Psychiatric Bulletin (2007) 31: 435. doi: 10.1192/pb.31.11.435
© 2007 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Enticing GP trainees
Anthony S. Hale, Consultant Psychiatrist, Professor of Psychiatry, Regional Advisor in
Psychiatry
Kent and Medway Partnership Trust, University of Kent, Canterbury, Kent
Surrey and Sussex, email:
Prof.Anthony.Hale{at}ekentmht.nhs.uk
Dein et als article (Psychiatric Bulletin, June 2007,
31, 227-230) is
fascinating and worrying, given recent developments in the structure of
training rotations. The authors emphasise the importance of exposure to
psychiatry after medical school, and that it is too soon to evaluate the
impact of the foundation year. Previously, the main opportunity for
postgraduate exposure was through GP vocational programmes. In many parts of
the country, as a consequence of MMC/MTAS, such programmes have expanded: for
example, in the South East, excluding London, the balance between psychiatric
and GP trainees has shifted massively in favour of the latter, with over 80
posts being converted this summer. However, simultaneously,
6-month training slots have been reduced now to 4 months duration, to
meet the needs of the GP rotations.
I question whether 4 months exposure is enough to encourage GP
trainees to switch to psychiatry, as has been common in the past. Rather, the
structure of the new senior house officer (SHO) jobs, which have moved towards
being generic site duty doctors for in-patient units, while the committed
psychiatric trainees staff the more interesting community and specialist jobs,
is I believe less likely to contribute to the important postgraduate factors
of empathy, better working conditions and a sense of fulfilment with
improvement or interface with other disciplines.
If we wish to encourage GP trainees to switch to psychiatry, we need
urgently to rethink what we provide during their brief 4-month exposure so
that it makes a lasting and positive impression, not treat them as workhorses
passing briefly through.
Related articles in PB:
- Why did I become a psychiatrist?: survey of consultant psychiatrists
- Kalpana Dein, Gill Livingston, and Christopher Bench
PB 2007 31: 227-230.
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