HC Deb 07 September 2004 vol 424 cc1069-70W
Dr. Gibson

To ask the Secretary of State for Health what impact he expects the revised National Institute for Clinical Excellence Referral Guidelines for Suspected Cancer will have on postgraduate general practitioner training. [185851]

Mr. Hutton

Government does not specify the content of the general practitioner training curriculum. This is the job of the joint committee on postgraduate training for general practice (JCPTGP), which is the competent authority for general practice training in the United Kingdom. The JCPTGP is an independent body and it is required by section 9(3) of the Vocational Training Regulations 1997 to determine and publish the curriculum to be followed by a GP registrar (a trainee GP).

The Regulations do specify seven competencies which must be tested, and which the curriculum must therefore teach: factual medical knowledge sufficient to enable the doctor to perform the duties of a GP; the ability to apply factual medical knowledge to the management of problems presented by patients in general practice; effective communication, both orally and in writing; the ability to consult satisfactorily with general practice patients; the ability to review and critically analyse the practitioner's own working practices and to manage any necessary changes appropriately; clinical skills; the ability to synthesise all of the above competencies and apply them appropriately in a general practice setting.

It is, therefore, the responsibility of the JCPTGP to assess the impact of the revised National Institute for Clinical Excellence referral guidelines for suspected cancer and adapt postgraduate general practitioner training accordingly.

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