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Dental Gold Guide

Dental Gold Guide. Implementation and usage. Spring 2010. Why did we do it? FAQs. What was wrong with the medical one? Why not revamp the Orange one? Why not do a supplement to the medical GG? Why is it Gold anyway?. Why did we do it?.

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Dental Gold Guide

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  1. Dental Gold Guide Implementation and usage Spring 2010

  2. Why did we do it?FAQs • What was wrong with the medical one? • Why not revamp the Orange one? • Why not do a supplement to the medical GG? • Why is it Gold anyway?

  3. Why did we do it? • Medicine moved to PMETB – new standards so Gold Guide • COPMeD responsible but with PMETB, NHS Employers and 4 DHs agreement • Dentistry could not use new Gold Guide as not under PMETB • Reference to PMTEB precluded supplement • Orange Guide had needed update anyway • Much of Gold Guide relevant but terminology not • Could not just substitute GDC for PMETB • Needed to consider dental differences

  4. The Process • Initial drafts adding specific dental text & removing non relevant medical text • One day workshop 4 PGDDs – final draft • Out to consultation • 22 responses received from bodies and individuals • Responses collated into 42 page document • Collated doc showed duplications in responses • Every response checked – most accommodated • Revised guide back to four PGDDs • Dental Gold Guide released Sept 09 Version 1.0 • First review underway – March/April 2010

  5. Career Development Posts: mixture of training and service posts to help graduates consolidate experience in a range of dental specialties

  6. What is the Dental Gold Guide • Process guide to managing dental specialty training • From recruitment to CCST, and beyond • Pathway clear to trainers and trainees • Process transparent to all stakeholders • Improves deanery quality management framework • Allows for consistency of training across UK • Agreed by 4 UK Health Departments • DGG is not concerned with Terms & Conditions of service, grace period or STC arrangements

  7. What is new in the Dental Gold Guide • Moves to use of PMETB educational standards • GDC approves curricula but not training like PMETB • However, GDC adopting PMETB standards • Deaneries approve and quality manage training • Deaneries externally QA’d by PMETB and SHAs so dentistry must meet same standards • GDC will QA dental specialty training*, probably via third parties – so needs to be done against common standard • RITA system in Orange Guide not robust - expectation that ARCP will be better • Live document – so regular review * but not Post CCST Development (old FTTA)

  8. Principles of specialty training • SACs asked to develop new curricula to GDC - SDEB (PMETB) standards • Introduction of WPBAs against new curriculum with a required number to be done annually • Satisfactory completion of training using WPBAs • Appraisal and Personal Development Planning • Monitoring of training environment to PMETB standards • Trainers required to have appropriate training • Trainer / trainee survey of training – available to deanery and external QA • External input to ARCP and STCs

  9. Appropriate timetable Exposure to multiple trainers Logbook & right case mix* Education sessions / tutorials Work based assessment Assessment - summative Appraisal and PDP Reflective practice Monitoring training environment RITA/ARCP (with external input) Triangulated trainee/trainer feedback Trained trainers StR    v    -    some Principles of training DF 2 • v •  • v • v • v • - • v • - •  • v v •  • some DF 1 • - • - •  v •  •  • Scot •  •  •  • - • some •  v = variable

  10. Curriculum Domains Speciaty specific Post CCST Development Clinical Professionalism Management & Leadership Communication

  11. Dental Gold Guide - 9 Sections • 1 – Introduction & background • 2 - Policy & statutory bodies • 3 - Characteristics of specialty training • 4 – Setting standards • 5 – Structure of training • 6 – Becoming a specialty registrar (StR) • 7 – Progressing as specialty registrar • 8 – Being a specialty registrar & employee • 9 – Appendices –include forms, glossary, NTN codes, abbreviations, duration of programmes

  12. Annual Review of Career Progression - ARCP • Trainee driven – penalty for failure to be ready • However, watch for the failing trainee • Outcomes renamed cf RITA • Deanery process with external input • Deanery must have QM system in place • SACs provided with new starter info, annual ARCP outcomes and notification of completion • SACs provide Annual ARCP assessment guidance with generic and specialty specific content • Can be paper-based only - with lay involvement • Maybe dentistry, with small specialties, will want to retain face to face

  13. ARCP - Outcomes Satisfactory Progress • Achieving progress & competences at expected rate Unsatisfactory or insufficient evidence (trainee must meet with panel) • Development of specific competences required – additional training time not required • Inadequate progress by the trainee – additional training time required • Released from training programme with or without specified competences ( Released from academic programme) • Incomplete evidence presented – additional training time may be required

  14. ARCP - Outcomes Recommendation for completion of training • Gained all required competences (clinical) Gained all required competences (academic) Outcomes for trainees out of programme • Out of programme experience for approved clinical experience, research of career break • Fixed-term specialty outcome – competences achieved identified above

  15. In summary • new process guide to manage StR training • does not include matters related to terms and conditions or maternity leave • UK wide – approved by 4 DHs • NHS Employers approved • implemented 1 October 2009 • two revisions –April & September 2010 then annually • notify problems, typos etc to COPDEND Secretariat NB. Scale points 1 & 2 on StR salary scale lower than SpR

  16. www.copdend.org.uk Thank you for listening

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