Thursday 3 September 2009

Another bleedin obvious edict from the GMC


The Times Online has an article regarding doctors’ training today: Medical students will be ordered out of the lecture theatre and into the wards, gaining more “hands-on” experience treating patients in hospitals and doctors’ surgeries, new guidance from the medical regulator says.

New standards for “tomorrow’s doctors” from the General Medical Council (GMC) says that all medical students should be able to administer a local anaesthetic, take blood from patients and undertake other medical procedures under supervision, before they graduate from university.

The guidance, seen by The Times before its publication this week, updates standards for undergraduate medical training first published in 1993. It follows concerns that some skills, such as prescribing multiple drugs at the correct dosage, are being overlooked by some medical schools.

A survey of 2,400 medical students and junior doctors last year found that three quarters felt that they put patients at risk because they had not been trained to prescribe drugs properly.

Sir Graeme Catto, a former chairman of the GMC, has said that while students were generally content with their higher education, they complained about the lack of “bedside manner” teaching.

“The old-fashioned teaching ward round has been lost. It is much easier to organise speaking to 300 students all at once in a lecture than to grapple with the logistical nightmare of sending them to GP surgeries or wards,” he said.

The latest Tomorrow’s Doctors guidance will standardise curriculums for more than 30 medical schools around the country, requiring them to organise “student assistantships”, where undergraduates can become involved in dealing with patients under the supervision of a registered doctor. At present, only some offer such placements.

Jim McKillop, Professor of Medicine at the University of Glasgow and chair of the GMC’s undergraduate board, said that the new placements were designed to provide all final-year students with “intense clinical experience in the workplace”.

Other tasks that students are expected to have carried out before they graduate include filling in a prescription form, ordering a blood sample, taking swabs and learning correct techniques for moving and handling patients.

Professor McKillop said that there was no hard evidence that prescribing errors, which contribute to 40,000 adverse reactions to medicine every year, could be directly linked to lapses in medical training.

But the GMC would send inspection teams made up of practising doctors, academics and the public to medical schools to make sure its guidance was being implemented, he added.
Isn’t this something that should have been normal practise since the battle of Waterloo?

The biggest snag I see is that “The GMC would send inspection teams made up of practising doctors, academics and the public to medical schools to make sure its guidance was being implemented,”

In the words of myself were are F****d!

Angus

Angus Dei on all and sundry

AnglishLit

Angus Dei politico

1 comment:

His Girl Friday said...

medical students prescribing drugs...wonderful.......