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Maintain the momentum: bridging the undergraduate/ graduate divide

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Adam Moreton
Affiliation:
Out of Programme Experience (OOPE), NHS North West Junior Doctor Advisory Team, Manchester, UK, email: a.moreton@doctors.org.uk
Andrew Collier
Affiliation:
CT3 Mersey Care NHS Trust, NHS North West Junior Doctor Advisory Team, Liverpool, UK
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Abstract

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Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2012

O’Connor et al Reference O'Connor, O'Loughlin, Somers, Wilson, Pillay and Brennan1 showed that a more positive attitude towards psychiatry exists following final-year psychiatry clerkships at University College Dublin. This signifies the importance of exposure to the realities of working as a psychiatrist in influencing students’ perception of the specialty. Whether this positive attitudinal change resulted from seeing the day-to-day psychiatric practice, exposure to relatable clinical role models or something else is unclear. However, it is unfortunate that such attitudes towards a career in psychiatry are not maintained when making post-internship specialty choices. This may suggest that the undergraduate pro-psychiatry outlook is not sufficiently robust or long-lived as to endure the first year(s) as a doctor.

Currently, there is a mismatch between the proportion of total foundation year (FY1/2) posts and core/specialty training year 1 (CT/ST1) posts in psychiatry in England. In comparison, the similarly sized specialty of paediatrics has a more favourable ratio of foundation to specialty training posts which would facilitate the maintenance of any undergraduate pro-paediatrics momentum (more detailed information available from the authors on request). Psychiatry has some ground to make up.

Assuming that exposure to the job is key and that endurance of the pro-specialty attitude gained in medical school is the issue, more work needs to be done to increase the number of psychiatry internships in Ireland and foundation posts in the UK to maintain this interest. Such work is already taking place in the UK through the Royal College of Psychiatrists’ ambitious plans to increase the number of FY1/2 psychiatry posts to 7.5%.

If interaction with those ‘doing the job’ is important, then there may also be benefits from increasing the face-time that recent graduates get with psychiatrists, even in a non-clinical environment, especially as this a key time for influencing a new doctor's career choice. Reference Goldacre and Lambert2

Although medical student internships produce positive attitudes towards psychiatry and stimulate enthusiasm for entering into the specialty, this momentum needs to be maintained post-graduation and not lost during the (Irish) internship or (UK) foundation programme.

References

1 O'Connor, K, O'Loughlin, K, Somers, C, Wilson, L, Pillay, D, Brennan, D, et al. Attitudes of medical students in Ireland towards psychiatry: comparison of students from 1994 and 2010. Psychiatrist 2012; 36: 349–56.Google Scholar
2 Goldacre, MJ, Lambert, TW. Stability and change in career choices of junior doctors: postal questionnaire surveys of the United Kingdom qualifiers of 1993. Med Educ 2000; 34: 700–7.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
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