果冻影院

XClose

果冻影院 News

Home
Menu

Doctors who perform poorly in exams more likely to be sanctioned

6 December 2018

Doctors who perform poorly in postgraduate professional exams are significantly more likely to听face sanctions听by the medical authorities because of the risk they pose to patients or the public,听finds听a new first-of-its-kind study by 果冻影院听and the University of Cambridge.听听

stethoscope

Thelargedata linkagestudy, publishedinBMCMedicine,assessedthe exam results of UK registered doctors who had takenknowledge basedexamsand clinicalassessments,set by the MRCGP (Membership of the Royal College of General Practitioners)orthe MRCP(UK) (Membership of the Royal Colleges of Physicians of the United Kingdom).听

Researcherslinkedtheexam datatoGeneral Medical Council听(GMC) dataon鈥楩itness to Practise鈥 (FtP)sanctions againstmedicaldoctors, the most seriousof whichis being struck off or erased from the medical register;other sanctionsrangefromsuspension from the registertoreceiving a warning for very poor behaviour or performance.

The study found doctors sanctioned by the Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service (MPTS), which makes decisions independent of the GMC, had previously scored substantially lower听on both the knowledge and clinical skills assessments in MRCGP and MRCP听(UK), with clinical assessments predicting听sanctions听somewhat more strongly. Of importance, researchers found,听that each additional increment in knowledge or skill contributed to a reduced likelihood of later sanctions.

Co-author Dr Katherine Woolf (果冻影院 Medical School)said:听鈥淭his study is the first to demonstrate for UK doctors thathow well they perform inpostgraduate examinationspredictsthelikelihood of their receiving a professional sanction, which could set back or, at worse, end their career.听

鈥淭he findingsdemonstratethatpostgraduateexaminationsmeasureimportant high-level knowledge, skills, and attitudes, whichunderpindoctors鈥 real world behaviour.The findings contradict the frequent assertion thatpostgraduate medical examinationsare unrelated to doctors鈥 clinical practice.鈥澨

TheMRCP(UK) and MRCGPexams are central to ensuring the quality ofUK doctors in training tobecome specialists in hospital care or general practice.This research supportsthevalueof the examinationsin protecting patients.听

Examresults were obtained for UK registered doctors taking the MRCGP Applied Knowledge Test(AKT;27,561doctors) orClinical Skills Assessment (CSA;17,365) at first attempt between 2010 and 2016 or takingMRCP(UK) Part 1 MCQ (multiple choice questions;37,358), Part 2 (MCQ;28,285) or Practical Assessment of Clinical Examination Skills(PACES;27,040) at first attempt between 2001 and 2016.听Exam data werelinked with GMC actions on a doctorregistration from September 2008 to January 2017.

Doctors in the lowest 2.5% of exam performance were about 12 times more likely to have sanctions than those in the top 2.5%.听听

Corresponding author Professor Chris McManus (果冻影院听Medical School) said:听鈥淔itness to practise is at the core of being a doctor - one of the most trusted and responsible positions in society

鈥淒octors who are not fit to practise endanger patients and others, and the GMC is understandably strict about such matters, with conduct and trust at the heart of the GMC鈥檚 approach to Fitness to Practise.听

鈥淗owever postgraduate examinations are primarily concerned about knowledge and skills, with the exams being set and administered by Royal Colleges, which are independent of the GMC.

Our findings therefore suggest thatwhileattaining the knowledge, skills and competencies for effective and safe medical practice-the apparent emphasesof examination - they are implicitly alsopartof assessing conduct and trustof doctors.鈥

The study did not distinguish between different levels of sanctions, or sanctions for different reasons. It did not take into account changes to the GMC鈥檚 Fitness to Practise procedures that occurredover the study period.The research looked at only two of the UK鈥檚 postgraduate examinations, there being other exams for a range of other medical specialties, but MRCGP and MRCP(UK) are two of the largest postgraduate examinations in the UK.

The GMCwillinvestigateadoctorif a complaint is made about that doctor鈥檚 fitness to practise by amember of the public, another professional,oranemployer (e.g. hospital)or other representative of aninstitution.

The Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service (MPTS) adjudicates on complaints made against doctors in the United Kingdom, making independent decisions about a doctor鈥檚 fitness to practise.

Links

Media contact

Henry Killworth

Tel: + 44 (0) 207 6795296

Email: h.killworth@ucl.ac.uk