Tomorrows Doctors
Tomorrows Doctors
Tomorrows Doctors
compromised.
n Protect and promote the health of patients and the public.
Maintaining trust
n Be honest and open and act with integrity.
n Never abuse your patients’ trust in you or the public’s trust in the profession.
You are personally accountable for your professional practice and must always be
prepared to justify your decisions and actions.
Tomorrow’s Doctors
Published September 2009
Contents
Paragraph(s) Page
Foreword 4
Introduction 1–6 8
Outcomes for graduates 7–23 14
Overarching outcome for graduates 7 14
Outcomes 1 – The doctor as a scholar
and a scientist 8–12 14
Outcomes 2 – The doctor as a practitioner 13–19 19
Outcomes 3 – The doctor as a professional 20–23 25
Standards for the delivery of teaching,
learning and assessment 24–174 30
Domain 1 – Patient safety 26–37 31
Domain 2 – Quality assurance, review
and evaluation 38–55 36
Domain 3 – Equality, diversity
and opportunity 56–70 41
Domain 4 – Student selection 71–80 45
Domain 5 – Design and delivery of
the curriculum, including assessment 81–121 47
Domain 6 – Support and development of
students, teachers and the local faculty 122–149 61
Domain 7 – Management of teaching,
learning and assessment 150–158 70
Domain 8 – Educational resources
and capacity 159–167 72
Domain 9 – Outcomes 168–174 75
Page
Foreword
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 doctor’s retirement from clinical practice.
Introduction
20 The graduate will be able to behave according to ethical and 20 See GMC,
legal principles. The graduate will be able to: Good medical
practice and
in particular
a Know about and keep to the GMC’s ethical guidance paragraphs 12,
65–71; Appendix
and standards including Good medical practice, the
3, Related
‘Duties of a doctor registered with the GMC’ and documents: 16,
supplementary ethical guidance which describe what is 61, 62, 64
expected of all doctors registered with the GMC.
b Demonstrate awareness of the clinical responsibilities
and role of the doctor, making the care of the patient
the first concern. Recognise the principles of patient-
centred care, including self-care, and deal with patients’
healthcare needs in consultation with them and, where
appropriate, their relatives or carers.
c Be polite, considerate, trustworthy and honest, act with
integrity, maintain confidentiality, respect patients’
dignity and privacy, and understand the importance of
appropriate consent.
d Respect all patients, colleagues and others regardless of 20d See GMC,
their age, colour, culture, disability, ethnic or national Good medical
practice,
origin, gender, lifestyle, marital or parental status, race, paragraphs 48,
religion or beliefs, sex, sexual orientation, or social or 52, 54, 56–60;
GMC, Personal
economic status. Graduates will respect patients’ right
beliefs; Appendix
to hold religious or other beliefs, and take these into 3, Related
account when relevant to treatment options. documents:
44, 52
a Place patients’ needs and safety at the centre of the 23a See
Appendix
care process.
3, Related
b Deal effectively with uncertainty and change. documents:
c Understand the framework in which medicine is 12, 18
Standards
26 The safety of patients and their care must not be put at risk 26 See
by students’ duties, access to patients and supervision on Appendix
3, Related
placements5 or by the performance, health or conduct of documents: 18
any individual student.
27 To ensure the future safety and care of patients, students 27 See GMC
and Medical
who do not meet the outcomes set out in Tomorrow’s Schools Council,
Doctors or are otherwise not fit to practise must not be Medical
students:
allowed to graduate with a medical degree.
professional
values and
Criteria fitness to
practise
28 Systems and procedures will:
28 See
a ensure that medical students undertake only Domain 6
appropriate tasks in which they are competent or
are learning to be competent, and with adequate
supervision
b identify and address immediately any concerns about
patient safety arising from the education of medical
students
c identify and address immediately any concerns about
a medical student whose conduct gives cause for
concern or whose health is affected to such a degree
that it could harm the public, where possible through
providing support to the student
Evidence
29 Evidence for this domain will include:
Standard
38 The quality of medical education programmes will be
monitored, reviewed and evaluated in a systematic way.
Criteria
39 The medical school will have a clear framework or plan for
how it organises quality management and quality control,
including who is responsible for this.
Evidence
45 The evidence for this domain will include:
n university and medical school quality assurance
48 Apart from the medical school officers and committees, all 48 See GMC,
Patient
education providers of clinical placements, and all clinical
and public
tutors and supervisors, students, employers and patients involvement in
should be involved in quality management and control undergraduate
medical
processes. Their roles must be defined and information
education
made available to them about this.
is being done
n how the problems were resolved.
Standard
56 Undergraduate medical education must be fair and based 56 See
on principles of equality. Appendix
3, Related
documents: 50
Criteria
57 The medical school will have policies which are aimed at
ensuring that all applicants and students are treated fairly
and with equality of opportunity, regardless of their
diverse backgrounds.
Evidence
62 Evidence for this domain will include:
n medical school policies and action plans about
Standard
71 Processes for student selection will be open, objective and 71 See
Appendix
fair.
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 73 See GMC,
Good medical
academic qualities needed in a doctor as set out in Good practice;
medical practice and capacity to achieve the outcomes set Appendix
3, Related
out in Tomorrow’s Doctors.
documents: 64
76 Students admitted will pass any health and other checks 76 See
Appendix
(such as criminal record checks) required by the medical 3, Related
school’s fitness to practise policy. The purpose and documents: 36
implications of each of these checks, and the points at
which they are made, should be made clear to applicants
and students.
Evidence
77 Evidence for this domain will include:
n information about medical school selection processes
Standard
81 The curriculum must be designed, delivered and assessed
to ensure that graduates demonstrate all the ‘outcomes
for graduates’ specified in Tomorrow’s Doctors.
Criteria
82 A clear curriculum plan will set out how the ‘outcomes for
graduates’ will be met across the programme as a whole.
The curriculum will include opportunities for students to
exercise choice in areas of interest.
Evidence
91 Evidence for this domain will include and principally be:
101 The structure and content of courses and clinical 101 See
Appendix
attachments should integrate learning about basic medical 3, Related
sciences and clinical sciences. Students should, wherever documents:
possible, learn in a context relevant to medical practice, 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.
105 The involvement of patients in teaching must be consistent 105 See GMC,
Good medical
with Good medical practice and other guidance on consent
practice; GMC,
published by the GMC. Consent:
patients and
doctors making
decisions
together;
GMC, Patient
and public
involvement in
undergraduate
medical
education
108 During the later years of the curriculum, students should 108 See
have the opportunity to become increasingly competent Domain 1
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
Criteria, paragraph 86: All the ‘outcomes for graduates’ 86 See GMC,
Assessment in
will be assessed at appropriate points during the curriculum,
undergraduate
ensuring that only students who meet these outcomes are medical
permitted to graduate. Assessments will be fit for purpose – education
that is: valid, reliable, generalisable,9 feasible and fair.
111 Students must receive regular information about their 111 See GMC,
Patient
development and progress. This should include feedback and public
on both formative and summative assessments. Clinical involvement in
logbooks and personal portfolios, which allow students undergraduate
medical
to identify strengths and weaknesses and to focus their education
learning, can provide this information. Using these will
emphasise the importance of maintaining a portfolio of
evidence of achievement, which will be necessary once
they have become doctors and their licence to practise is
regularly revalidated. All doctors, other health and social
care workers, patients and carers who come into contact
with the student should have an opportunity to provide
constructive feedback about their performance. Feedback
about performance in assessments helps to identify
strengths and weaknesses, both in students and in the
curriculum, and this allows changes to be made.
practitioner’
n each of the four outcomes under ‘The doctor as a
professional’
n every practical procedure listed in Appendix 1.
118 Those responsible for assessment must keep to relevant 118 See GMC
and others,
legislation and aim to apply good practice relating to the Gateways to
assessment of those with a disability. Medical schools the professions:
advising
should also take account of the Gateways guidance.
medical schools:
encouraging
119 Medical schools should be guided by the QAA Code of disabled
students
practice for the assurance of academic quality and
standards in higher education. 119 See
Appendix
3, Related
documents: 66
Standard
122 Students must receive both academic and general guidance
and support, including when they are not progressing well or
otherwise causing concern. Everyone teaching or supporting
students must themselves be supported, trained and
appraised.
Criteria
123 Students will have comprehensive guidance about the
curriculum, their placements, what is expected of them and
how they will be assessed.
127 Medical schools will have robust and fair procedures to deal 127 See GMC
and Medical
with students who are causing concern on academic and/ Schools Council,
or non-academic grounds. Fitness to practise arrangements Medical
and procedures will take account of the guidance issued by students:
professional
the GMC and the Medical Schools Council. Students must values and
have clear information about these procedures. fitness to
practise
128 Everyone involved in educating medical students will be 128 See GMC,
appropriately selected, trained, supported and appraised. Developing
teachers and
trainers in
Evidence undergraduate
129 Evidence for this domain will include: medical
education
132 Guidance and support in making reasonable adjustments 132 See GMC
and others,
can be found in the Gateways guidance and should also
Gateways to
be sought from an appropriate member of staff, such as a the professions:
disability officer. Implementing reasonable adjustments advising
medical schools:
promptly and reviewing their effectiveness may remedy encouraging
the difficulties faced by the student. It is important that the disabled
medical school gives sufficient time for the student to reap students; GMC
and Medical
the benefit of the adjustment (and receive the necessary Schools Council,
training to use the adjustment, where required) before Medical
students:
reviewing the situation.
professional
values and
133 Support and guidance must be provided for students who fitness to
practise,
raise concerns about the health or conduct of anyone else,
paragraph 48
in order to protect them from victimisation. The process for
raising such concerns must be made clear to students. 133 See
Appendix
3, Related
documents: 21
Students’ health:
Criteria, paragraph 126: Students will be encouraged to
look after their own health and given information about their
responsibilities in this respect as a trainee doctor. They will 137 See GMC
feel confident in seeking appropriate advice, support and and others,
Gateways to
treatment in a confidential and supportive environment. the professions:
advising
137 It is important to differentiate between disability and medical schools:
encouraging
ill-health in relation to fitness to practise. Having an disabled
impairment does not mean that a person is in a students, section
3.2
permanent state of poor health.
140 Good medical practice requires doctors to take 140 See GMC,
Good medical
responsibility for their own health in the interests of practice
public safety, and medical students should also follow this
guidance. Students should protect patients, colleagues
and themselves by being immunised against serious
communicable diseases where vaccines are available. If a
student knows that they have a serious condition which
could be passed on to patients, or that their judgement or
performance could be significantly affected by a condition
or illness (or its treatment), they must take and follow
advice from a consultant in occupational health or from
another suitably qualified doctor on whether, and in what
ways, their clinical contact with patients should be altered.
Students should not rely on their own assessment of the
risk to patients.
141 Guidance on the responsibilities of students and the medical 141 See
Appendix
school is in the Medical School Charter, produced jointly 3, Related
by the Medical Schools Council and the Medical Students documents: 22
Committee of the British Medical Association.
143 Medical students who are ill have the same rights to 143 See GMC,
Confidentiality
confidentiality as other patients. Doctors providing
medical care for students must consider their duties under
the GMC’s Confidentiality guidance. Passing on personal
information without permission may be justified if failure to
do so may result in death or serious harm to the patient or
to others. Doctors should not pass on information without
the student’s permission, unless the risk to patients is so
serious that it outweighs the student’s rights to privacy.
They must remember that students will be in close contact
with patients from an early stage of their training.
145 Medical schools must provide appropriate support, advice 145 See GMC
and Medical
and adjustments. They must also have robust and fair
Schools Council,
arrangements and procedures, including an appeals process, Medical
to deal with students who are causing concern − either on students:
professional
academic or non-academic grounds, including ill-health or values and
misconduct. Medical schools must tell students about these fitness to
arrangements and procedures so that they understand their practise
148 Medical schools must make sure that everyone involved in 148 See GMC,
Developing
educating medical students has the necessary knowledge
teachers and
and skills for their role. This includes teachers, trainers, trainers in
clinical supervisors and assessors in the medical school undergraduate
medical
or with other education providers. They should also make
education
sure that these people understand Tomorrow’s Doctors and
put it into practice. The medical school must ensure that
appropriate training is provided to these people to carry
out their role, and that staff-development programmes
promote teaching and assessment skills. All staff (including
those from other education providers) should take part in
such programmes.
Standard
150 Education must be planned and managed using processes
which show who is responsible for each process or stage.
Criteria
151 A management plan at medical school level will show who
is responsible for curriculum planning, teaching, learning
and assessment at each stage of the undergraduate
programme, and how they manage these processes.
Evidence
154 Evidence for this domain will include:
vocational placements.
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 Tomorrow’s Doctors.
Standard
159 The educational facilities and infrastructure must be
appropriate to deliver the curriculum.
Criteria
160 Students will have access to appropriate learning resources
and facilities including libraries, computers, lecture theatres,
seminar rooms and appropriate environments to develop
and improve their knowledge, skills and behaviour.
Evidence
163 Evidence for this domain will include:
Domain 9 − Outcomes
Standards
168 The outcomes for graduates of undergraduate medical 168 See
Appendix
education in the UK are set out in Tomorrow’s Doctors. All
3, Related
medical students will demonstrate these outcomes before documents:
graduating from medical school. 15, 17
169 The medical schools must track the impact of the outcomes
for graduates and the standards for delivery as set out
in Tomorrow’s 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.
Evidence
174 Evidence for this domain will include:
Appendix 1 –
Practical procedures for graduates
Diagnostic procedures
Therapeutic procedures
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.
26 Wound care and basic wound dressing Providing basic care of surgical or
traumatic wounds and applying dressings
appropriately.
27 Correct techniques for ‘moving and Using, or directing other team members
handling’, including patients to use, approved methods for moving,
lifting and handling people or objects, in
the context of clinical care, using methods
that avoid injury to patients, colleagues, or
oneself.
UK law
3 Standards for the delivery of the Foundation Programme, 3 See GMC, The
New Doctor
and outcomes for the training of provisionally registered
doctors seeking full registration, are published under the
title The New Doctor.
16 Stirrat G M., Johnston C., Gillon R., et al. ‘Medical ethics and law for
doctors of tomorrow: the 1998 Consensus Statement updated.’ Journal
of Medical Ethics. 2010, 36: 55-60. jme.bmj.com
32 Jan Illing and others. How prepared are medical graduates to begin
practice? General Medical Council. 2008. www.gmc-uk.org
35 Medical Schools Council. The Ten Key Principles for joint working between
the Universities and the NHS. 2004. www.medschools.ac.uk
Medical practice
60 General Medical Council. Treatment and care towards the end of life:
good practice in decision making. 2010. www.gmc-uk.org/guidance
Higher education
Appendix 4 – Glossary
Endnotes
9 A generalisable assessment
is one where candidates’
scores are not influenced by
specific circumstances such
as variability in examination
conditions or examiners.
Index
S
safety and needs of
patients 25–26, 28–29, 31–35
scientific method in medical research 18
scientific role of doctor 14–18
The text of this document may be reproduced free of charge in any format or medium providing
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as GMC copyright and the document title specified.
ISBN: 978-0-901458-36-0
Cover illustration by Geoff Hardie
Code: GMC/TD/0914