| Literature DB >> 25592885 |
Jonathan R L Wild1, J Edward F Fitzgerald, Andrew J Beamish.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: National Health Service (NHS) reforms have changed the structure of postgraduate healthcare education and training. With a Government mandate that promotes multi-professional education and training aligned with policy driven initiatives, this article highlights concerns over the impact that these changes may have on surgical training. DISCUSSION: The creation of Health Education England (HEE) and its local education and training boards (LETBs), which are dominated by NHS healthcare providers, should result in greater accountability of employers in workforce planning, enhanced local responsibility and increased transparency of funding allocation. However, these changes may also create a potential poacher-turned-gamekeeper role of employers, who now have responsibility for junior doctors' training. Analysis of LETB membership reveals a dearth of representation of surgeons, who comprise only 2% of board members, with the input of trainees also seemingly overlooked. A lack of engagement with the LETBs by the independent sector is a concern with increasing numbers of training opportunities potentially being lost as a result.The new system also needs to recognise the specific training needs required by the craft specialties given the demands of technical skill acquisition, in particular regarding the provision of simulation training facilities and trainer recognition. However, training budget cuts may result in a disproportionate reduction of funding for surgical training. Surgical training posts will also be endangered, opportunities for out-of-programme experience and research may also decline and further costs are likely to be passed onto the trainee.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25592885 PMCID: PMC4324039 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2482-15-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Surg ISSN: 1471-2482 Impact factor: 2.102
Figure 1Health Education England and its LETBs.
The proportion of LETB board membership revealing the LETBs are dominated by service providers and administrators
| LETB | LETB board membership | Total number | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Health service provider | Education provider | Administrator | Healthcare professional representative | Trainee/medical student | Patient | ||
|
| 10(71%) | 1(7%) | 2(14%) | 1(7%) | 0(0%) | 0(0%) | 14 |
|
| 11(65%) | 2(12%) | 3(18%) | 1(6%) | 0(0%) | 0(0%) | 17 |
|
| 11(65%) | 3(18%) | 2(12%) | 1(6%) | 0(0%) | 0(0%) | 17 |
|
| 7(41%) | 2(12%) | 3(18%) | 2(12%) | 2(12%) | 1(6%) | 17 |
|
| 7(47%) | 2(13%) | 3(20%) | 3(20%) | 0(0%) | 0(0%) | 15 |
|
| 9(53%) | 2(12%) | 3(18%) | 3(18%) | 0(0%) | 0(0%) | 17 |
|
| 14(61%) | 4(17%) | 4(17%) | 1(4%) | 0(0%) | 0(0%) | 23 |
|
| 12(57%) | 3(14%) | 4(19%) | 2(10%) | 0(0%) | 0(0%) | 21 |
|
| 9(56%) | 1(6%) | 3(19%) | 3(19%) | 0(0%) | 0(0%) | 16 |
|
| 10(63%) | 1(6%) | 3(19%) | 2(12%) | 0(0%) | 0(0%) | 16 |
|
| 13(65%) | 2(10%) | 3(15%) | 2(10%) | 0(0%) | 0(0%) | 20 |
|
| 10(59%) | 2(12%) | 4(23%) | 1(6%) | 0(0%) | 0(0%) | 17 |
|
| 12(62%) | 3(14%) | 3(14%) | 2(10%) | 0(0%) | 0(0%) | 21 |
|
| 136(59%) | 28(12%) | 40(17%) | 24(10%) | 2(0.9%) | 1(0.4%) | 231 |
Those primarily representing the training needs of healthcare professionals are in the minority.
Breakdown of the 66 medically qualified LETB board members by specialty reveals that the craft specialties are under-represented
| Specialty | Number of medical qualified representatives on LETBs | Subspecialty |
|---|---|---|
| General practice | 34 (52%) | - |
| Medicine | 17 (26%) | Nephrology ×4 |
| General medicine ×3 | ||
| Care for the elderly ×2 | ||
| Respiratory ×2 | ||
| Cardiology ×2 | ||
| Rheumatology ×2 | ||
| Gastroenterology ×1 | ||
| Paediatric medicine ×1 | ||
| Surgery | 4 (6%) | Urology ×2 |
| Breast surgery ×1 | ||
| Vascular surgery ×1 | ||
| Other | 11 (16%) | O + G ×3 |
| Pathology ×2 | ||
| Psychiatry ×2 | ||
| Anaesthetics ×1 | ||
| Microbiology ×1 | ||
| Clinical chemistry ×1 | ||
| Reproductive Medicine ×1 |