`August is always a nightmare': results of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh and Society of Acute Medicine August transition survey

Authors: Vaughan, Louella; McAlister, Graeme; Bell, Derek

Source: Clinical Medicine, Journal of the Royal College of Physicians, Volume 11, Number 4, August 2011 , pp. 322-326(5)

Publisher: Royal College of Physicians

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Abstract:

An electronic survey was used to assess perceptions of the disruption caused by the August transition and explore support for possible solutions. In total, 763 responses from members and fellows of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh and the Society of Acute Medicine were received. The majority perceived the August transition to have a negative impact on patient care (93.1%), patient safety (90.4%) and training (57.8%) for a period of up to one month. In total 680/737 respondents wished to shift away from a single changeover day, with strong support for a staggered changeover by grade. Changes to consultant working practices were felt to be beneficial, especially the cancellation of outpatient clinics (75%) and the restriction of leave (69.9%). Further use of shadowing (74.1%) and online induction (37%) was supported. This paper concludes that there is a high degree of support for structured change to the current provisions for junior doctor changeover.

Keywords: August transition; medical education; pre- registration house officer

Document Type: Research article

Publication date: 2011-08-01

More about this publication?
  • Clinical Medicine is published six times a year and circulated to 20,000 Fellows and Members of the Royal College of Physicians. The journal is read by physicians both established and in training in hospitals across the world. It features a wide range of articles including original papers, professional issues, clinical guidance, medical humanities, ethics and clinical governance. The journal publishes the key features from the College lectures and conferences. Each issue has a CME section which reviews the latest advances in a chosen specialty.
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