Placement Resources
Example timetable
Timings are flexible - below is an example of how a day might run for newGP3 module
Morning activities
9-9.30 Welcome, preparation for the day
9.30-11.30 Meet patients face-to-face
Consider how this relates to the log book requirements
We suggest Supervised student clinics with minimum of 3-4 acute presentation or F/U each week - 30 min appointments
11.30-12.30 Debrief, feedback & filling knowledge gaps
Afternoon activities
13.30 -14.30 Tutorial
Consider one of year 3 clinical themes or vertical threads if time permits
Consider role play to develop patient consultation skills if time permits
14.30 - 17.00 Broader GP activities including:
Data interpretation session (see exam themes)
Nurse or other healthcare professional clinic
supervised learning - e.g assist chronic disease monitoring clinic
e.g. diabetes: take histories, review meds, check BP, dip urine, complete template
clinical skills - e.g. BP, ECG, spirometry
Practice meetings (e.g. palliative care, MDT, clinical meetings)
Home visit (with member of MDT e.g. coping with chronic illness)
Learning needs assessment
Please do a learning needs assessment at the start of the placement.
Student introductory email template
Dear Students
My name is Dr ….and I will be your GP Tutor at …Practice Name for your upcoming GP3 placement.
SURGERY INFORMATION
· Address of Practice
· How to get there
· Details of Educational Co-ordinator
· If there is more than one site – clarify where they have to go
SESSIONS
- The Sessions will be from (add timings)
- Please arrive for (add time) at the surgery for your first session
- Information about lunch – should they bring their own or are there places nearby
- If there is any reason why you cannot attend, especially on the first day please inform me by email as soon as possible.
- We have moved to a “total triage” system in general practice with a “telephone-first” approach, it may be useful for you to familiarise yourself with these concepts. (this may or may not be relevant to your practice)
I look forward to meeting you all in ............ and we want to make sure you get as much patient exposure as possible.
Please could you CONFIRM RECEIPT OF THIS EMAIL (with thoughts on key learning needs and what you hope to get out of the placement).
Best wishes
Dr
Belonging matters
For student engagement and learning on placement, having a sense of belonging matters. Students need to feel that they matter, and are not just in the way - it enhances learning, reduces burnout. Click here to better understand how to achieve this in the GP3 placement.
Meeting patients
Students should meet patients both face to face as well as remotely over phone or video, different skills may be brought out in either of these. The GP tutor should gradually allow students to engage more with patients as they gain in confidence and ability.
Remote consultations
There are opportunities to undertake remote consultations and (pre-recorded) virtual patient encounters if required. Resources are included here in this guide. Share the benefits with students if you use them:
They require good history taking skills
They offer less opportunity for examination
They invite development of patient management (e.g. can stop the consultation and discuss management plan and then return to the consultation to practice this)
They invite development of the ability to triage which patients need to come in for review
Consent advice for students (adapted from year 3 guide)
Your role in the third year is to learn with, from and for patients. The key things to remember are that patients need to know who you are and need willingly to give informed consent to help in your learning. The information that they need to enable them to give informed consent includes what will be involved, a true estimate of how long it will take and the fact that it is for your education and whether they say 'yes' or 'no' will not affect their care.
You should explain that you have the same duty of confidentiality as other professionals, namely that you will not discuss the patient outside of the clinical team or your learning group. Most patients will be happy to help you learn. If the patient prefers that you don’t examine them, thank them very politely and then move on to the next
patient, they might well feel up to it next time you speak to them.
Student: ‘Hello, my name is ***, I’m a third-year medical student attached to Dr ***. I’m currently learning how to take a medical history and I was wondering if you might allow me to talk with you before you see the GP. It will take about 10 minutes It’s just for my learning, so no problem if you say no.’
Obviously, never pressure a patient to allow you to examine them – consent is a gift from the patient and should be given freely. Also, never allow the patient to misunderstand who you are – if they say ‘Yes, of course doctor’, for example, correct them ‘Oh no, I’m not a doctor yet, I’m a student doctor and I’m just here to learn.’ Not only is this the right and ethical thing to do, but it also stops you from getting into trouble if a patient assumes that you are qualified.
Year 3 student learning agreement
Student Expectations
Your GP tutor will:
Email you prior to placement to let you know where to come etc.
Introduce you to themselves, the practice, the team, the processes and how things work in general practice
Do a learning needs assessment when you first attend the practice
Offer you debrief opportunities after seeing patients
Offer you a mid-term review
Offer you feedback on your clinical, consulting, professionalism skills