The Psychiatrist (2006) 30: 71-74. doi: 10.1192/pb.30.2.71
© 2006 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Psychiatric Bulletin (2006) 30: 71-74
© 2006 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Taking on the management: training specialist registrars in child and adolescent psychiatry
Lesley Hewson, Consultant in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
Director Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service, Bradford District
CareTrust, 2-8 St Martins Avenue, Lister Hills, Bradford BD71LG,
e-mail:
lesley.hewson{at}bdct.nhs.uk
Susie Hooper, Consultant in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
Bradford District CareTrust
Anne Worrall-Davies, Senior Lecturer in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
Academic Unit of Psychiatry and Behavioural Sciences, School of Medicine,
University of Leeds
Declaration of interest
None.

Introduction
The proposal that management training should be integral to
the training of
all doctors, including psychiatrists, is not
new
(
Gadd, 1990). The Child and
Adolescent Psychiatry Specialist
Advisory Sub-Committee (CAPSAC) training
guidelines (
1999)
recognise
that future consultants will need sufficient management
skills to be leaders
in service development as well as effective
clinicians, and outline the
knowledge and experience to be
gained during higher professional training (Box
1). This paper
describes the Yorkshire schemes approach to supporting
trainees to achieve these objectives and highlights the need
to engage
trainees, trainers and managers in taking forward
this important agenda.
| Box 1. Learning objectives in management, audit and information
technology proposed by the Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Specialist Advisory
Sub-Committee
- Understanding of relevant organisational structures and processes relevant
to delivery of a CAMHS (e.g. within the NHS, other agencies, delivery of
postgraduate and undergraduate training, GMC, Royal College of
Psychiatrists)
- Understanding of service planning, effective use of resources, ability to
generate short- and long-term strategy and relate to day-to-day activities
- Use of information to inform service development and audit
- Understand principles of clinical governance, risk management and
accountability
- Familiarity with recruitment, equal opportunities and appraisal and the
need for continuing professional development for all professionals in the
multidisciplinary team
- Development of team leadership skills and effective working with other
professionals
- An ability to maintain appropriate clinical records and communicate
effectively with other professionals
- Effective self-management: time management, self-presentation, ethical
awareness and use of initiative
|
CAMHS, Child and adolescent mental health service; GMC, General Medical
Council

Need for leadership
The NHS Plan (
Department of
Health, 2000) stresses the need
to develop leadership within all
professions if modernisation
and the redesign of services are to be achieved.
Clinical governance
(
Department of Health,
1998) and the drive to improve the quality
of health services are
dependent on effective working between
clinicians and managers.
Although management as a component of training for specialist registrars is
well recognised, new consultants consistently report that this is the area of
their work for which they feel most unprepared
(Houghton et al,
2002). Where new consultants have gained management experience
during their training, this was seen as helpful, but generally a result of the
actions of individual consultants rather than a planned component of
training.
A survey of the training experiences and attitudes of higher specialist
trainees in child and adolescent psychiatry
(Smart & Cottrell, 2000) found that 17% were unlikely to have the opportunity to shadow a manager
during their training and 13% would not be involved in the planning of
services. The majority of trainees, however, recognised management training as
essential.
The Yorkshire Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Higher Training Scheme has
worked over the last 7 years with all specialist registrars and scheme
trainers to ensure that management knowledge and experience becomes an
integral and routine aspect of training.

Starting point
In 1998 the training committee sent out a questionnaire to the
17 trainers
and 14 trainees on the Yorkshire Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry Scheme. This
aimed to identify attitudes towards
management training, the availability of
management experiences
on the scheme and to identify development needs. The
questionnaire
was completed and returned by all trainers and trainees.
Trainees appeared keen to gain understanding of the relevance of management
to their future clinical practice and for management to become more meaningful
and included in their training. They were asking for improved understanding of
the day-to-day running of childrens mental health services, including
structures, business planning, finance and how and where decisions are made.
Future survival as a consultant on a day-to-day basis was a major concern.
The consultant trainers unanimously endorsed the proposal that management
should be included in trainees training plans but appeared unsure of
their own contribution. Many thought that they would have little to offer a
trainee, not viewing themselves as undertaking management tasks or having
expertise to share. Even those trainers with formal management roles were not
used to routinely engaging trainees in this aspect of their work.
As a result of the questionnaire, a number of suggestions were made to
improve training. These findings continue to underpin the schemes
overall approach to management training.

Moving on
The approach to management training was formalised following
a half-day
workshop (
Hewson & Wright,
2002). Local trainers
and trainees came together to develop
proposals for how the
scheme could support all trainees to meet the management
learning
objectives proposed by CAPSAC and to consider the results of
the
earlier survey (Box 2).
It was agreed that management training would need to be promoted across the
scheme by including management experience in the educational objectives for
each trainee agreed at the beginning of a new clinical placement. Progress
would be reviewed mid-year at the annual placement visit undertaken by the
programme director or their deputy, and management achievements would be
included in the annual record of in-training assessment (RITA). In addition
trainees would be expected to attend the local generic management training
available to trainees across all the specialties (Box 3).
| Box 2. Initial proposals identified in the scheme survey and/or
workshop
- Management introduced early in training
- Appropriate involvement in clinical teams and service development
- Shadowing arrangements in placements facilitated by trainer
- Opportunities to discuss management issues in supervision
- Undertake a small supervised management project
- Identified placements providing in-depth management experience
- Generic management courses run by the deanery to become mandatory
- Include management in the academic programme
- Combine theory and practice to make management meaningful
- Directed reading, skill sessions, role-play.
|
| Box 3. Key components of generic management courses
- Management and leadership
- Mentoring, appraisal, interview skills
- Effective team-working
- Managing change
- Time management
- Preventing and managing stress
- Negotiating skills
- Managing meetings.
|
However, the survey and workshop identified key areas likely to require a
more systematic approach to management training for trainees in child and
adolescent psychiatry than that provided either by generic management courses
or experience in clinical placements. These included understanding the
relevance of inter-agency planning to child and adolescent psychiatry, the
forces shaping demand for child and adolescent mental health services (CAMHS)
and government and local policy for childrens services. It was agreed
to develop management seminars that would run two to three times a year and be
included in the academic programme.

Management seminars: an evaluation
During 2001, the schemes lead trainer for management
(L.H.) and a
lead trainee (S.H.) planned the content, style
and format of these new
seminars (Box 4). These have now been
in place since January 2002. The content
has focused on topics
considered to be relevant to CAMHS and the future role
of child
and adolescent psychiatrists (Box 5).
| Box 4. Structure and style of management seminars
- 2-3 half-day seminars a year
- Trainee to work with lead trainer to plan seminars
- Include regular update onhot issues (e.g. new government
guidance)
- Focus on CAMHS rather than generic management
- Trainees to present accessible papers
- Trainees share practical management experience from placements
- Invite speakers, including CAMHS managers and consultants
- Discussion-based learning.
|
| Box 5. Content of the first four management seminars
- Historical context of CAMHS
- Management experience of a recently appointed consultant
- CAMHS structures and operational management
- Where is the consultant voice in decision-making?
- Modernisation in CAMHS and the wider NHS, including user views
- CAMHS in a multi-agency context
- Multi-agency working in practice: the rhetoric and the reality
- Management responsibilities of the consultant.
|
| Box 6. Characteristics of trainees eligible to attend management
seminars from January to July 2003 (n=15)
Age range 32-41 years Median age 35 years
Sex Female:14 Male:1
Training pattern Flexible trainees: 7 Full-time: 8
Time in training 0-12 months:1 13-34 months:1 25-36 months: 5 >
36 months: 8
Trainee still on scheme at evaluation 9 remained in training, 6 had
left the scheme
|
An evaluation was carried out following the first four seminars to ensure
that these were on the right track and to ensure ownership by the group. A
questionnaire was sent to all specialist registrars who had been eligible to
attend any of the seminars (n=15). The characteristics of this
trainee group are summarised according to age, gender and time in training
(Box 6).
Fourteen trainees (93%) returned the feedback form. The median number of
seminars attended was two (50%). Although full attendance is expected, all
absences were understandable, being the result of sick leave, annual leave,
maternity leave or undertaking a locum post. Trainees were asked to rate the
style, relevance and trainee involvement in the seminars. The evaluation
showed that the seminars appear highly valued by the trainees (Box 7).
| Box 7. Feedback on management seminars by trainees (November
2003)1
Median score
- How relevant have you found the topics covered in the seminar? 5
- How appropriate have the papers and written material been? 5
- How beneficial has it been for trainees to summarise and present papers?
5
- How useful has it been to discuss examples of local services? 4
- How valuable have you found opportunities for free discussion? 5
- How adequate has trainee involvement in planning and organisation of
seminars been? 4
- Do you feel trainee participation in the sessions has been sufficiently
valued? 4
- How helpful have the seminars been in enhancing your understanding of the
wider organisational context of CAMHS? 4
- How useful have the seminars been in developing your understanding of the
possible management roles of a consultant in child and adolescent psychiatry?
4
1. A 5-point Likert scale was used where 1=not at all and 5=extremely.
|
Trainees were given an opportunity to advise on how to improve the
seminars. The most consistent request was for more trainers to attend the
sessions and outside speakers to be invited so as to ensure a broad
perspective. Trainees suggested that final-year trainees should take a
specific lead in the planning and delivery of seminars. These recommendations
are being addressed. A commissioner and service manager have been included in
seminars and there are now plans to include a CAMHS regional development
worker. Engaging trainees early continues to be considered important so as to
develop understanding throughout training rather than management training
simply being an exercise prior to a consultant interview.

Discussion
Child and adolescent mental health services are undergoing significant
change and development which is likely to continue for the
foreseeable future.
The Childrens National Service Framework
presents a challenging
multi-agency vision for childrens
services
(
Department of Education and Skills,
2004) requiring
whole-system change to achieve better outcomes for
children
and young people. The new standards for CAMHS will be delivered
over
the next 10 years. Trainees today will start their consultant
careers in
services which are taking on these development challenges.
It is well recognised that tensions can exist between doctors and managers
(Davies et al, 2003).
Getting Better? - A Report on the NHS
(Commission for Health Improvement,
2003) identifies the difficulty of securing doctors
interest in management, particularly those working in mental health, but
reports that services do better when doctors get involved in management. Poor
relations between doctors and managers can damage services to patients and
impede improvements. This has led to a recommendation that developing
doctors understanding of the organisation of healthcare and the role of
management is essential at the earliest opportunity
(NHS Confederation, 2003).
| Box 8. Types of management experience undertaken in placements
- Shadow a senior manager in the trust (e.g. trust board or executive to gain
understanding of decision-making structures and processes)
- Meet with the financial lead for the service to gain understanding of the
financial constraints and opportunities of the service
- Attend service or directorate clinical governance meetings and lead a small
project supervised by trainer or service clinical lead
- Follow through a service reprovision or restructure
- Lead the development of a service clinical protocol
- Take part in the development of a bid for local or national resources
- Take part in a review of service (e.g. compared with NICE guidelines)
- Shadow multi-agency partnership meetings
- Follow through the development of a multi-agency initiative (e.g. CAMHS
input to looked after children or the youth offending team)
- Attend meetings with commissioners to gain understanding of the agreed
approach to managing a service-level agreement.
NICE, National Institute for Clinical Excellence.
|
| Box 9. Key components of management training on the orkshire
scheme
- Systematic approach for all trainees
- Training across the 3 years of training
- Identified management objectives in each placement
- Generic management courses as mandatory
- Service development issues included during supervision
- Service development seminars included in the academic programme
- Identified lead trainer for management training
- Involvement of the trainees and trainers in ongoing development and
evaluation
|
Future consultants in child and adolescent psychiatry will need to work
within increasingly complex management and accountability frameworks
(Reder, 2003). They will need
to contribute to service development through job planning and clinical
governance with an understanding that service priorities are increasingly set
by national policy, multi-agency joint commissioning and the expectations of
users and the general public. Higher training programmes should ensure that
future consultants are prepared for this.
The schemes annual audit of training has confirmed that all trainees
now have management objectives. Many of these include shadowing managers or
the consultant trainer and discussing service development during supervision
(Box 8). The undertaking of a management project has been less consistent.
Organisational change and the move away from business planning to multi-agency
commissioning appears to have made the direct involvement of trainees in
management projects more difficult. As clinical governance, access and choice
increasingly drive service improvement, specialist registrars and their
trainers should consider engaging with managers through this agenda.

Conclusion
Generic management courses for doctors provide valuable training
but tend
to focus on general aspects of management common to
all specialties in
medicine rather than more specific areas
of interest to future child and
adolescent psychiatrists.
The Yorkshire scheme has introduced a systematic approach (Box 9) to
management training. This is now recognised as an integral part of training
for all higher trainees in child and adolescent psychiatry in Yorkshire.
Specialist registrar training schemes in other areas may benefit from similar
developments.

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Related articles in The Psychiatrist:
- Management training for all specialist registrars
- Richard Onyon
The Psychiatrist 2006 30: 314.
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