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Older Peoples Mental Health, St Georges Hospital, Morpeth, Northumberland NE61 2NU, email: reoshea{at}doctors.org.uk
Annesley House, Nottingham
R.O. is the Immediate Past Chair and S.N. was a member of the Psychiatric Trainees Committee, Royal College of Psychiatrists at the time of writing.
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Introduction |
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What is a clinical attaché (sometimes known as honorary senior house officer (SHO), clinical fellow, or honorary fellow)? One commonly held view is that clinical attachés are overseas doctors who gain unpaid work experience in the high-quality National Health Service, in the hope of then gaining paid employment and training and skills to eventually bring back to their country of origin. An alternative view is that they are doctors, wealthy in their home countries, who desert their needy compatriots in order to earn lots of money and settle permanently abroad, working in a system that is happy to asset-strip poorer countries. Similar arguments rage regarding the NHS International Fellowship Scheme (Khan, 2004; Holsgrove, 2005). The reality may be somewhere in the middle of these polarised views.
The exact number of doctors seeking clinical attachments is unknown, but many hospitals and consultants receive hundreds of applications annually. This high figure is because of the potential rewards if successful, and perceptions abroad that the NHS is short of junior doctors (advertisements in foreign newspapers for doctors in the UK may encourage this view). Changes in registration procedures and to the Professional and Linguistics Assessments Board (PLAB) examination (including overseas sittings) by the General Medical Council (GMC), and profits made by the GMC and some trusts may be factors in encouraging applications.
Anecdotal evidence suggests that many aspiring clinical attachés are unaware of the true picture in terms of how difficult it is to be successful; failed doctors are reluctant to give the true reasons for their return home, and doctors may be blinded to the reality by their own hopes (Alcock, 2004).
Currently, clinical attachments in psychiatry are obtained predominantly through personal contacts in the UK. Doctors also try their luck by sending curriculum vitae to unknown consultants or medical staffing departments. There is much variability among hospitals and consultants; some take no clinical attachments (and may have policy accordingly), some take a few, some perhaps take too many. There are no national standards, although there are guidelines (Cheeroth & Berlin, 2001). In some hospitals there may be formal or informal procedures, waiting lists, or structured schemes for clinical attachés.
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Benefits for clinical attachés |
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The benefits for individual doctors in terms of career prospects in the UK and elsewhere, remuneration, opportunities for family members to live in the UK, etc. must also be borne in mind.
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Benefits for trusts, the NHS and others |
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Problems for clinical attachés |
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The difficulties continue even after securing an attachment; there is ongoing uncertainty owing to the short-term nature of contracts offered, periodic visits to the Home Office for expensive visa extensions, pressure to get paid employment and get accepted onto a training scheme, and financial pressures. Attachments are by no means guarantees of future employment. The cost of living (especially accommodation) in the UK is high, and people with short-term visas and no employment contract find getting a private rental contract difficult. The practice in some trusts of charging for attachments is in our opinion undesirable, especially as the quality of the experience offered is often no better as a result, although we accept that such fees are legal and are dictated by market forces.
| Box 1. Comments from clinical attachés and those who work with
them Comments from clinical attachés
Comments from consultants
Comments from others
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Attachments vary in quality; there are many instances of attachés being mistreated in various ways (see Box 1), not least because of their dependence on the sponsoring consultant. Some consider that even the best attachments are not meaningful experiences, owing to limitations on patient contact, inadequate teaching from SHOs and senior doctors, the pressures noted above and the steep learning curve in general.
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Problems for trusts, the NHS and others |
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Medical and other students may receive fewer educational opportunities if clinical attachés are also present (bearing in mind that clinical attachés should not see patients alone).
Individual consultants may have little experience of clinical attachés, or may have ethical objections to recruiting from poorer countries. Doctors from different countries may not have equal opportunities to gain an attachment. Some believe there is an old boys network; there are reports of consultants accepting as attachés only doctors who have graduated from the consultants own alma mater.
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Impact of recent changes in immigration regulations |
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Doctors who have leave to remain under the Highly Skilled Migrant Programme can still take up any posts offered, without the need for Home Office permission.
Following discussions with the Department of Health, the Home Office has decided to limit the amount of leave granted for clinical attachments to 6 weeks at a time and 6 months in total, in line with the purpose of these posts, to allow overseas doctors to familiarise themselves with UK working practices and prevent overseas doctors remaining in the UK when there are no suitable posts available.
Predicting the future is difficult in the light of these changes, but it is clear that opportunities for overseas doctors will be fewer because of increased competition from EEA doctors. The current flood of applications for clinical attachments is likely to become a trickle, but is unlikely to dry up completely in the immediate future.
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Solutions |
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Good practice for clinical attachés
(see Prabhu, 2004; Mahboob, 2005).
Good practice for supervisors
(see Department of Health, 1995; Turya, 2004).
A system of placements administered centrally by the Royal College of Psychiatrists would make the application process simpler (and cheaper). The College could monitor supervision and run some form of appraisal, perhaps using systems similar to that which is currently in place for SHOs. This would ensure some quality control and prevent some of the problems listed. Alternatively, and more simply, the College could maintain a register of attachés (who have passed the PLAB examination) and a register of consultants willing to take attachés.
If the system of clinical attachés is worth maintaining, there should be formal incentives for those consultants involved.
The NHS could draw up clear guidelines regarding charging for attachments; placements should be free for medically qualified refugees (Department of Health, 2000).
Information is required on what happens to these doctors (i.e. how many come to the UK annually, what proportion enter training schemes, what proportion return home disappointed, etc). The College could consider research in this area.
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References |
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BERLIN, A., CHEEROTH, S., AGNELL, A., et al (2002) Clinical attachments for overseas doctors. BMJ Career Focus, 325, 160 .
CHEEROTH, S. & BERLIN, A. (2001) Guidelines for Clinical Attachments for Overseas Qualified Doctors. British Medical Association.
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH (1995) Doctors Acting as Observers in Hospitals. Health Service Guidelines HSG(95)30. Department of Health.
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH (2000) Report of the Working Group on Refugee Doctors and Dentists. Department of Health.
HOLSGROVE, G. (2005) The International Fellowship Programme: some personal thoughts. International Psychiatry, 7, 7 9.
KHAN, M. M., (2004) The NHS International Fellowship
Scheme in Psychiatry: robbing the poor to pay the rich? Psychiatric
Bulletin, 28, 435
437.
MAHBOOB, S. (2005) What is expected from a clinical attaché and how can one make the most of a clinical attachment? BMJ Career Focus, 330, 214 .
PRABHU, U. (2004) A users guide to clinical attachments. BMJ Career Focus, 328, 263.
TURYA, E. (2004) How to supervise an overseas doctor on a clinical attachment. BMJ Career Focus, 328, 262 263.
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