Posts Tagged ‘Interview’

Interview: Dr Heyworth, College of Emergency Medicine

By Mike Broad - 18th November 2010 5:36 pm

Hospital Dr invited Dr John Heyworth, president of the College of Emergency Medicine, to answer 13 questions and complete a half finished sentence.

1. What is the biggest challenge facing the profession?

“Acknowledgement and acceptance that demand for emergency care will continue to rise, both in terms of numbers and acuity, and that the fundamental component of any health service is to provide consistent high quality 24/7 emergency care, a principle which our patients both expect and deserve.”

2. When did you last laugh and why?

“Watching (another) Frasier rerun.”

3. What are the College of Emergency Medicine’s priorities over the next year?

“Drive the increase in emergency medicine consultant numbers from the current woefully inadequate average of around four consultants per department with an average attendance of 75,000. This gross mismatch must be corrected as soon as possible.

“The clinical and cost benefits are supported by an impressively robust body of evidence. Whatever replaces the four hour standard must maintain support and investment in emergency care and continue to drive individual patient flow from the ED into the hospital.

“And abolish the terms casualty and A&E - both now almost 50 years old - and replace with 21st century terminology i.e. Emergency Medicine in Emergency Departments.”

4. Which person influenced you the most and why?

“My father - psychiatrist, polymath, sportsman and rock.”

5. What is your favourite book?

Jay McInerney’s Last Bachelor.

6. How do we reverse the rise of emergency hospital admissions?

“Rather than pursuing Canute-styled, doomed attempts to reverse the tide of patients, accept that the expensive and evidence free community initiatives have largely been wasteful with no significant impact on ED activity. Of course, chronic disease surveillance and strengthened General Practice are welcome but better to accept that emergency demand will continue and that a properly funded and staffed Emergency Department with co-located primary care provision as required is the key to providing emergency care into the future.”

7. What are your guiltiest pleasures?

“Wine gums, buttered toast, Portsmouth FC, air guitar and drums.”

8. How can the standard of care delivered out-of-hours in Emergency Departments be improved?

“By appointing adequate numbers of emergency medicine consultants to provide such presence. The College of Emergency Medicine recommends a minimum 10 wte consultants for each Emergency Department. This compares favourably with international models. Such numbers allow sustainable rotas, important given the relentless demand on EM consultants during their shift. It also allows for a proper work/life balance throughout the consultant career and development of the consultant. It’ll help ensure that emergency medicine remains the number one specialty for junior doctors.”

9. What was your most embarrassing professional moment?

“Whilst eruditely describing the symptoms and signs of a ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm from the foot of a patient’s bed, said patient struck a telling blow with his foot in my lower abdominal area. A distinctly non-professional expletive may have ensued - not impressive.”

10. Of what achievement are you most proud?

“Three outstanding children - one paediatric trainee, one Seville-based teacher and one potential rock legend.”

11. Is the relaxation of the four-hour waiting target to 95% of patients a step forward?

“The four hour target was a good idea but setting the upper limit of 98% was associated with a degree of inflexibility which led to significant distortion of clinical care, pressure on clinicians and frustrations regarding the ability to provide the level of care expected.

“It is interesting that the margin between 95% and 98% should produce such difficulties, but the system is now geared to 95% and the College view is that support to achieve this performance must continue into the future to ensure patient flow from the ED, otherwise the previous problems of gridlock and patients being warehoused in our departments will return rapidly.”

12. When were you most in danger?

“Possibly as a student at a party to which I may not have been invited when asked whether I was looking at this chap’s girlfriend. Rather wittily I thought, I responded in the affirmative. This was rewarded by a dimpled pint glass versus nose event. In 2010, this may well have been replaced by a rather sharper implement with more than a cosmetic disadvantage.”

13. How will the colleges maintain their relevance?

“The College of Emergency Medicine embraces change enthusiastically and recognises the need for the system to respond and improve to optimise care. However, as with all other aspects of healthcare, there must be absolute clarity that all efforts are centred around the patient.”

Finish this sentence: the recent white paper Equity and Excellence: Liberating the NHS…allows the expert clinical groups - the College of Emergency Medicine and others - to contribute to the future of emergency care. This will ensure that the commissioning process is robustly informed by those clinicians with the experience and expertise derived from practising such care on a day-to-day basis, rather than uninformed misguided strategy devised at a distance from the clinical environment.

Interview: Andrew Lansley, health secretary

Royal College of Physicians - 3rd November 2010 11:40 am

The following interview with Andrew Lansley, secretary of state for health, is reproduced with the kind permission of the Royal College of Physicians. The interview was first published in Commentary, October 2010, the RCP membership magazine, and is based on questions submitted by RCP fellows and members.

Q. Given the additional strains on clinicians’ time resulting from the proposals in the white paper, Equity and Excellence: Liberating the NHS, what will you do to enable us to find the time for carrying out the revalidation process?

A. I want a system of revalidation that works for patients and for the medical profession - a system that is robust, efficient and cost effective. That’s why we have extended the current revalidation pilots for another year - we want to get it right. I understand that there are many pressures on clinicians’ time, and we will use the pilots to ensure that the benefits of revalidation really do outweigh the costs for the medical profession and patients.

Q. I warmly welcome the re-engagement of clinicians in healthcare planning, but we do not want to risk duplicating lots of bureaucratic time negotiating new contracts for small numbers of patients from several local practices or consortiums. How will relatively small consortia of GPs be knowledgeable enough to commission services for low-volume, high-cost disorders such as adult cystic fibrosis?

A. GP consortia will help us bring together the management of care with the management of resources - and that’s vital for a more effective and efficient healthcare system. There are practical challenges we will need to face, not least the skills challenge around commissioning. However, consortia will have access to expert support if they feel they need it and the NHS Commissioning Board will provide expert commissioning guidelines to further support them.

And we are also currently consulting on how the NHS Commissioning Board and GP consortia can best work together to ensure effective commissioning of low-volume services. I would welcome the RCP’s views on how we can get the right skills in the right places to support consortia arrangements.

Cystic fibrosis is an interesting case where we can improve on current commissioning. My discussions with the Cystic Fibrosis Trust have shown how their work has helped identify the key factors in individual trusts, and they are working on a more effective tariff. With clear quality indicators and a better tariff structure to incentivise quality and more patient input I am sure we can do better.

Q. Should hospital consultants hold positions within the commissioning consortia so that they can contribute their knowledge and experience to the task of commissioning such models of care?

A. Given their key role in coordinating care, GP practices are well placed to lead on commissioning care for patients. But clearly we would expect consortia to involve relevant health and care professionals from all sectors in helping design care pathways or care packages that achieve more integrated delivery of care. Working between GPs, specialists and other providers is instrumental to service improvement.

Q. How is the secretary of state planning to handover to primary care in England such a large responsibility of healthcare when most general practitioners at present do not take responsibility for their patients after 6 pm on weekdays and at the weekend/bank holidays?

A. Their responsibility was taken away through the 2004 contract. GPs, in my experience, want to be involved. Through the GP consortia, we are putting general practice in its rightful place - at the very heart of the healthcare system. GPs are closest to their patients and are best-placed to secure the right services for them at the right time.

We are currently working with GP organisations to sort out the detail of what this means in practice. But I’ve been clear that the consortia will be required to take over responsibility for commissioning out-of-hours care, which will form part of a 24/7 high-quality, urgent-care system.

Now this doesn’t necessarily mean a return to the old days, where GPs were individually legally responsible to offer out-of-hours services themselves - though some may choose to do so. Instead, we are expecting local GPs to commission the best out-of-hours service for their patients and to be clearly accountable for the standard of care received - whether that’s during the day or at night.

Q. Would the secretary please re-consider the penalty charge for readmission as the current one may make consultants reluctant to discharge and lead to prolonged lengths of stay?

A. I think the statistics tell a story. Over the last 10 years, emergency re-admissions have increased by 50%. I don’t believe this is because patients have become more frail but because hospitals have been incentivised to push people out early. It’s a classic case of process targets creating risks for patients.

Our proposals are about sending a powerful signal to the NHS - that it is outcomes, not activity, that matter. By withdrawing payment for re-admissions we are making it absolutely clear that patient care doesn’t end when patients walk out of the hospital door.

I don’t see this as a fine or a penalty charge, but as a way of ensuring hospitals discharge patients when it is best and safe for them to do so; and we will ensure that the resources are provided to reflect these additional responsibilities. It may be earlier - if the hospital can be sure they have the right team in place. This will also stimulate the NHS to forge meaningful connections with community services to ensure patients are fully supported in recovery.

I also recognise that some re-admissions are appropriate - for instance it may be in the best interests of a child with a long-term condition to be sent home, although there is a risk of re-admission. We plan to adjust the tariff prices for initial admissions to take account of such ‘appropriate’ re-admissions.

Q. There was little related to the education of trainee doctors in the white paper. What changes does the secretary of state see in the delivery of education to trainee doctors? Who will commission education and training?

A. Training and supporting the next generation of doctors is essential for the long-term future of the NHS. I want to make sure we’re attracting the brightest and best, and that we’re planning appropriately for new demands as our healthcare needs change.

We’ll be publishing a consultation on how education and training needs to evolve later this year. Certainly it’s clear to me that we need to make the system simpler, more efficient and more employer-led. But I also want to make sure the professions, the royal colleges and the NHS contribute to this process, and I hope as many of you as possible will get involved in the consultation.

Q. Will the new government be advised to take a firm stand with the European Commission and say that the EWTD does not work in England and should be modified?

A. Practising medicine is a 24/7 business and I’m conscious there are significant problems associated with limiting doctors’ hours in line with EWTD.

We cannot - and will not - go back to a situation where doctors are working 100-hour weeks. I consistently supported our New Deal for Junior Doctors to ensure we stopped excessive hours. But it’s also clear that the directive isn’t working for patients or the profession in its current form.

I will support the business secretary in taking a robust approach to future negotiations on the revision of EWTD. It is essential that the opt-out is retained, and that a workable solution is found.

In the meantime, I’ve asked Medical Education England to work with the profession, the service and the medical royal colleges, including the RCP, on proposals to improve training practices and support greater continuity of care under the current system.

Q. Given that there are increasing numbers of trained specialists coming through the system and a shortage of new consultant posts, how are the current expectations of the medical workforce to be met?

A. You are absolutely right to say that medical training posts need to meet future demand for specialists rather than current service demand for junior doctors.

There were some reductions made in training post numbers in 2009/10 and we need to build up the evidence to match specialty training to future needs.

That’s why the Centre for Workforce Intelligence has been commissioned to provide initial recommendations on medical specialty training numbers for 2011 by specialty - this will give us a solid foundation for planning the clinical workforce of the future.

Q. Will the coalition’s determination to encourage clinical audit be backed up with continuity funding for mature audits as well as help for start-ups?

A. I’ve been clear that good information is a catalyst for better performance. I want to encourage clinicians to examine what they do against explicit criteria and by comparison with their peer group. I have, in opposition, been very much aware of the way in which the Myocardial Infarction Audit Project and the Sentinel Stroke Audit have helped drive improvements.

That’s why we will continue funding the National Clinical Audit and Patient Outcome Programme (NCAPOP) this financial year, and will also extend national clinical audits to support clinicians across a much wider range of treatments and conditions.

Funding for NCAPOP is there to get more clinical audits off the ground and we are looking at how we can encourage the NHS to use a range of funding options for established audits more effectively. We are also keen to put more information from clinical audits into the public domain and develop clear outcome measures.

What is important is that the local NHS grasps that good information is integral to quality and patient safety, and makes the right investment.

Q. Does the government have any plans to revise the rules and regulations surrounding recruitment of international medical graduates (IMGs) to ease the lack of locum doctors?

A. We want to attract the very best doctors into the NHS - and that includes drawing on talent from abroad where appropriate. There are now far more doctors working in the NHS than ever before and the NHS is now more self-sufficient in the training and development of our own doctors.

However, we are open to bringing in outstanding doctors from abroad, and if no suitable UK or European doctor is available to fill a post, the current immigration rules do allow fast-tracking to secure an IMG.

Q. Since its introduction in 2007, smoke-free legislation has already had a positive impact ‘at the coalface’ of medicine. What plans do you have to protect people, specifically children, further from smoking and smoke?

A. Public health is about striking the right balance between regulation and responsibility. Certainly, we know that the smoke-free legislation is improving health and saving lives, and so we have no intention of rolling back legislation in this area.

But we need to be aware of the continuing prevalence of smoking so, in terms of going further on tobacco control, we need to look carefully at the evidence of what actually works. We will say more about our plans when we publish our public health white paper later this year.

Interview: Dr Porter, chair of BMA’s consultants committee

By Mike Broad - 28th June 2010 10:33 am

Hospital Dr invited Dr Mark Porter, chairman of the BMA’s consultants committee, and consultant anaesthetist in Coventry, to answer 13 questions and complete a half finished sentence.

1. What is the biggest challenge facing the profession?

“We’ve been used to continual increase in resources allocated to healthcare in the UK, with the biggest expansions being in the last ten years. Now the profession is being asked to manage a reduction as we all pay for the burst banking balloon. The challenge will be continuing to be effective advocates for our patients while feeling a justifiable sense of outrage at this.”

2. When did you last laugh and why?

“A few minutes ago at one of the idiocies of life. There are so many.”

3. What are the BMA’s priorities over the next year?

“To represent our members to the best of our ability, and to a high standard, both individually and as a profession. I expect that a significant part of my own time will be spent on ensuring that revalidation does not become a threat or a disproportionate burden on the profession.”

4. Which person influenced you the most and why?

“My family; Dr Sandy Macara, a BMA officer in the 1990s, who encouraged me to become involved; Dr John Elton, a colleague at work, who is an inspiration in his focus on patient care and multidisciplinary working.”

5. What is your favourite book?

“So many and too difficult to choose but one. In the last year, Direct Red by Gabriel Weston stands out; an elegantly written memoir of a surgeon’s journey through her career. Stunningly perceptive.”

6. Will revalidation be implemented as the GMC envisages?

“Yes and no. It will come, and it will be as the GMC envisages at that point, but to get from where we were to where we will be has involved significant change as the GMC and other organisations have been brought to accept that revalidation is unavoidable but it must not be oppressive.”

7. What is your guiltiest pleasure?

“The DVD box set of Battlestar Galactica.”

8. What can doctors do to protect services in the face of cuts?

“Make sure that we have a strong voice in decisions; that we bring our experience, our advocacy and our evidence to bear in those decisions.”

9. What was your most embarrassing professional moment?

“Entering the main hall at a BMA conference and being immediately called to speak, having forgotten that I had submitted a speaking request or what the debate was about. It was a long walk to the podium as I tried to work out what the preceding speaker had been exhorting the conference to do.”

10. Of what achievement are you most proud?

“Being part of the team that put the present consultant contracts into place.”

11. Is the downturn going to compromise the 2003 consultant contract for many?

“For some, perhaps. There has always been accountability in any employment contract, and some consultants are still less able to give a meaningful account of what they spend their SPA time on - time that costs their employers in cash terms. In some trusts this brings the role of SPAs into question and challenge. I’m quite clear what they are for - quality assurance and quality improvement for our roles as doctors in looking after patients.”

12. When were you most in danger?

“At 60 mph ten metres from a car that had pulled out in front of me.”

13. The government are keen to extend the role of the private sector in delivering NHS services. What progress has the BMA’s Look After Our NHS campaign made?

“We were never under the illusion that the Prime Minister would smack his head and say ‘of course’ - we set out to raise awareness about an insidious process occurring alongside fine slogans about patient choice and creating spare capacity. And we have done that with the support of many doctors.”

Finish this sentence: juniors working a 48-hour week will have their training opportunities improved by… careful attention to their needs instead of an assumption that given more time it will just happen.

Interview: Professor Stephenson, president of the RCPCH

By Mike Broad - 22nd April 2010 4:47 pm

Hospital Dr invited Professor Terence Stephenson, president of the Royal College of Paediatrics & Child Health (RCPCH) to answer 13 questions and complete a half written sentence.

1. What is the biggest challenge facing the profession?

“Not being a profession. The new consultant contract introduced to the NHS in 2003 concentrated too much on the time sensitive or time sheet approach, creating a sense that doctors are tradesmen paid by the hour, rather than professionals.”

2. When did you last laugh and why?

“Yesterday when my very thin 17-year-old son asked for a bowl of coco pops half-an-hour after two huge bacon sandwiches.”

3. What are the RCPCH’s priorities over the next year?

“Children, children and children always first. Ensuring our paediatricians are among the best trained in the world; integrating the European Working Time Directive and maintaining a quality health service for children; revalidation; and service reconfiguration.”

4. Which person influenced you the most and why?

“My father. He taught me to be sceptical but not cynical.”

5. What is your favourite piece of music?

“Bach Cello Suites.”

6. Has medicine become too protocol driven?

“No. If there is a current, optimal way to manage a condition, every patient who fits the inclusion criteria should be managed that way or be in a randomised trial. ‘Post-code’ treatment, or treatment following what the doctor was taught 20 years ago, has no place.”

7. What is your guiltiest pleasure?

“Chocolate.”

8. What was your most embarrassing professional moment?

“Not knowing the diagnosis - still happens every day.”

9. Of what achievement are you most proud?

“Being elected by my peers as president of the Royal College of Paediatrics & Child Health.”

10. When were you most in danger?

“Driving alone across the Great Karoo desert as a medical student in a 15-year-old car which I had borrowed.”

11. How will paediatrics cope with an increasingly part-time workforce?

“Paediatrics will cope very well. My personal experience is that the service receives more than the sum of the parts when doctors job-share. Inevitably, however, comprehensive twice a day hand-over has become much more important than when I was resident in a hospital continuously from 9 am Friday until 5 pm Monday. I have no wish to go back to that and I am sure patients feel the same.”

12. What are the hallmarks of an excellent paediatric team?

“Knowledgeable, skilful, sensitive, multidisciplinary care by a group of professionals who trust each another and enjoy their work.”

13. How will the royal colleges maintain their relevance?

“By being fit for purpose and fit for the 21st century. We must be relevant to our members and to society’s priorities. We must engage with the media and the public. That is why the RCPCH involved young people in appointing our new chief executive.”

Finish this sentence: trainees working a 48-hour week will…still be trained to be among the best doctors in the world but be able to enjoy a reasonable work-life balance along the way.

Interview: Prof Sir Neil Douglas, chairman of AMRC

By Mike Broad - 2nd March 2010 9:59 pm

 

Prof Sir Neil Douglas

Prof Sir Neil Douglas

Hospital Dr invited Prof Sir Neil Douglas, chairman of the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges, to answer 13 questions and complete a half finished sentence.

1. What is the biggest challenge the profession faces?  

“Convincing all doctors that they have a leadership role, however local that might be, and that they can make a difference. Too many in the profession see themselves as powerless and this must change if we are to be able to give the public the high quality of care they deserve. Doctors are in a unique position to innovate better care but too often they give up when thwarted.”

2. When did you last laugh and why?

“Listening to Bill Bryson recounting his story of the futility of wearing bells to frighten off bears when hiking. A great story, brilliantly told.”

3. What are the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges’ priorities over the next year?

“Training, training, training and training. Repeated PMETB surveys have shown even before the 48 hour WTR that hospital trainees are dissatisfied, and with good reason. WTR will only make this worse. Poor training is not the fault of ‘the managers’, blame lies squarely with the profession for not giving and demanding adequate priority for training, for permitting rotas which provide service but little and often no training.

“Too many seniors have given up on their trainees feeling they do not see enough of them to bond with them and teach well, rather than radically revising their own and their trainees’ schedules to ensure excellent training.”

4. Which person influenced you most as a doctor and why?

“Dr Andrew Douglas - no relation - by demonstrating that kindness to patients, infinite patience and skill were all necessary to look after patients well.”

5. When were you most in danger?

“Numerous skiing episodes, or possibly when I was a student being arrested by Russian police for not paying a drinks bill which was not mine, but they spoke no English and were not friendly!”

6. Why do we need the AMRC?

“To provide a united voice of the colleges to drive forward improved training and patient care.”

7. What is your favourite book?

“Usually whatever I am reading at the time! In fact, that is The girl who kicked over the hornet’s nest by Stieg Larsson, and I have really enjoyed the whole quirky trilogy.”

8. Is credentialing the way forward in training?

“Credentialing is not the main issue, the key issue is to ensure that trainees are treated and valued as the intelligent young people they are and that their timetables reflect real training not their use as rota fodder. While CCT must remain the main goal of training, many doctors change their areas of practice later and the public have a right to know whether they are adequately trained in all areas of their practice.”

9. What is your guiltiest pleasure?

“Good New Zealand wine - having campaigned actively for greater alcohol control.”

10. Will revalidation raise the quality of doctors?  

“Yes, but slowly and perhaps not in the most cost efficient way. Nevertheless the public have a right to be confident that the doctor looking after them is up to date and safe.”

11. What was your most embarrassing professional moment?

“Throwing a sleeping medical student out of a seminar I was giving on sleepiness - only to find him referred to me a few weeks later with classical but undiagnosed narcolepsy!”

12. Of what achievement are you most proud?

“Establishing in Edinburgh the first sleep centre in the UK. We fought and won - by using the media - the case that from the beginning all CPAP units issued by us were funded by the NHS.

“This was some 25 years earlier than CPAP was funded in England and over 5,000 patients in Edinburgh benefited from NHS CPAP over that period.”

13. What is the most important lesson a career in medicine has taught you?

“That we all make mistakes and can and must learn from them.”

Finish this half written sentence: trainees working to a 48-hour week will…

…only be able to become competent consultants if similar priority is given to training as to patient care.

Interview: Prof Sir Sabaratnam Arulkumaran, RCOG president

By Mike Broad - 8th February 2010 11:22 am

Hospital Dr invited Professor Sir Sabaratnam Arulkumaran, president of the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RCOG), to answer 12 questions and complete a half finished sentence:

Prof Sir Sabaratnam Arulkumaran

Prof Sir Sabaratnam Arulkumaran

1. What is the biggest challenge the profession faces?

“There are a few: increasing consultant presence in the labour wards to improve safety and quality, reducing litigation and enhancing the quality of postgraduate training.” 

2. When did you last laugh and why?

“Laughter is the best medicine - it makes you relax. I laughed whilst watching a comedy with my son recently.”

3. What are the RCOG’s priorities over the next year?

“To evaluate whether we are able to provide high quality training with the reduction of hours as a result of EWTD implementation; and to improve quality and safety whilst reducing the cost of care provided.”

4. Which person influenced you most as a doctor and why?

“There have been many over the years - my seniors and colleagues have always encouraged and inspired me to do better.”

5. When were you most in danger?

“Fifteen years ago, I had a road traffic accident when my car skidded and hit a tree.”

6. How will royal colleges maintain their relevance?

“Royal Colleges are key to the provision of postgraduate medical education. We develop the curriculum and run the examinations. We are also involved in the setting of clinical standards through our guidelines and scientific papers. These activities help advance the practice of medicine.

“Our members give up their time voluntarily and work both weekdays and weekends to give their best to the college. This commitment and loyalty shown by our members cannot be equalled elsewhere. Without this sense of altruism and the sharing of their knowledge and expertise, I think patient care will not be as robust as it is.”

7. What is your favourite piece of music?

“I enjoy Indian classical music, played on traditional instruments such as the sitar and nathaswaram, by musicians like Ravi Shankar.”

8. How will we improve maternity services?

“Three very basic points: the provision of one-to-one midwifery care in labour; care closer to home for antenatal and postnatal care; and increased consultant presence in hospital maternity units.”

9. What is your guiltiest pleasure?

“Relaxing with my family and close friends with a single malt whisky.”

10. What are the hallmarks of an excellent O&G team?

“Good clinical outcomes, small numbers of low-risk incidents and complaints received and the continuous monitoring of performance (through using the maternity dashboard).”

11. What was your most embarrassing professional moment?

“I received an honorary doctorate from the University of Athens. I thought I should say a few words in Greek which I prepared but failed miserably in delivering.”

12. Of what achievement are you most proud?

“Being Honoured as Knight Bachelor in the Queens Birthday Honors list, in June 2009, for services to medicine.”

Finish this half written sentence: trainees working to a 48-hour week will…need to work hard and use every clinical encounter as a learning opportunity.

Interview: Prof Ian Gilmore, president of the RCP

By Mike Broad - 25th January 2010 8:31 pm

 

Prof Ian Gilmore

Prof Ian Gilmore

Hospital Dr invited Prof Ian Gilmore, president of the Royal College of Physicians to answer 12 questions and complete a half finished sentence…

1. What is the biggest challenge facing the profession?

“The biggest challenge facing the profession is to remain a profession - to be true to our professional roots, our altruism and societal values at a time when doctors are being put on work sensitive contracts, subjected to hours restrictions through the European Working Time Directive and facing increasing obstacles to continuity of care.”

2. When did you last laugh and why?

“The fact that I can’t remember when I last laughed means: A. I never laugh B. I laugh so frequently C. I have a memory disorder. The correct answer is B.”

3. What are the RCP’s priorities over the next year?

“The RCP’s priorities over the next year include promoting leadership by doctors in the improvement for quality of care and developing better models for continuity in the wake of the EWTD. We are also working to strengthen our regional structures and better support work at hospital and SHA level.”

4. Which person influenced you the most and why?

“It is always difficult to single out a defining influence from the myriad of influential teachers and mentors over a lifetime. When I was appointed a consultant, I learnt so much about how to build up, run and motivate a clinical team from my older colleague, Richard McConnell.”

5. What is your favourite book?

“My favourite book is Down and Out in London and Paris by George Orwell. When I read it again recently, I realised how poorly developed his writing style was at this early stage of his career but I loved the graphic, earthy experiences of student poverty.”

6. Has medicine become too protocol driven?

“In a world of ideal education, training, staffing and supervision, protocols would be superfluous. Under the current hospital pressures, particularly in unselected ‘medical take’ they are essential.”

7. What is your guiltiest pleasure?

“My guiltiest pleasure is not revealing one.”

8. What are the hallmarks of an excellent medical team?

“In an excellent team the sum is greater than the individual parts and the role of leadership is evident only by its apparent absence.”

9. What was your most embarrassing professional moment?

“My most embarrassing professional moment was failing to dislodge the screw top from a bottle of water when offering a glass to a royal visitor at the college.”

10. Of what achievement are you most proud?

“I am most proud of the fact that all of my three children work for one of the greatest modern achievements of a civilised society - the NHS - without any perceptible parental influence in their choice.”

11. When were you most in danger?

“While I currently feel most in danger during my present role, where I am only one media slip away from national ignominy, in reality I was probably much more in danger when I was performing invasive endoscopic procedures on a daily basis. So often I felt I was balancing the high risk of doing something versus the high risk of doing nothing!”

12. How will the royal colleges maintain their relevance?

“We will maintain our relevance as long as we retain strong support from our fellowship. Currently nearly all consultant physicians working in England and Wales are fellows of the college, in addition to many working in other parts of the UK and abroad. While we have their support, we are able to engage with a wide range of bodies, including government regulators and NGOs in the knowledge that we are speaking for frontline clinicians.”

Finish this sentence: trainees working a 48-hour week will…

…precipitate a radical rethink of what is meant by continuity of care and how it is achieved.

Interview: Prof Peter Rubin, chair of the GMC

By Mike Broad - 12th November 2009 2:03 pm

Prof Peter Rubin, chair of the GMC

Prof Peter Rubin, chair of the GMC

Hospital Dr invites Professor Peter Rubin, chair of the GMC, and Professor of Therapeutics at the University of Nottingham, to answer 12 questions and complete a half written sentence:

1. What is the biggest challenge the profession faces?

“Well, the starting point has to be that opinion polls consistently show that the medical profession is easily the most trusted group in the UK. Over the years, doctors have felt most threatened when the profession as a whole has got out of step with public expectations and felt that change was being done to them. So I think the biggest challenge is for the profession to engage in leading change, recognising that the world around us is always changing.”

2. When did you last laugh?

“About 5 minutes ago.”

3. Which person influenced you the most as a doctor and why?

“There’s no one person who stands out, but several people have influenced me in different ways. For example, Sir George Pickering, who was my tutor for a while in Oxford, taught me the importance of seeing the world from my patient’s viewpoint. A young patient who was dying from cancer when I was a registrar taught me the importance of making decisions with your patient, not just for them. I’ve also been influenced by some pretty dire prima donnas in that I’ve been determined never to be like them!”

4. When were you most in danger?

“If you exclude school rugby in Cornwall, I don’t think I’ve ever been in physical danger.”

5. What are the GMC’s biggest priorities over the next year?

“Continuing the piloting for revalidation; the merging of PMETB; preparing to separate adjudication, while the GMC maintains its role in setting standards of practice and investigating complaints. Moving the responsibility for adjudication to the Office of the Health Professions Adjudicator will further demonstrate that decisions are fair and effective, separate from the regulators, the professions and government.”

6. What is your favourite book?

“Maugham’s Of Human Bondage really gripped me with its insight into why people do the things they do.”

7. Is the medical profession becoming over regulated?

“I certainly hope not. There are 180,000 doctors practising in the UK, of whom I’m one, and at the GMC we’re determined that regulation should be proportionate.”

8. What is your guiltiest pleasure?

“Eating Cornish clotted cream straight out of the tub.”

9. Would revalidation catch another Harold Shipman?

“No. Nor was it ever intended to. Revalidation grew out of the Bristol Royal Infirmary when it became clear doctors were working outside their competence, with other doctors knowing and remaining silent.”

10. What was your most embarrassing professional moment? 

“The time I got renal colic in my clinic. There are all sorts of memories, from my patient helping me on to the couch, to being wheeled off past my waiting patients.”

11. Is doctors’ training being dumbed down?

“No. For the last 150 years it has been regularly claimed that doctors are not what they used to be. There’s nothing new in this world.”

12. What achievement are you most proud of? 

“Leading the development of the Nottingham Vet School.”

Finish this sentence: The merger with PMETB is going to be…

…of benefit to the profession and the public by making the regulation of all stages of medical education by a single organisation a reality.

Interview: Dr Christine Tomkins, MDU chief executive

By Mike Broad - 14th October 2009 12:58 pm

The MDU's Dr Christine Tomkins

The MDU's Dr Christine Tomkins

Hospital Dr invites Dr Christine Tomkins, chief executive of the MDU, to answer 12 questions and complete a half written sentence:

1. What is the biggest challenge the profession faces?

From a medico-legal perspective, the biggest challenge is the increasing level of regulation faced by doctors.

After a single incident, a doctor can be suspended and/or disciplined by their employer; questioned at a Coroner’s Inquest and in a Care Quality Commission investigation; investigated by the police and face a criminal trial; called to appear before the GMC at a Fitness to Practice hearing; subjected to a civil claim for alleged clinical negligence; and face the glare of the media. Obviously doctors who are not performing or who may be a danger to patients need to be identified and any concerns addressed; but the existing systems are more than enough to achieve this. Anything more is out of all proportion.

2. When did you last laugh?

About five minutes ago, when my medical student son phoned to ask me to send him a preposterous list of things he had forgotten to take back with him to university.

3. Which person influenced you the most as a doctor and why?

Donald Longson, a consultant physician at Manchester Royal Infirmary and the dean of clinical studies at Manchester Medical School. I did my pre-registration medical house job with him at Manchester Royal Infirmary and was lucky enough to have him as a friend and mentor until his death in 2002. He was wonderfully clever and perceptive, as well as funny and kind. His patients loved him, as did his colleagues and friends. He was a perfect example of an exceptional doctor and exceptional human being.

4. When were you most in danger?

A horse I was riding reared and fell on me a few years ago. I had a very narrow escape.

5. What do you hope to achieve in this role?

To drag professional indemnity into the 21st century! In most other EU countries, insurance for doctors is compulsory or the norm, and in the UK other healthcare practitioners, such as optometrists, all require a professional indemnity insurance policy so the medical profession is out of step.

Discretionary indemnity for clinical negligence claims may have served doctors well in the 19th and 20th centuries but times have changed and it’s not unusual to see compensation awards between £3 million to £4 million. A contract of insurance, and the security that successful negligence claims that come within the policy will be paid, is indisputably in the interests of patients and of doctors.

The MDU is the only medical defence organisation to provide members with insurance. This means there is still a substantial number of the UK’s doctors not covered by insurance if they are sued. With discretionary indemnity, there is no guarantee that patients who are harmed by doctors’ negligence will be compensated.

6. What is your favourite film?

To Kill A Mockingbird

7. Is the medical profession over regulated?

The MDU has repeatedly spoken out against new tiers of regulation which we believe are unnecessary and likely to be time-consuming for the profession. We see no need for the changes being brought in and strongly object to the suggestion there is a regulation gap. The medical profession is already held accountable in more ways than other professions. If anything, there is too much regulation.

8. What is your guiltiest pleasure?

Not telling!

9. How do we tackle our culture of litigation in the NHS?

If a patient has been negligently treated it is right that they be compensated. However, our evidence shows that claimants’ legal costs are excessive, often far higher than the compensation itself. We have campaigned for fairness and proportionality in claimants’ solicitors fees.

We don’t believe defendants should pay success fees in clinical negligence cases and after the event insurance should be abolished if conditional fee arrangements are in place. We would also like to see fixed hourly rates for claimants’ solicitors.

10. What was your most embarrassing professional moment? 

There have been a few. I blush to remember when, as a junior doctor after a long spell on-call, I fell asleep while taking a history from a patient. Fortunately I don’t think he noticed or he was too polite to say so. 

11. What has been your greatest success?

Being appointed chief executive of the MDU, the UK’s oldest and largest medical defence organisation and being the only qualified doctor leading a medical defence organisation.

12. Will the new NHS complaints system benefit both doctors and patients?

In general ‘yes’. The new procedure has just two stages and we are pleased to see greater emphasis on local resolution, as our experience is that the majority of complaints are resolved quickly, often by providing a clear explanation and a sincere apology, when appropriate. We also support the emphasis on using complaints to identify where systems need to be implemented to help prevent mistakes happening again.

On the negative side, the new procedures allow complaints to be made direct to a trust and only notified to the provider with the consent of the complainant. This means it is possible that doctors may not even be told and this means they cannot respond or address concerns.

Finish this sentence: Andy Burnham is…

…an Evertonian, so he will be much happier now than he was on the first day of the season!