg taking arterial blood gases,
proctoscopy etc. - assessment of elective admissions
- communication skills and counselling including
breaking bad news - co-ordinating treatment and investigations
- discharge planning
- writing discharge letters and other
communications
23Roles to replace foundation doctors
- Many of these activities can be carried out by
other types of staff but - may require significant additional training for
role, eg prescribing and practical procedures - Role level 7 (30,764 40,558 pa Band 7 AfC
scale ex HCA) - Advanced practitioner
- Role level 8 (39,239 47,088 pa Band 8a AfC
scale ex HCA) - Consultant nurse practitioner
- Cross cutting role (30,764 47,008 pa Band
7/8a AfC scale ex HCA) - Physician associate
24Physician associates
- Dependent health professionals who are trained in
the medical model to obtain medical histories,
conduct examinations, request and interpret tests
and diagnose and treat injuries - 2 year postgraduate diploma - more training
places being commissioned locally - Do not yet prescribe
- Not yet a regulated profession
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26Any questions?