| Literature DB >> 35441208 |
.
Abstract
Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35441208 PMCID: PMC9019067 DOI: 10.1093/bjsopen/zrac048
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BJS Open ISSN: 2474-9842
Final ASiT integrated clinical academic surgical training quality indicators
|
| |
| AQI1 | Academic trainees in surgery should have an assigned academic supervisor. Where possible this should match their specialty interest and trainees should be supported to change academic supervisors if their research interests do not match |
| AQI2 | Academic supervisors should set clear objectives at the start of each training year in partnership with the academic trainees and these should be reviewed on at least a quarterly basis |
| AQI3 | Academic trainees should have a dedicated academic training programme director whose responsibility it is to safeguard interests of the academic trainee and liaise with local trust clinicians/managers where required |
| AQI4 | Academic trainees should have a named regional academic administrator who can provide information on academic training/educational opportunities and can liaise with local trusts |
|
| |
| AQI5 | The contracted academic time of academic trainees should be protected from non-academic activities. This should be communicated to the departmental NHS managers, rota coordinator, and local clinical supervisors by the training programme director at least 3 months before starting the placement, and any unmet service need covered by the trust |
| AQI6 | Academic trainees should not be required to fill ‘rota gaps’ where these arise during their dedicated academic time, to allow for progression in line with a competency-based curriculum |
| AQI7 | If academic trainees’ clinical duties are left uncovered because of protected academic time, the trust should be responsible for providing cover |
| AQI8 | Academic trainees should be given flexibility to arrange their academic time in days/weeks/months, according to what frequency best suits their academic work |
|
| |
| AQI9 | Academic trainees should have key local training opportunities prioritized, which may be at the expense of some service delivery |
| AQI10 | Academic trainees that are on an on-call rota should be offered flexibility to reduce their on-call commitment to reflect their reduced overall clinical time (pro rata, akin to ‘Less-Than-Full-Time’ training) |
| AQI11 | Following an extended interval of academic time, academic trainees should be able to request a ‘back to training’ interview and, where desired, keep-in-touch days, or phased return to clinical duties |
|
| |
| AQI12 | Annual review of academic trainees’ experiences within training units should be undertaken by programme directors. This could be supported, for example, by the ASiT integrated clinical academic surgical training quality indicators |
| AQI13 | Quality indicators for academic training posts should be clearly communicated to all hospital administrative and co-ordinating staff through which academic trainees rotate |
|
| |
| AQI14 | Academic trainees in surgery should have access to the same clinical study budget for additional clinical training courses as non-academic trainees |
| AQI15 | The process for academic trainees to access additional training and study budget available from the National Institute for Health Research should be transparent, and made available by the academic training programme director at the start of the integrated training post |
| AQI16 | Academic trainees should have a local working space (such as a shared office), and institutional library access made available for them to complete academic work during clinical postings |
|
| |
| AQI17 | Academic trainees should have individualized clinical training plans discussed at ARCP, to provide flexibility, and understanding in placements given the need to balance academic and clinical commitments |
| AQI18 | Academic trainees should have a dedicated academic ARCP (either as part of a clinical ARCP, or separately) where the panel specifically review their academic objectives and outcomes |
| AQI19 | Academic trainees should have the flexibility to extend their CCT dates where required, reflecting their reduced clinical commitments. This decision should be made with the trainee, based on competency-based progression |
|
| |
| AQI20 | Clinical training programme directors should be part of the selection panels for integrated academic clinical training posts, where possible |
ASiT, Association of Surgeons in Training; ARCP, Annual Review of Competency Progression; CCT, Certificate of completion of training.