Professionalism and non-technical skills in Radiology in the UK: a review of the national curriculum

Abstract Objective To drive quality and safe clinical practice, professional values and non-technical skills need to be explicit in all postgraduate medical curricula and appropriate assessment tools should be available for teachers to apply. We interrogate a national Radiology curriculum for conten...

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Main Authors: F. Daley, D. Bister, S. Markless, P. Set
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-02-01
Series:BMC Research Notes
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13104-018-3200-5
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spelling doaj-8b15f929e1b549a5a11c298729efb8162020-11-25T01:19:57ZengBMCBMC Research Notes1756-05002018-02-011111510.1186/s13104-018-3200-5Professionalism and non-technical skills in Radiology in the UK: a review of the national curriculumF. Daley0D. Bister1S. Markless2P. Set3Department of Radiology, Addenbrooke’s University Hospital, Addenbrooke’s, Cambridge University HospitalGuy’s HospitalKing’s Learning InstituteDepartment of Radiology, Addenbrooke’s University Hospital, Addenbrooke’s, Cambridge University HospitalAbstract Objective To drive quality and safe clinical practice, professional values and non-technical skills need to be explicit in all postgraduate medical curricula and appropriate assessment tools should be available for teachers to apply. We interrogate a national Radiology curriculum for content on professionalism and assessment tools, comparing it with the Royal College of Physicians’ 2005 document. Results We found that whilst the knowledge for practising with professional values is embedded in the curriculum, the skills that have to be acquired have not been comprehensively developed. This is reflected in the restricted assessment tools that are mapped to each generic area. The terminology used in the Radiology curriculum was varied and the most frequently used descriptor for professionalism or behaviours pertaining to non-technical aspects was Good Medical Practice; a term used by our regulator, the General Medical Council, and to which our curriculum is mapped. If terminology is to be standardized in Britain collaboration with our regulator is key. We need standardized terminology to permit effective research and sharing of best practice. The Radiology curriculum encompasses all the values set out in the seminal document produced by the Royal College of Physicians in 2005, Doctors in society: medical professionalism in a changing world.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13104-018-3200-5ProfessionalismRadiologyPostgraduate curriculumEducationPatient Safety
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author F. Daley
D. Bister
S. Markless
P. Set
spellingShingle F. Daley
D. Bister
S. Markless
P. Set
Professionalism and non-technical skills in Radiology in the UK: a review of the national curriculum
BMC Research Notes
Professionalism
Radiology
Postgraduate curriculum
Education
Patient Safety
author_facet F. Daley
D. Bister
S. Markless
P. Set
author_sort F. Daley
title Professionalism and non-technical skills in Radiology in the UK: a review of the national curriculum
title_short Professionalism and non-technical skills in Radiology in the UK: a review of the national curriculum
title_full Professionalism and non-technical skills in Radiology in the UK: a review of the national curriculum
title_fullStr Professionalism and non-technical skills in Radiology in the UK: a review of the national curriculum
title_full_unstemmed Professionalism and non-technical skills in Radiology in the UK: a review of the national curriculum
title_sort professionalism and non-technical skills in radiology in the uk: a review of the national curriculum
publisher BMC
series BMC Research Notes
issn 1756-0500
publishDate 2018-02-01
description Abstract Objective To drive quality and safe clinical practice, professional values and non-technical skills need to be explicit in all postgraduate medical curricula and appropriate assessment tools should be available for teachers to apply. We interrogate a national Radiology curriculum for content on professionalism and assessment tools, comparing it with the Royal College of Physicians’ 2005 document. Results We found that whilst the knowledge for practising with professional values is embedded in the curriculum, the skills that have to be acquired have not been comprehensively developed. This is reflected in the restricted assessment tools that are mapped to each generic area. The terminology used in the Radiology curriculum was varied and the most frequently used descriptor for professionalism or behaviours pertaining to non-technical aspects was Good Medical Practice; a term used by our regulator, the General Medical Council, and to which our curriculum is mapped. If terminology is to be standardized in Britain collaboration with our regulator is key. We need standardized terminology to permit effective research and sharing of best practice. The Radiology curriculum encompasses all the values set out in the seminal document produced by the Royal College of Physicians in 2005, Doctors in society: medical professionalism in a changing world.
topic Professionalism
Radiology
Postgraduate curriculum
Education
Patient Safety
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13104-018-3200-5
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AT pset professionalismandnontechnicalskillsinradiologyintheukareviewofthenationalcurriculum
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