ABSTRACT
Background and aims: Trainees who have failed the Clinical Skills Assessment (CSA) component of the Membership of the Royal College of General Practitioners (MRCGP) licensing examination present an educational challenge. This study describes a CSA resit programme and evaluates the outcomes when doctors reattempt the CSA.
Methods: We delivered an educational programme to trainees in North West England who were resitting the CSA in 2016 and 2017: the majority were undertaking periods of additional training time. After the programme, we compared their CSA pass rates with national pass rates. Results were stratified by the number of previous attempts and source of primary medical qualification.
Results: The trainees who took part in this programme had pass rates that exceeded national pass rates. Results were particularly encouraging for the group of International Medical Graduates (IMGs) who had previously failed the CSA two or more times.
Conclusions: We suggest several possible explanations for these results. All trainees reappraised their learning needs, using educational tools written by CSA assessors. The programme was delivered by experienced, trained educators working with both trainee and trainer in order to produce shared educational plans. The training community’s commitment to support trainees improved their confidence and motivation.
Acknowledgments
We wish to thank Dr Robert Kirk Deputy Dean HEENW for his strong support of the SOX programme, Dr Mark Coombe and FourteenFish for the joint work on the North West England CSA Toolkit, the group of CSA SOX educators for their skill and dedication and the CSA support administration team at HEENW for making the programme happen.
Disclosure statement
Both authors are MRCGP CSA examiners. Funding of the programme described in this paper was provided by Health Education England working across the Northwest.