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Medical Educators Conference 7 th Nov 2014 Doctors in Difficulty Workshop. Dr Mumtaz Patel Consultant Nephrologist Divisional Educational Lead Manchester Royal Infirmary. Doctors in Difficulty Workshop. Outline and Aims Definition Categories of Difficulty Common Presentations
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Medical Educators Conference7th Nov 2014Doctors in Difficulty Workshop Dr Mumtaz Patel Consultant Nephrologist Divisional Educational Lead Manchester Royal Infirmary
Doctors in Difficulty Workshop • Outline and Aims • Definition • Categories of Difficulty • Common Presentations • Potential Triggers of Doctors in Difficulty • Managing Doctors in Difficulty • Case Studies
Definition: • “Any trainee who has caused concern to his/her educational supervisor(s) about the ability to carry out their duties, which has required unusual measures. • This would mean anything outside the normal trainer-trainee processes where the Training Programme Director has been called upon to take or recommend action.” (NW Deanery, 2013)
Categories of Difficulty • Trainees in Difficulty • Struggling to manage workload, failure to progress • Trainees with Difficulties • Illness, Home or personal life issues • Difficult Trainees • Inappropriate, unprofessional behaviours. Lack of Insight
Categories of Difficulty • Performance Issue • Problematic Personal Conduct • Problematic Professional Conduct • Health problems • Learning Environment • System Issues
Potential triggers of concern • Patterns or repetitive behaviours (rather than one off • Sudden out of character behaviour • Sickness • Serious one-offs that are rationalised by trainee • Eg. a small lie
Steps in Management 1. Early Identification of problems and intervention is essential. 2. Establish and clarify the circumstances and facts as soon as possible – Access many different sources of information. 3. Remember poor performance is a symptom and not diagnosis and needs to be explored. 4. A robust and detailed diagnosis can lead to effective remediation. 5. Clear documentation is essential. 6. Misgivings must be communicated; Records must be kept and remedies must be sought
Managing trainees in Difficulty Taken from NACT Managing Trainees in Difficulty 2012
Three Questions • Key areas to explore when considering poor performance ie. ‘Potential Diagnoses’ • i) clinical performance • ii) personal, personality and behavioural issues including impact of cultural and religious background • iii) physical and mental health issues • iv) environmental issues including systems or process factors, organisational issues including lack of resources Taken from NACT Managing Trainees in Difficulty 2012
Levels of Concern - 1 • No harm/risk to patient, staff, trainee. • Minor incidents, complaints • Controlled illness • Failure to attain training goals • Action plan ES lead, thorough documentation. • Discussion with trainee/minor investigation • Pastoral Support/OH • SMART action plan/short resolution time. • Discussion with TPD/?HR, Lead Employer
Levels of Concern -2 • Potential or actual harm/risk to patient, staff, trainee or reputations. • Repetitive patterns, recurrent behaviours • Any issue requiring extension of training • Action plan • Formal Investigation • HR, OH, Deanery, PGME • Action plan with defined objectives • Specialised interventions
Levels of Concern - 3 • Actual serious harm, reputations are at serious risk • SUIs, Formal complaints • Criminal Act • GMC, NCAS referral • Action • HR, OH, Deanery, PGME • As level 2 with formal investigation • ? Cessation/Restriction of practice
Managing Clinical Concerns • Specific areas, technical and non-technical skills • Focused retraining • Often task orientated and with specific targets • Performing adequately at a level (eg ST 3) but not demonstrating the necessary skills eg leadership, complex decision making to progress to a higher level. • Focused training • Mentoring and Coaching • Thorough documentation
Managing Personality Issues • Close clinical supervision, developmental mentoring • Develop insight • Cultural and Religious advice if necessary • Simulation or videoing to challenge behaviours • Educational Psychology • Cognitive Behavioural Therapy • Difficult and sometimes impossible to remedy
Managing Health Issues • Doctors can become ill • Physical and mental Illness • Substance misuse • Occupational health review • Disability act requires employers to make reasonable adjustments • Ensure adequate support • Staff counselling
Causes of Management Failure • Early concerns not addressed • Inadequate documentation of problems and discussions; dated and signed • Insufficient thought given to remedial plan • Feedback especially around ARCP outcome 2 and 3 is seen as arbitrary and punitive • Views on course of action are varied
General points • Document everything • Be transparent • Discuss actions and plans with trainee • Support • Staff counselling • Share appropriately • PGME, Deanery.
Managing Trainees in Difficulty Managing Trainees in Difficulty (version 2) Practical Advice for Educational and Clinical Supervisors July 2012 NACT UK: Supporting Excellence in Medical Education
Developing DiD support within CMFT • Website • Blog • Interactive toolkit • Links to useful documents and sites • Intelligence • Referral to PGME of DiDs • Involvement of ES in sickness management • Trainer involvement • Faculty of mentors • Assessment and targeted training groups • Education • Trainer development days