REVALIDATION FOR GENERAL PRACTITIONERS
Paul Roblin
March 2009
Much of the detail may still change.
Why now?
• Autumn 2009: all GPs need licence to practice
• All registered doctors will entitled to a licence
• Licence to practice to be introduced before 5 yearly renewal (Revalidation)
Autumn 2009
• Some doctors may choose to maintain registration only
• 240K registered (150K active)
• Only licensed doctors will be subject to Revalidation
The Purpose of Revalidation
1. To ensure that doctors are up to date and fit to practice
2. Improve and demonstrate the quality of care that all GPs provide to patients.
3. Identify GPs for whom there are concerns about their fitness to practice
Revalidation is the name for the whole process
One set of processes with two outcomes
1. Relicensure
2. Recertification
Relicensure
• To demonstrate that licensed doctors continue to practice in line with the generic standards set out by the General Medical Council.
Recertification
• To confirm that GPs on the GP register continue to meet standards that apply to the discipline.
Government and GMC have yet to publish their timescales
for relicensure and recertification
RCGP is putting steps in place to ensure that GPs have as much information and lead-in time as
possible to familiarise themselves and fully prepare for the process.
ENHANCED APPRAISAL
• Annual appraisal will be central• But it will be ‘enhanced’ appraisal. • The future nature and content of appraisal
remains under discussion.
• RCGP proposes and GMC approves(standards required and the methods used)
SUBMISSION OF EVIDENCE
• Every year: a portfolio of evidence for annual appraisal
• Every five years: a portfolio of evidence for revalidation.
• Electronic portfolio hoped for
Evidence Standardisation (Consistency)
• Common requirements for evidence• Regardless of PCT and appraiser you will be
assessed on a consistent basis.
Using “Good Medical Practice”
• GMP is being modernised to define the qualities required of a good GP
• New GMP will guide the range of annual and 5 yearly evidence
• 4 domains (currently 7) become 12 generic standards from which criteria are developed
• Translation questionable
Four Future Domains
• Knowledge, skills and performance
• Quality and safety
• Communication and teamwork
• Maintaining trust
The RCGP are proposing that every 5 years, every GP, in
whatever environment, should be able to provide:
Evidence Conventional portfolio
Description of roles
Exceptional circumstances
Evidence of 5 appraisals
Five PDPs
Four reviews of PDPs
250 Learning Credits
Two MSFs from Colleagues (360 degree)
Two Patient Surveys
Review of Complaints
Five significant event audits
Two conventional audits
Statement of probity and health
RCGP CPD Scheme“Impact and Challenge
Model”
Developed by the RCGP
Learning Credit System
• Self-accreditation of learning credits
• Minimum of 250 over the 5 year revalidation cycle
• Credit value based on the effort required (challenge) and impact on patient care(not time based)
• Credits are self-attributed and verified
at appraisal.
Why Impact and Challenge?
• Encompass the value of the learning
• Not simply the time spent in CPD
• Table combining Impact and Challenge
Challenge
Impact
Low Minor Moderate Significant High
Low
1-2 Credits 2-4 Credits 3-5 Credits 4-8 Credits 5-10 + Credits
Minor
1-3 Credits 2-4 3-7 5-10 6-12 + Credits
Moderate
2-4 Credits 3-6 4-8 6-12 8-15 + Credits
Significant
3-5 Credits 4-7 5-11 7-15 + 10-20 + Credits
High
4-6 Credits 5-10 6-14 + 10-20 + 20 Credits +
Impact?
• Impact on patients
• Impact on the individual
• Impact on service
• Positive weighting of impact compared to challenge
Challenge?
Challenge is context related
• Related to effort expended • Related to circumstances• Related to personal ability
Low impact •Mainly confirming current practice Little change necessary within the practiceNo examination of current practice (e.g. data collection)Knowledge gained is minimal or of low valueMainly for personal benefit Anything that does not reach a higher level
Minor impact Confirming current practice although new knowledge acquired which aids understanding or implementationSome change in practice required (but not necessarily followed through systematically) May involve others (e.g. discussion on new NICE guidance at practice meeting) but probably falls short of changing practice protocolsInitial data collection for audit discussed but change not yet evaluatedMinor audit (few patients, minimal change and low level gain)
Moderate impact
Demonstrating current practice against accepted best practice (e.g. completed audit cycle)Change in practice in response to new information (e.g. essential general practice – followed through to examining own practice)Would usually involve others (e.g. change in practice protocol, presenting audit data and implementing change)Teaching session that demonstrates a change in the learners through evaluation Working with organisations to influence change in others (e.g. PCO guideline development)Becoming a trainer in a well established training practice
Significant impact
Major change in practice involving an important condition. This should be in response to a change in the accepted evidence (e.g. the use of atenolol in treating uncomplicated hypertension – re designing the practice protocol and reviewing patients taking atenolol considering a switch)Influencing others to change in response to new evidence either through (evaluated) teaching or through guideline and protocol development on a regional basisIntroducing a new service for patients (e.g. starting a monitoring system for DMARDS / Warfarin, starting a minor surgery clinic from scratch)Introducing a new service to your team (e.g. a new palliative care team, an “intermediate care” team etc.)Becoming a trainer to fill the gap left by the retirement of the only other trainer in the practice
High impact Major change in the practice (e.g. becoming a new training practice, becoming a research practice within a recognised research network etc.)Major contribution or lead on projects that change or confirm professional practice. This would be at a regional or national levelPersonal development to implement a new service in practice (e.g. using a recognised scheme to gain a skill and then set up a service – RCGP certificate in substance misuse – new clinic in practice – possibly recognised as a GPwSI)
Un-answered questions about appraisal (pilots)
• Is this definition of a credit acceptable?• Is the system easy to understand and use?• Are GPs able to produce evidence easily?• Are the examples of credits self-accredited justifiable?• Are appraisers easily able to verify an individual’s credits in terms of
challenge or impact?• What if an appraiser disagrees with the doctor?• Are appraisers comfortable with this system?• Are GPs comfortable with this system?• Are we seeing diversity of subject?• Are we seeing diversity of method?• Is this an appropriate system for all GPs (sessional, OOH,
overseas)?• Are there further training issues for GPs or appraisers?• What are the local resource issues of the system?
Pass or Fail: Who Judges?
Role of the GP appraiser
Judges• Quality of a PDP
• Adequacy of a CPD folder
• Whether PDP of previous year’s appraisal has been completed
• Whether and how learning needs have been identified / prioritised
• Credits scoring
And
• Guides future learning needs
• Suggests upskilling or remedial action where required
Traffic Lighting of appraisals
• Green, Amber and Red.
• This could make the retention of the formative aspect of appraisal even more difficult.
THE RESPONSIBLE OFFICER
• Responsible Officer (RO) in every NHS Trust
• Final say on the revalidation of doctors.
• Every doctor will have one RO only
Evidence Assessment
• Four tiers– RO– Local Group (RO, RCGP and Lay assessor)– National RCGP– GMC
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Uncertainties
• Possibly 2% (?underestimate) of doctors under raised scrutiny.
• Need for increased resources for both investigatory work and remedial training.
• Much of the detail may still change.
• UK Revalidation Programme Board
(first meeting was held on 10.2.09)
Possible Curriculum and Optional Exam
• The RCGP will provide a six monthly Essential Knowledge Update of new and changing knowledge that every UK GP should have assimilated
• The linked Essential Knowledge Challenge will be a voluntary assessment for the GP to provide evidence of keeping up to date
The End
http://www.gmc-uk.org/about/reform/Revalidation.asp
http://www.rcgp.org.uk/practising_as_a_gp/revalidation.aspx