Tomorrow's Doctors PDF
Tomorrow's Doctors PDF
Tomorrow's Doctors PDF
Tomorrows Doctors
Tomorrows Doctors
Published September 2009
Tomorrows Doctors
Contents
Paragraph(s) Page
Foreword
Introduction
16
Outcomes for graduates
723
Overarching outcome for graduates
7
Outcomes 1 The doctor as a scholar
and a scientist
812
Outcomes 2 The doctor as a practitioner
1319
Outcomes 3 The doctor as a professional
2023
Standards for the delivery of teaching,
learning and assessment
24174
Domain 1 Patient safety
2637
Domain 2 Quality assurance, review
and evaluation
3855
Domain 3 Equality, diversity
and opportunity
5670
Domain 4 Student selection
7180
Domain 5 Design and delivery of
the curriculum, including assessment
81121
Domain 6 Support and development of
students, teachers and the local faculty 122149
Domain 7 Management of teaching,
learning and assessment
150158
Domain 8 Educational resources
and capacity
159167
Domain 9 Outcomes
168174
4
8
14
14
14
19
25
30
31
36
41
45
47
61
70
72
75
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Page
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Foreword
Doctors must be capable of regularly taking responsibility
for difficult decisions in situations of clinical complexity
and uncertainty.
See Appendix 3,
Related
documents: 62
See GMC,
Good medical
practice,
paragraph 1
Tomorrows Doctors
See Appendix 3,
Related
documents: 39
The outcomes set out what the GMC expects medical schools
to deliver and what the employers of new graduates can expect
to receive although medical schools are free to require their
graduates to demonstrate additional competences. These
outcomes mark the end of the first stage of a continuum of
medical learning that runs from the first day at medical school
and continues until the doctors retirement from clinical practice.
Tomorrows Doctors
See GMC,
Good medical
practice
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See GMC,
Good medical
practice
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Introduction
1
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h
i
j
k
l
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a
b
c
d
e
f
5a See GMC,
Good medical
practice
5b See GMC,
Good medical
practice,
paragraphs
3943;
Appendix 3,
Related
documents:
45
Tomorrows Doctors
6c See GMC,
Good medical
practice,
paragraphs
2427; GMC,
Raising concerns
about patient
safety
6e See GMC
and Medical
Schools Council,
Medical
students:
professional
values and
fitness to
practise
Tomorrows Doctors
7 See GMC,
Good medical
practice, duties
of a doctor
(also inside
front cover of
Tomorrows
Doctors)
8 See
Appendix 3,
Related
documents:
1, 2, 3, 7, 9, 13
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f
g
8f See
Appendix 3,
Related
documents:
10, 11
9 See
Appendix 3,
Related
documents:
4, 14
9g See
Appendix 3,
Related
documents: 8
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11 See
Appendix 3,
Related
documents:
5, 12, 63
11a See
Appendix 3,
Related
documents:
43, 44
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a
b
c
d
12 See
GMC, Good
practice in
research and
Consent to
research
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13 See
Appendix 3,
Related
documents: 6
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14 See
Appendix 3,
Related
documents: 12
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h
i
j
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a
b
c
d
e
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17 See GMC,
Good practice
in prescribing
medicines;
Appendix 3,
Related
documents:
7, 10, 11
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19 See
Appendix 3,
Related
documents:
12, 49
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20 See GMC,
Good medical
practice and
in particular
paragraphs 12,
6571; Appendix
3, Related
documents: 16,
61, 62, 64
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21 See
Good medical
practice,
paragraphs 713,
3943
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d
e
22 See Good
medical practice,
paragraphs
3538, 4445;
Appendix
3, Related
documents:
20, 23
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22d See
Appendix
3, Related
documents: 48
23a See
Appendix
3, Related
documents:
12, 18
23d See
Appendix
3, Related
documents: 63
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f
g
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26 See
Appendix
3, Related
documents: 18
27 See GMC
and Medical
Schools Council,
Medical
students:
professional
values and
fitness to
practise
28 See
Domain 6
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Evidence
29 Evidence for this domain will include:
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33 See
paragraph 133;
also see GMC,
Good medical
practice
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36 See
paragraphs
145147;
also see GMC
and Medical
Schools Council,
Medical
students:
professional
values and
fitness to
practise
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37 See
Domain 5; also
see GMC, Good
medical practice
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b
c
43 See GMC,
Patient
and public
involvement in
undergraduate
medical
education
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46 See
Appendix
3, Related
documents: 66
48 See GMC,
Patient
and public
involvement in
undergraduate
medical
education
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n
n
n
n
n
50 See
paragraphs 157,
165
51 See GMC,
Patient
and public
involvement in
undergraduate
medical
education
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54 See
Domain 5
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56 See
Appendix
3, Related
documents: 50
59 See GMC
and others,
Gateways to
the professions:
advising
medical schools:
encouraging
disabled
students;
Appendix
3, Related
documents:
37, 51
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Evidence
62 Evidence for this domain will include:
n medical school policies and action plans about
equality and diversity
n information about staff training in equality and
diversity, including data on attendance/
compliance
n monitoring data about student applications:
evidence of addressing equality and diversity
matters within admissions processes,
progression, assessment and arrangements
made for supervision, covering sex, race,
disability, sexual orientation, religion or belief,
gender identity and age
n information about reasonable adjustments made for
students with disabilities and the procedures in place to
review the effectiveness of the adjustments
reports and minutes of meetings.
Detailed requirements and context
63 This domain is concerned with ensuring that students
and applicants to medical schools are treated fairly and
impartially, with equality of opportunity, regardless of
factors that are irrelevant to their selection and progress.
It is also concerned with encouraging diversity within the
student population to reflect modern society.
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64 See GMC
and others,
Gateways to
the professions:
advising
medical schools:
encouraging
disabled
students;
Appendix
3, Related
documents: 34
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70 See
Domain 6
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71 See
Appendix
3, Related
documents: 33
Criteria
72 The medical school will publish information about the
admission system, including guidance about the selection
process and the basis on which places at the school will be
offered.
73 Selection criteria will take account of the personal and
academic qualities needed in a doctor as set out in Good
medical practice and capacity to achieve the outcomes set
out in Tomorrows Doctors.
73 See GMC,
Good medical
practice;
Appendix
3, Related
documents: 64
75 See
Appendix
3, Related
documents: 34
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76 See
Appendix
3, Related
documents: 36
Evidence
77 Evidence for this domain will include:
n information about medical school selection processes
n data about applicants and selected students
n minutes of committees and reports.
Detailed requirements and context
78 Medical schools should base their policies and procedures
on relevant guidance, recognised best practice, and research
into effective, reliable and valid selection processes which
can have the confidence of applicants and the public.
79 Medical schools should also take account of relevant
legislation and the Gateways guidance in their student
selection processes. This includes the requirement to make
reasonable adjustments for students with disabilities where
the disability would not prevent the applicant from meeting
the outcomes for graduates. Schools should be wary of
not offering a place on the basis of a judgement about
hypothetical barriers to achievement and employment
specifically associated with an applicants disability.
79 See GMC
and others,
Gateways to
the professions:
advising
medical schools:
encouraging
disabled
students
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84 See GMC,
Clinical
placements
for medical
students;
Appendix
3, Related
documents: 35
86 See GMC,
Assessment in
undergraduate
medical
education
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101 See
Appendix
3, Related
documents:
20, 23
102 Medical schools must ensure that students work with and
learn from other health and social care professionals and
students. Opportunities should also be provided for
students to learn with other health and social care students,
including the use of simulated training environments with
audiovisual recording and behavioural debriefing. This will
help students understand the importance of teamwork in
providing care.
Clinical placements and experience:
Criteria, paragraph 84: The curriculum will include practical
experience of working with patients throughout all years,
increasing in duration and responsibility so that graduates are
prepared for their responsibilities as provisionally registered
doctors. It will provide enough structured clinical placements
to enable students to demonstrate the outcomes for
graduates across a range of clinical specialties, including at
least one Student Assistantship8 period.
84 See GMC,
Clinical
placements
for medical
students;
Appendix
3, Related
documents: 35
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106 See
Domain 2
108 See
Domain 1
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109 In the final year, students must use practical and clinical
skills, rehearsing their eventual responsibilities as an F1
doctor. These must include making recommendations for
the prescription of drugs and managing acutely ill patients
under the supervision of a qualified doctor. This should take
the form of one or more Student Assistantships in which
a student, assisting a junior doctor and under supervision,
undertakes most of the duties of an F1 doctor.10
110 Students must be properly prepared for their first allocated
F1 post. Separate from and following their Student
Assistantship, they should, wherever practicable, have a
period working with the F1 who is in the post they will take
up when they graduate. This shadowing period allows
students to become familiar with the facilities available, the
working environment and the working patterns expected of
them, and to get to know their colleagues. It also provides
an opportunity to develop working relationships with the
clinical and educational supervisors they will work with in
the future. It should consist of protected time involving
tasks that enable students to use their medical knowledge
and expertise in a working environment, distinct from the
general induction sessions provided for new employees and
Foundation Programme trainees. The shadowing period
should normally last at least one week and take place as
close to the point of employment as possible.
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86 See GMC,
Assessment in
undergraduate
medical
education
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127 Medical schools will have robust and fair procedures to deal
with students who are causing concern on academic and/
or non-academic grounds. Fitness to practise arrangements
and procedures will take account of the guidance issued by
the GMC and the Medical Schools Council. Students must
have clear information about these procedures.
128 Everyone involved in educating medical students will be
appropriately selected, trained, supported and appraised.
Evidence
129 Evidence for this domain will include:
n
n
n
n
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141 See
Appendix
3, Related
documents: 22
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Evidence
154 Evidence for this domain will include:
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157 The medical school must have agreements with the other
education providers who contribute to the delivery of the
curriculum. These should specify the contribution, including
teaching, resources and the relevant curriculum outcomes,
and how these contributions combine to satisfy the
requirements set out in Tomorrows Doctors.
158 The four UK health departments have the role of ensuring
that NHS organisations work with medical schools so that
students receive appropriate clinical training.
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Domain 9 Outcomes
Standards
168 The outcomes for graduates of undergraduate medical
education in the UK are set out in Tomorrows Doctors. All
medical students will demonstrate these outcomes before
graduating from medical school.
168 See
Appendix
3, Related
documents:
15, 17
169 The medical schools must track the impact of the outcomes
for graduates and the standards for delivery as set out
in Tomorrows Doctors against the knowledge, skills and
behaviour of students and graduates.
Criteria
170 The programme of undergraduate medical education
employs a curriculum which is demonstrated to meet the
outcomes for graduates.
171 The programme requires that graduates are able to
demonstrate the outcomes.
172 Quality management will involve the collection and use
of information about the progression of students. It will
also involve the collection and use of information about
the subsequent progression of graduates in relation to the
Foundation Programme and postgraduate training, and in
respect of any determinations by the GMC.
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Appendix 1
Practical procedures for graduates
Diagnostic procedures
Procedure
4 Venepuncture
8 Managing an electrocardiograph
(ECG) monitor
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14 Nutritional assessment
15 Pregnancy testing
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Therapeutic procedures
Procedure
16 Administering oxygen
21 Blood transfusion
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22 Male and female urinary catheterisation Passing a tube into the urinary bladder to
permit drainage of urine, in male and female
patients.
23 Instructing patients in the use of devices Providing instructions for patients about
for inhaled medication
how to use inhalers correctly, for example,
to treat asthma.
24 Use of local anaesthetics
25 Skin suturing
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29 Hand washing
(including surgical scrubbing up)
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Medical practice
49 Academy of Medical Royal Colleges. A Clinicians Guide to Record
Standards. 2008. www.rcplondon.ac.uk
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Higher education
66 Quality Assurance Agency. Code of practice for the assurance of academic
quality and standards in higher education. Various dates for sections.
www.qaa.ac.uk
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Appendix 4 Glossary
Appraisal
Assessment
Clinical tutor or
clinical supervisor
Curriculum
Elective
Examiners
Integrated teaching
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Other education
providers
Placement
Primary medical
qualification (PMQ)
Revalidation
Scheme of
assessment
Self-directed
learning
Student
Assistantship
Student-selected
components (SSCs)
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Endnotes
1
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A generalisable assessment
is one where candidates
scores are not influenced by
specific circumstances such
as variability in examination
conditions or examiners.
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Index
Note: Numbers refer to page numbers
A
academic outcomes 1418
academic support
and guidance 61, 6364
admissions policies 4547
assessment see curriculum design,
delivery and assessment
C
career advice 61, 65
clinical placements 5255, 63
clinical presentations 20
clinical records 2124
clinical supervisors 69
Code of practice for the assurance of
academic quality and standards in
higher education, QAA 38, 59
communicable diseases 6667
communication skills 2122
confidentiality 24, 6768
consultations with patients 19, 21
curriculum design, delivery and
assessment 4760
clinical placements 5255, 63
feedback and assessment 5659
Student Selected Components
(SSCs) 5051
D
diagnostic procedures 7778
disability 9, 43, 6566, 69
and fitness to practise 43, 6566, 69
diversity, and opportunity 4144
duties/professional role of doctor
Good medical practice, GMC 4
98 | General Medical Council
E
educational resources and capacity of
medical schools 7274
equality, diversity and
opportunity 4144
ethical responsibilities of doctors 2526
European Union law, undergraduate
education 8384
examiners 5859
F
fitness to practise 9, 10, 3335, 4647,
62, 68
disability, ill-health 65
G
Gateways to the professions: advising
medical schools, encouraging
disabled students, GMC 46
GMC, responsibilities 89
Good medical practice, GMC 4, 6, 7, 12,
14, 25, 33, 35, 53, 66, 92, 99, 100
I
ill-health, disability 65
information, effective use
in medical context 24
L
leadership 14, 28
legal aspects of professional duties 26
legal aspects of undergraduate
education
EU law 8384
UK law 82
licence to practise 34, 35, 82, 83
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M
medical education
documents 8591
PMQs 9, 82
medical emergencies, care in 22
medical practice, documents 9293
medical research, scientific method 18
medical schools
admissions policies 4547
assessment see curriculum design
equality, diversity and
opportunity 4144
fitness to practise
policy 10, 34, 62, 68
resources and capacity 7274
responsibilities 10
staff 60
teachers, trainers, clinical
supervisors and assessors 69
see also standards for teaching,
learning and assessment
medical students
assessment see curriculum design,
delivery and assessment
equality, diversity and opportunity 4144
disability 43, 6566, 69
fitness to practise 9, 13, 3335, 62, 68
health 6567
pastoral support and guidance 6164
progression, reporting of 68, 7576
responsibilities 13
selection 4547
welfare needs 61, 64
Tomorrows Doctors
Email: gmc@gmc-uk.org
Website: www.gmc-uk.org
Telephone: 0161 923 6602
General Medical Council, 3 Hardman Street, Manchester M3 3AW
ISBN: 978-0-901458-36-0
Cover illustration by Geoff Hardie
The GMC is a charity registered in England and Wales (1089278)
and Scotland (SC037750)
Code: GMC/TD/0914