Title: Foundation year Training for Junior Doctors
1Foundation year Training for Junior Doctors
- The pharmacists role in assessment at the
Chelsea Westminster Hospital - Barry Jubraj
- Lead Pharmacist for Academic Studies
Professional Development
2What is Foundation Training
- New 2 year programme for all newly-qualified
doctors in the UK from Aug 05 - 1st year F1 and 2nd year F2
- Curriculum document http//www.mmc.nhs.uk/pages/
foundation/Curriculum
3Aims of Foundation Training
- To build on undergraduate learning
- Ensure ability to identify/assess acutely ill
patients - Development of professionalism across a wide
range of generic skills/competencies - Enhance awareness of patient safety
- Prepare for future career
4Curriculum Competencies
- Pharmacists know all about competencies!
- Now the junior doctors have them
- See handout of competencies (section 1) and
syllabus (section 4) relevant to drug therapy and
multi-professional working - Pharmacists need to assess against competencies
but the syllabus underpins these and provides
criteria to assess against - Later will suggest how to use these for the
assessment tool
5How does this affect pharmacists?
- The F1s/F2s will be subject to various forms of
assessment - One form is multi-source feedback from other
people - So pharmacists (see later - band 7) will be
asked to provide feedback on relevant aspects of
performance of junior doctors
6How will pharmacists assess?
- The Mini Peer Assessment Tool (Mini-PAT) See
handout - If youre asked to complete anything else, please
see Barry first - Designed to assess performance
- Shortened from a larger tool to reflect validity
for the MMC curriculum - Before we go any further
- Should only take 10 minutes to complete
7Administering Mini-PAT
- The DOCTOR is responsible for finding assessors
and providing the form so they will approach
YOU! - Assessors MUST include other health professionals
apart from doctors - They need at least 3 assessors (pref. 8)
- Will be completed throughout the year but
unfortunately it appears that formative feedback
isnt provided at the moment - You may be given a hard copy but the medics are
moving towards electronic completion, so you may
get an email instead
8Guidance given to the F1/F2s
- Assessor
- Comparison is with the expected level of
experience not with other trainees - Only rate areas of which you have direct
experience of the trainees ability - Always write comments as the assessment is an
educational tool and they may be helpful - Should only take 10 min
- Trainee
- Choose assessors who will be able to fill in most
of the qns - Your current consultant must be included
- Fill in the self assessment form to reflect what
is going well and what can be improved it is
not a test
9How should pharmacists complete the Mini-PAT
- Familiarise yourself with the curriculum/syllabus
(relevant parts in handout provided) - Ensure junior doctor has put name on top FIRST!
- Only assess against these relevant parts of the
curriculum that you are familiar with, not by
comparing against other F1/F2s youve known - If there are questions you cant assess on, tick
U/C - Important You are giving an overall impression,
rather than a detailed assessment - Return Mini-PAT to F1/F2 after completion or
follow the instructions on any email received
10Specific questions in the Mini-PAT and how
pharmacists might answer
- Remember the assessment is an overall impression
so the following mapping exercise is a guide - Good clinical care
- Qn 1 4 U/C
- Qn 2 map against section 4 (2.2)
- Qn 3 map against section 4 (4.0 ii)
- Qn 5 map against section 4 (2.2)
11Specific questions in the Mini-PAT and how
pharmacists might answer
- Maintaining good medical practice
- Qn 6 U/C or map against section 1 (4.0)
- Qn 7 map against section 1 (1.1. iv), section
7.0 (ix), section 4 (1.1. iv), section 4 (2.2. i) - Teaching training, appraising assessing
- Qn 8 map against section 4 (4.0 i)
12Specific questions in the Mini-PAT and how
pharmacists might answer
- Relationship with patients
- Qn 9 may be able to comment depending on your
involvement with the doctor. Map against section
4 (1.5) - Qn 10, 11 probably U/C but may be able to
comment by mapping to section 4 (1.5)
13Specific questions in the Mini-PAT and how
pharmacists might answer
- Working with colleagues
- Qn 12, 13, 14, 15 should be able to comment a
lot here - For each map against section 1 (4.0. i),
section 4 (4.0. i, ii), section 4 (7.4) - Qn 16 difficult to assess since this is the
first year. - Suggest make this judgement on the basis of
ratings assigned to other questions because we
MUST rate according to curriculum. - However, remember its an overall impression.
Hopefully you wont be rating below
expectations often!
14Specific questions in the Mini-PAT and how
pharmacists might answer
- Other details
- Probity health Probity honesty
- PLEASE write constructive comments overleaf
remember you are an ambassador for pharmacy too - MUST complete the demographics
- Reflect how will this change our relationships
with the junior doctors?
15Finally.
- When?
- Soon! Within the next month (Oct 05)
- Who can assess? (local CW guidance only)
- Band 7 pharmacists or above. Mike (Clinical
Services manager) is compiling a list of pharmacy
assessors will circulate. Other Trusts may
form different guidelines - If youre approached and youre not eligible to
assess, please politely decline and explain why
(Mini-PAT asks how long qualified and we need
credibility). - Encourage the doctor to ask their next ward/team
pharmacist in advance if they would be eligible
to assess, so that you give them something
positive to go away with - What next?
- Establish whether you can assess or not
- Familiarisation with the curriculum/syllabus