Gp junior doctor reddit Would be much better if junior doctors could get more involved in actual research projects like they do in USA where you are actually working towards some goal and will eventually get published instead of doing some silly QIP exercise for the sake of doing I always like to pause a think a moment of our dear colleagues, the GP trainees, whose reflection burden is so severe and back breaking it legitimately went on my list of 'reasons why not to apply for GP training'. I did exactly 0 portfolio reflections last year :') I am a doctor from Ireland and I am trained as a GP (family medicine/general doctor). As you can imagine, this means a hell of a lot of rural areas where you're essentially the village doctor and I guess a lot of people don't like that. 47. ADMIN MOD GP offers Northern Ireland . I had submitted my application to GP training before the deadline (01/12/20) and received an email on 03/12/20 saying I had not sent in my employment history and needed to email them it within the next 72 hours (I had misread this and thought they wanted my employment history prior to starting FY1 Just got offered southend yesterday. I feel a weight has been lifted. And then they can do a few more shifts in ED when the fancy takes them. k. Expand user menu Open settings menu. if medicine, then getting used to seeing patients with common acute medical issues and initiating appropriate management and referrals, or if surgically minded then to get used to competently managing common issues surgical patients can experience such as infections and electrolyte disturbances. I do wish I'd loved GP in my F2, I'd be CCTing now as well, but with respect it was incredibly dull and lonely and I hated the fact that Unfortunately it depends on job and can change with mere weeks notice, in theory. That plus tax pretty much negates going for it in the first place. While it may cost roughly this much to train a senior doctor, the cost to train someone until they become a junior doctor is much less. Last patient is out of my room by 4:15 so have 45 mins to debrief and do admin. Tbh the role of gp can be so varied I don’t think you need to spend loads of days in a practise you just need to talk to a few different gps! You might get a bit of idea of the variety of career paths gp can take at gp conferences or courses and careers fairs, check out the gp royal college they should have info too. You mention GP superpractices but the top only the 1% GP partners are on ~200k. Given how competitive getting a spot in London has been this year compared to previous years, that’s what I’d do A gp appointment isn’t a ward round or amu clerking or a surgical on call team where there is a consortium of medical inputs of varying levels, you see one doctor develop a relationship and they manage you, so if you bring in non training juniors for service provision the only way they will fit is by doing the same job as a gp. That's another reason for having longer than 10min appointment slots - to allow for discussion/review by a GP. Almost every specialty will require out of hours work during training (including GP when doing the 12 or 18 months of hospital-based specialties), whereas PAs do almost entirely in-hours work, from my understanding. The NHS is overwhelmed. As I said some areas are larger, but I genuinely think the choices at application are better for GP in terms of location than any other speciality. My work week alternates between 3. I know I'm too late for the round 1 entry for August 2022, and assume that Round 2 will be slim pickings and there may be little choice on location given that competition has gone up (no Round 1 re-advert). I feel in Medicine Psych has become the in-vogue specialty for people to talk about as a bit if a panacea (perhaps taking the place of GP) and I'd like to get real views instead. So I don't actually work a set 47. In terms of working in the nhs, I would say psychiatry. and manage patients with tons of stuff going on. Follow up with GP after the acute illness gas resolved would seen appropriate. Its pretty high up for my choices. All in hours 9-5. If specifically asked for barriers that make me hesitant to apply: Having 10 minute It is definitely worth it - you will get 20, 40, or 60% of your money back depending on the highest rate of income tax you pay. The office hours are longer than hospital folk imagine but they're still nowhere near as antisocial as other specialties - you have to do something like 6 out of hours shifts per 6 months, plus usually in the region of 8. But you can still learn stuff relevant to GP in any of the medical specialities. Due to my personal situation and preference I’ll be working in both the US and Canada. Financially this may make more sense (but not necessarily, it can be hard to find long term Locum consultant posts I think). Peope expect a Ferrari service on a Ford budget and come in with 4 things to discuss, sometimes all of which are valid concerns. com find HSJ analysis of data from the latest General Medical Council national training survey has revealed the top and bottom trusts for overall experience for junior doctors. Asking for a non-Redditor. For doctors looking to move to New Zealand as well as highly mobile doctors in the UK who will now require more incentives to stay. GP MSRA results are out, but I'm still a bit indecisive about where to apply and what to put as first, second choice etc. This winter is going to be rough. If the OP did GP, then I would advise as much locuming to earn well as long as its compatible with lifestyle, then work towards a portfolio career. Or check it out in the app stores Doctors cannot work in GP unless an F2 or a GPST. But if you want a career in any hospital specialtyavoid. Hospital often involves seeing people once Debriefing at the end of each session (AM and PM). Specialty / Core Training Although core psych training would be local, higher psych could see me commuting 2+ hours each way to hospitals, and that was not for me, so I chose GP. Am currently an FY2 planning to apply to GPST after a healthy F3 locum year. This applies to most professional fees - BMA, My wife did her GP training in Exeter and East Devon. I'm not joking, go on any UK subreddit and say you're underpaid on £50k and you'll be The salary scales for DHB-employed senior doctors can be found here, and for DHB-employed junior doctors they're here and here. GP can become a grind The0ne_WhoKnocks GP in hiding • Additional comment actions I don't have one to hand but you can always try asking the practice, applying good ideas / good practice from somewhere you've worked previously to where you are now (if it's your ST3 post I guess), or asking the CS/ES for ideas. The public campaign is far less important and was a complete waste of energy with the last set of "Strikes". ” That’s all non-consultant doctors. I've only known one salaried GP. Junior doctors make up about half of the NHS doctor workforce. 11 of these days of TOOT are due to striking. Lots of specialist registrars in various fields retrain to become general practitioners. I’ve had 22 days of TOOT (with 14 being the limit for extension of training). 6. Tell me you've never done a QIP in GP without telling me you've never done a QIP in GP. Good question. whilst I do occasionally socialise with my gp work colleagues my friends circle is mostly non-colleagues. Could anyone outline what the rota would look like for an 80% GP trainee as Current intern here, having a really tough time deciding between going down the route of psych training or general practice. I don't think I want to be a GP, ever and 2. Hello! Any GP's on here moved to/ worked in canada? If so, is it a good QOL? And is it possible to do 3-4 days a week like it is in the UK? I like ED & GP but seriously considering GP so I can move to Canada long term. However 1. I'm an F3, currently not working (to focus on hobbies and other stuff), starting GP training in April 2021 (deferred entry from Aug 2020). From what I gather, North Devon is a bit ropey with regards the hospital placements, and the GP training patch is pretty huge. Since many here are curious about pay and conditions are like in those countries I thought I might share what I’ll be making and working. PSUs are seeing more referrals from GPs and GP trainees that pre-covid. was there a list of TERS jobs along with their linked hospitals and GP The GP flexible pay premium is £8,789 per year, but is only paid pro-rata when you are placed in a GP surgery, not a hospital post, so you'll get half that figure in ST1, and the full lot in ST3. reReddit: Top posts of September No f3 as still on a visa so would be a hassle/would require long term post. Yes option 1 is what I meant but that is not possible. The BMA has been asking for 35% “pay restoration” as its starting position, but has said it is willing to negotiate. Being a big city GP is pretty shit due to the competition with other GP practices so the smart money is in staying in a larger town and being able to charge above what the government will cover. By that time most of them would be fed up and lose interest in their main specialty and just choose whatever or just remain as a trust grade doctor. The rest of my choices were all TERS in london and surrounding areas, apart from ilford newham and barking. Does anyone know of/remember the tool to be able to do this? Would be extremely useful! Thanks so much, Weasel When I got mine as ST1 worked out around 9. In my F2 GP job I got exposed to SO MUCH gynae, and hadn't done a speculum since medical school. I went in actually wanting to be a GP but am now 99% sure I will be applying to start another specialty next August. NICE guideline NG3 (1. I think I blew my chance getting into GP training. I'm an FY2 about to finish my GP job and inspired by the other post about people not being able to live on base pay, I You can certainly get involved with medical education, plenty of students out there on GP blocks needing supervision. Also option to do something like Diploma in Mental Health alongside GP. The bread and butter of GP - I enjoy it. In other words, there will be a greater impetus to improve their conditions. Big pro of GP is the ease of working a 3 day week Dear ———- We are changing the way we work to help improve our services for you. I enjoy the mix. g. From Jan 1, Get the Reddit app Scan this QR code to download the app now. I was a few years post CCT and now a I'm new radiology trainee. Background: Used to work in medical recruitment, now a junior doctor I think collective bargaining needs to happen gradually when it comes to locums. As for medical specialities, I think care of the elderly is very useful and relevant to GP compared to ones like gastro and acute med, as in GP you see a lot of chronic stuff and have to do medication reviews etc. As already mentioned, general practice depends on managing uncertainty. So very hard to predict exact numbers. Internet Culture (Viral) So the only alternative is leaving public sector to work as GP where the pay is much better. The HSE is notorious for absolutely chewing up and spitting out junior doctors via an abysmal system. The dilemma is also between some northern and southern regions. Be careful of media numbers in the current environment - different groups have different incentives to make pay seem higher or lower than in reality. Band 2 in PD & 3 in clinical. You may as well compare it to the most senior equity Those were the pushes away from GP, but the pull to being a physician was cemented by my first medical job where I learned that even as a very junior doctor, you could sort out pretty sick patients - crashing LVF, cyanosed and moribund - furosemide, nitrates and morphine and 2 hours later they would be sitting up and talking. GP is shorter training scheme, you can earn more. in psych, I spent most of my time covering long-term sick leave of another trainee so felt very busy) Anyway, I applied for both GP and psych, assuming I'd take GP. Ultimately a GP will out earn a hospital doctor by a significant margin and much earlier. £150K gross. a a whole family to one motel room) and are facing being kicked out now that tourists are returning and motels are turning back to tourism. Regarding verification, here is my answer to a similar question on the other post : Food is very expensive yes. We need our Doctors to understand why we are Striking - and to continue Striking - until the Government meets our demands. Does anyone know if there is a difference between areas / deaneries in the U. Could get to b2 in a few months and C1 in a year i would guess. I see that the job offers are plenty and the paycheck is also fine, but I would like to know and I NEED to know the reality as a GP working doctor. I've known since F1 that I wanted to be a GP, but during my time during F1/F2, I had encounters with several GP trainees/fully-qualified GPs who'd sat MRCP1+2+PACES and recommended I do so too. All are welcome to join the discussion! However this is a sub for doctors and we expect medical school topics to go under r/medicalschooluk or a more appropriate sub and non medical questions would probably be filtered to r/AskDocs. GP in Ireland is very competitive and highly-sought-after because the working conditions are tolerable (and perhaps even better than NHS GP). As a qualified Gp there won’t be many places you’ll struggle to get a job. Seriously though if you're a GP trainee and you don't follow the proper QIP methodology they can make you re-do the whole thing at ARCP, so even if it's a bad project you have to oversell all the QIP tools you used. That's the way the system is designed and there is supposed to be sufficient variety built into the foundation program such that this becomes a non-issue. He wouldn't actively declare striking and lose pay as on this study day he would be doing jack all anyway compared to a regular work day. so it ends up being a fairly chill job and most GPs I know work full time hours. If you don't mind patients telling you what they want, GP So, I’m quite nervous with my upcoming ARCP prior to ST3. 00X or 0. true. 4. ST2–started on GP. ST1–didn’t have any GP rotations, hated hospital medicine (Geri’s and paeds) and it made GP seem all the more tempting. Emphasis on 'highly mobile doctors' because I doubt that many UK docs consider working in NZ for life (or > 1 year for that matter) I’d agree with this - because the contract is “cost neutral” it means the specialty pay premia awarded to places like A&E, Histopath, psych and GP have come from cutting the pay of other doctors - and in the main it was people like O&G and anaesthetics who have a lot of out of hours commitment but don’t quality for the pay premia. I’ll be applying to GP training at the end of this year and my partner is choosing preferences for his training atm. The public tend to be unable to understand that being a generalist is the hardest and most special of specialities. If I were you, I’d take the offer and commute for the 3 years, an hour is not so bad, especially in GP training where 18-24 months would be in GP surgeries: 9-5 or 8-6. A seismic paycut, but it's only for a few years . 14) says all women who have had gestational diabetes should be offered an annual HbA1c. K. Your job is listening. People are getting sicker. 'If a salaried GP lion could speak, we could not understand him. (Unless competition ratios have drastically changed). Standard of living is good but i make good money. g-clinic days are supposed to end at 6pm, but I usually am out around 4. After five years’ of completed NHS service: 32 days. The safety net is the patient’s responsibility. This has been a major bug bear of mine for a while now. But a PA can be a GP partner and in charge of salaried GPs? Someone who is unregulated, never done specialty training, cannot prescribe or order ionising investigations is allowed to become the highest grade in a GP I enjoy general practice , but the more I do clinical medicine , the more I realise that preventative medicine is more appealing to me. Locum GP Varies post to post, 100/h is often quoted. However if you wanna work in private sector, I would say GP. The firms will have a list holding doctor and may include the following: a dedicated pharmacist, an advanced practitioner and a GP assistant. GP partner No salary, but as a business owner you take a share of the profits. doi: F2 in GP, really have enjoyed my job overall and think general practice is, on the whole, a good job. Good morning I'm considering applying for training and am looking for realistic accounts/experiences of a career in Psychiatry. Or even just the things that take longer like new presentations of mental health. I did ask him a few times why he was doing this to himself, and his answer was that he 'liked the stability of having a regular workplace and being part of a team. It will and is happening in all facets of medicine, not just GP. In that sense, it isn’t completely binary if you choose GP, although more so if you choose ACCS. The annual leave entitlement for a full-time doctor is as follows, based on a standard working week of five days: On first appointment to the NHS: 27 days. 0X% if not 0. Just have a few questions about GP training and areas. My wife (29) is a junior doctor (GP trainee) and I’ve heard her mention that she would like a decent doctors bag for home visits. 31 votes, 17 comments. Also: a) Most of London isn't posh b) You'll be a GP - no once cares about where you completed your training If you're applying for GP, A&E or psych you probably will get in first time, so probably makes more sense to decide before applying. And before you come back with that “junior” bullshit, most doctors that will administer your medical care as an inpatient are termed “junior. I’ve been fully committed to the strikes and will continue to do so. How is it in real life, is there a lot of paper There are a lot of Surgeries looking for GPS and you could mix and match your sessions to suit your work pace. Internet Culture (Viral) Amazing NSW’s junior doctors win $230m payout. 5 days, with a non resident night, and a 1in 8 non-resident weekend. A few things: -For example, a new payment model in British Columbia would pay GP’s 385. 30pm for Now: I hate my job. 5k after deductions and taking off standard ST1 in GP salary. Overall a comprehensive and accurate summary. 10 sessions as a GP locum is very different to a salaried doctor Most GP sessions are 3hrs vs 4-5hrs for salaried. Valheim; Genshin Impact; I've got a place for GP in Round 2 in my ideal location, rotations aren't out yet but I'm not overly picky BMA Junior Doctors Committee will move to replace the term "junior doctor" with "resident doctor" Seeing how GP partners earn around 150k, and consultants can easily earn well over 100k with some private work, locum etc It's only fair comparing 9-5 for 9-5. I speak some french, german and italian, not fluent in any but about a B1 in all 3. But really, it doesn't make much sense. Hello, Of what I read last, I am sorry to say but you cant apply directly as you can after finishing your GP training. I know a GP who went to Qatar and got £400k for 8-2 4 days a week. In F2, I loved both GP and psych. Medical advice is not to be sought here. Typically these areas are very commutable. You're right, it's hard to classify significant, but I think it's being important in one way, whether that means having a large company where you can influence people on a global scale, rather than just affecting a few patients here and there who are Ex GP here. During FY1 - FY2 you do a series of rotations in different specialties, commonly a surgical specialty, a community specialty (GP/psychiatry, paediatrics), Medical specialty and acute medicine/ED. source: am Irish, moved to UK for training The issue with declining doctors pay led to a great Reddit movement which led to BMA upheaval and hopefully successful strikes. Internet Culture (Viral) Amazing The tax relief for junior doctor commuting is very specificly in the tax manual (for HMRC) as lead employer trainees I'm coming to the end of my ST1 year as a GP trainee (started in April 2021, finishing within the Get the Reddit app Scan this QR code to download the app now. I want to apply now to GP training as a means to familiarise myself with the process and have a shot at the MSRA so that when I actually apply in the following year I'll hopefully do better and be more likely to secure my preferred location. for quality of GP training. GP does give a better work life balance compared to surgery, in that you do not do night shifts or weekends unless you want to, you have more control over taking leave if you are a partner compared to battling with rota coordinators in hospitals, and the training is much shorter at only 3 years. If you're worried about a lack of clinical exposure going into GP straight after foundation - don't be. Ngl I would feel like a bit of a tit. How social you are at work depends on the team and the environment of the surgery - it can really vary quite drastically from practice to practice. 30-6 Monday to Friday with actual, scheduled education time, I think experiences for GPs are often very different to this, I worked there for four years as a GP and loved it (im only back in the UK for family reasons at the moment) if anyone is doing GP training or is a GP who needs advice or information about working in Oz then feel free to get in touch, I didn’t have a lot of support when trying to Even with a portfolio career the likelihood is that GP will form the majority of your work. I would like to get her one for Christmas. Also is it possible to do occasional ED shifts whilst working as a GP in canada? Thanks 😁 Posted by u/Oppenheimer67 - 11 votes and 10 comments I've been thinking about moving from the shit-show that is IMT + hospital medicine to GP training for some time, and think I'm finally ready to make the switch. I keep telling the F1s/F2s that GP is the objectively correct specialty to apply to, and the only reason not to is if you love something else or actively dislike GP (unfortunately for me, I'm both of those things). It appears that the University of Kent has been the way that the unit costs have been derived for 25 years and so is probably the original source of the claim. Doctors need to stop being martyrs - continue your career progression, who gives a shit? I still think that many junior doctors and NHS consultants think our job is easy - but I can almost guarantee that no NHS consultant can do my workweek in the same way that I would not be able to do a week as a neurosurgeon with a couple of clinics and a couple of days chopping open spines and brains. If you’re interested in it, you can be more focused on trying to cut your appointment times down as you progress, ask to shadow/help with some duty doctor shifts, ask to do supported home visits if you have a practice that actually treat you as a supernumerary The practice manager already suggested one - to look at how effectively a general practitioner's time is being used: (1) Audit the reasons for making an appointment to see the doctor and look at the outcomes from each appointment (2) See if the appointment could have been made with some other health professional at the practice (3) Train & put up posters in the reception so ENT comes in useful (plus is usually a really nice job), and if you're female then as a GP your future will be disproportionately filled with Gynae, so having some confidence about what you're looking at is probably a good shout. Score available but no ranking yet. Private GP has so much control on your own working hours, on top of that, your hourly rate is crazy, a private GP is one of the richest doctor career. Reply reply GP F2 job is the only time you can try out GP before committing to the training programme, which is worth baring in mind. A big difference in GP is patient-doctor relationship. 300 GBP). In most hospitals £80ph are reg rates. Wanted to know if anyone on this Reddit who has a career crossing GP/public health had some pointers . One of my options is Bournemouth but I've never worked or lived there. They will have an annual review/Hba1c etc anyway each year. I’m in GP now and in the world of GP, it’s rare to see a single person, I feel like the doctors who do GP are the ones who do it for family, because every practice I’ve worked in, I’ve always been the only one not married no kids. No kids. GP probably had the edge but looking back, I think this was more to do with the actual jobs and teams rather than the specialties (e. Canadian here. If you're undecided on specialty then F3 could be a good opportunity to explore, although you'll probably not get locums in derm or GP. Progression is based on competency as well. Your last paragraph is unanswerable. . In the US as a doctor people will respect you and think you deserve every cent of $300k and more. Consultants start on around £80k, compared to $300k in the US. Can't imagine a more demoralising time to go into general practice to be perfectly honest. If it’s just for the CV, I’d spent your time a) having a fun and b) getting GP exams out the way. I would like to go back perhaps in the future to finish GP but not sure if I would be allowed to re-apply. Once you’re a GP, there is little incentive to since you can pick up a special interest role in virtually any specialty without having to jump through as many hoops. 000 CAD (222. You might get a GPST as well I guess. ' It brought to mind the famous Wittgenstein quote. Internet Culture (Viral) Amazing; Animals & Pets our new home is /r/doctorsUK ** A community for UK-based doctors to chat about their experiences, share articles and hang out. For example, You could work as a prison GP/locum GP some days a week As someone starting my medical degree aged 27, general practice seems like a wise career choice for me based on the training pathway and relative work/lifestyle balance, but it seems use the following search parameters to narrow your results: subreddit:subreddit find submissions in "subreddit" author:username find submissions by "username" site:example. Pay per session is around 12-13K (including employer contributions) so salaried and around 14K for locum Choice is easy (unless you are planning on having a baby) People, please, do NOT go in to general practice for an easy ride. I'm a 'young' GP working in a densely populated London borough - so lots of variety with age, race, SE status etc. I'm slightly confused as to what things I need to consider while ranking the rotations; I'm confused if I should start with a hospital rotation or a GP rotation. A GP has a lot more opportunities to earn more as well. I’m a GP training currently in an ITP post. One of the great things about GP training is that there’s no need for arbitrary point scoring/CV building for application. 83 votes, 55 comments. . How hard is it really to get PR as a white foreign doctor? Most of my friends are from pre-med school/ med-school/ F1/ F2 / GP training. After you've finished FY1 and 2 You can decide if you want to be a GP (general practice), surgeon or medic. ** This subreddit is now closed to new submissions - our new home is /r/doctorsUK ** A community for UK-based doctors to chat about their experiences, share articles and hang out. Anecdotally, my friend who is a GP trainee got a self-directed 'study day' during the strikes. Happy to be downvoted again, but I’d stick with rads. Update regarding MSRA result for GP applications 2022. It becomes your responsibility to try and evidence that your learning environment is effective, despite however poor the departmental attitude to teaching might happen to be. etc. Nowadays, well certainly how I practice, I am a 'consultant in primary care medicine' - so I supervise the other staff (Pharmacists, NPs, Paramedic etc) doing the traditional GP work, chair the MDT and get directly involved in complex patients and things that only a doctor can really deal with. Definitely go & join the picket at your hospital Today I received an email about preferencing for GP rotations. Honestly I found reflections such a massive waste of time. Patience in abundance and a tolerance for working in absolutely broken systems. It is actually disgusting how expensive it is here for anything remotely decent. COVID seems to have exposed what is (in my experience at least) a 50:50 split in GPs. This is the exact quote from the gov website. In my region, they were offering it in the hospital that is 1hr away from where most people live, and is so bad that they had all of their junior docs taken away except GPSTs! I’d be very wary of taking it unless you really know the area well. Part time salaried, ad-hoc teacher for local medical school, locum, extended access roles. From the junior doctors' handbook: Annual leave will now be stated in days, rather than weeks. I think that fully qualified, highly trained professional doctors from F1 to ST7/8 should not be called “junior doctors”. Depends on where you are ie London much lower than Isle of White. Or check it out in the app stores GP is very personal practice. 5hrs on average is what my work schedule pays, 30-40 hrs is what I actually work when I calculate how much time I work e. Torbay has similar issues. For all those currently in GP and scrambling for an audit before ARCP, I've just done a really easy one in a couple of hours. Some different roles such as A&E, triage, administration/Oncall to break up the relentless and draining f2f sessions. Passmedicine and GP self test. ' Radiology could be big bucks and there could be interventional stuff. Valheim; Genshin Impact our new home is /r/doctorsUK ** A community for UK-based doctors to chat about their experiences, share articles and hang out. Both seem to offer flexibility in terms of work life balance and place of work (do not want to be tied to a large hospital for my career) Would love to hear from current trainees in both schemes of pros and cons. GP, worked like a dog, treated worse than one. To me it just feels like the touted benefits of GP are trying to do as little GP as possible. Locum GP. Just a bit devastated and wondering if anyone has any advice on how to proceed. I was always very keen on GP throughout med school but now I'm leaving GP training at the end of this rotation and it can't come round fast enough. Hadn’t had a GP rotation as it was taken away due to Covid. I think if you have a medical degree from one of MOH selected schools, should not be a problem. 5 days and 4. GPVTS - 3 years, so if everything goes perfectly, you should be a fully qualified GP 5 years after graduating medical school. 45pm, maybe 5. And I’d only do it if you genuinely want to improve your knowledge of EM. Foundation - 2 Years. From the time of medical registration in Australia, all overseas trained doctors and foreign graduates of an accredited medical school must work for at least 10 years in a: Distribution Priority Area (DPA) if you're a general practitioner (GP) District of Workforce Shortage (DWS) A few people have recommended counselling but I'm hesitant as it will come up on my record and I'm not a fan of my university. I still have anxiety and depression and burnout. Training to be a doctor takes many years. I considered LTFT but to be honest 18 months of hospital full time are worth it to get your head down and get qualified in my opinion. If your TOOT exceeds 14 days due to industrial action, but you have met all the competencies, you should still progress. reReddit: Top posts of When I used to work in hospital medicine, I recall there being a way to call GP surgeries directly, therefore bypassing the reception staff and being able to talk to the duty GP and saving a huge amount of time. If I only have a GP application, does hold play any roll for me? Am I right in understanding that with the first option, I accept the post and am not looking for any upgrades and this is final, Whereas with the second one I automatically will take a higher “ranked” option, even if I’ve changed my mind about what I considered a “higher” or better option Get the Reddit app Scan this QR code to download the app now. Im sold on the idea that prevention is better than cure . I know a stroke consultant in Dubai who earns 7 figures but works a lot. GP partners don't make £150k on average - they can, in the same way US doctors can earn $600k/yr. You can also become a trainer yourself and supervise GP trainees. Pros: Really enjoyed having so much time for patients. Your point about AHPs taking over this basic work is essentially because there are not enough trainee doctors. I'm young. Log In / Sign Up; Advertise on Reddit; Shop Collectible Avatars; Get the Reddit app Scan this QR code to download the app now. Sure it will suck to still be tied to the NHS "training" system but it's my only hope for a more interesting and less stressful career in the long term. DO NOT DO GP GP placements are expanding, with more GP training spent in GP itself rather than hospital specialties, so trainers will be in high demand in the next few years. The patient loads are more sustainable with fewer appointments a day compared to the U. Meanwhile people here will flame you for being on £50k. The patient outcomes are probably not significantly different to seeing me and seeing a below average GP (according to usual academic metrics). Your pointless hospital provision jobs are not. IMT currently and hoping to get into cardio. Currently living at my mums with my wife whilst we save. Members Online • Kobi-21. GP trainees apparently have to do some insane number that boils down to at least one a week and whilst it was not the only pro/con it definitely went in my 'negatives' column for GP training! For CMT (and I presume IMT) you don't actually have to do any. My medical degree is from ireland but my postgraduate GP training is from australia (and recognised in ireland). Wife is more of a "portfolio" GP. I know an ED doc in Oman who owns a Ferrari F40 with 7000 miles on the clock. No question. It's assumed you will work beyond your contracted hours on a whim. No one can predict what will happen with GP. I feel you can adequately pick up enough clinical exposure in 7 clinical sessions over 18 (/21 with the gp +) months and limit a high attrition rate due to burn out. From this sub, I gather that there are the junior doctors, a whole bunch of noctors, consultants and mixed cross-breed of doctors and nurses who may/may not be authrorized to prescribe and treat on their own. When you’re in GP you are well looked after and usually only work 4 days a week anyway with the educational time. using this as the reference . Valheim; Genshin Impact; Minecraft; Pokimane; Halo Infinite; Call of Duty: Warzone; so they’re quite attentive to ensuring junior doctors are well taken care of Reply reply More posts you may like Top Posts Reddit . Again, it depends. These are clearly the ** This subreddit is now closed to new submissions - our new home is /r/doctorsUK ** A community for UK-based doctors to chat about their experiences, share articles and hang out. Internet Culture (Viral) Amazing You are literally talking about the 0. Valheim our new home is /r/doctorsUK ** A community for UK-based doctors to chat about their experiences, share articles and hang out. DOI: not a GP or GP trainee. Obviously he would 'attend' this self directed study day at home. Or check it out in the app stores TOPICS. Very rarely leave late. Its not uncommon to see partners doing locum shifts. Would be weird striking outside GP practices as trainees Fucking lol, I am now picturing a modest picket outside a small rural GP practice consisting of exactly one FY2, who is often the only junior in the practice. I was told that to until I started to consider actually moving there. I've seen doctors from Nepal and India take years for full registration, but doctors from other countries have been quite fast. Primarily because Canada has a population almost half the size of the UK whilst being larger than the USA (39x larger than the uk). The work of a GP is the total opposite of surgery. Shame there are not more options to combine areas of medicine particularly in such schemes as in to do public health you do need some link with communities which you get from GP. Someone in their mid-30s could potentially be either a junior or early senior doctor depending on when they started medical school and how quickly they progressed through their postgraduate training scheme. The way they work it out is a bit crazy but everyone I know got around the same amount (depending on previous jobs etc). GP is probably the except as training is short and lots of vacancies. I am not as up-to-date with this new payment model but as a rule of thumb, any salary reported for physicians in Canada is pre-overhead. Get app Get the Reddit app Log In Log in to Reddit. You will be paid well and esteemed. I am a GP trainee in London - only came back due to having family and commitments. ( I personally know 5 friends who did so) Less than %20 of most training placements are filled by IMGs (except GP, IMT and psychiatry)* From another reply in the thread, it looks like there are a few things about GP you might really like. I don’t get paid any more than a GP who failed or borderline passed numerous assessments. This is obviously once you are sure not DKA/HHS etc. Was ranked like 5081. I enjoy my consultations, I enjoy what I do. Gaming. So many GPs go into it for the wrong reasons and are utterly miserable and trapped by the decent salary and their own mortgage. If specifically asked for barriers that make me hesitant to apply: Having 10 minute appointments for an increasingly elderly, frail, polymorbid society. 5 hrs. Lead plaintiff Dr Amireh Fakhouri is now a GP at Utopia Refugee and Asylum Seeker Health at Hoppers Crossing in Melbourne’s south-west. Average of about 8 sessions per week. What are the different stages of a junior doctor's training - and how much responsibility do they have? The thing that bothers me and puts me off studying to become a doctor is the negative attitudes towards the work of the vast majority of junior doctors there. Again, variable from very small single doctor practices to massive conglomerates. Most actually married non medics but there were a few that married other doctors. The theoretical minimum for a GP is 5 years post medical school graduation. Also quite daunting to start back near the bottom and have a load more exams to get through in quite a different phase of my life to when I last did exams. Pop a post in here :) It was stickied but got overtaken by the COVID thread. Looking for some advise and help with deciding where to move. Am now happily into my 2nd week as a locum GP doing no more than 4 sessions a week. Very true but I was more talking about which is most compatible with family life and spending time with family. Also, not all rotations offer the same set of specialties, so any input as to what to look for is appreciated. That GP can also do a few days in traditional general practice, maybe a MOPs clinic, maybe contraceptive implant insertion, private health reports (££), etc. Shame Reddit only allows two! Reply reply More posts you may like Top Posts Reddit . I think this term lead to so many issues, including other hospital staff treating us like children as we are juniors, and I think part of the problem why PA/ANPs/allied HCP treat us as assistants to them/ junior to them (while in reality we are NOT !) In theory, "simple" work should be performed by junior doctors in training roles. However, considering that you did two years of foundation training and would have an additional year of Internal Medicine training/experience, you can probably apply for a Practice Ready Assessment. The difference between GP and the hospital is that in hospital, patients are sick until proven otherwise; in GP it’s the other way round - well until proven sick. As soon as you're a doctor (I hate the term junior), you'll find that people pay far less respect to your outlined role. 000X% of doctors in the UK. With all due respect to all the FY2s, a year of practicing medicine is probably too early to be able to do it consistently without supervision. Non-consultant “junior” doctors are the vast majority of doctors in the country - they are fully qualified doctors that make 28,000 a year for their first year out of uni. They then transition to consultant workload over time. General practice/A&E - Not ideal as an FY1, as you can't discharge patients and don't enjoy much autonomy. has raised the starting pay for public sector junior doctors and will introduce a new allowance for doing weekend rounds in hospitals. Junior doctors have received a pay rise averaging nearly 9% this financial year. Have a good social life. Get the Reddit app Scan this QR code to download the app now. Ophthalmology/Derm/Lab - Could make the extra responsibility in FY2 more daunting/difficult, as the knowledge base acquired is quite niche and perhaps less transferrable. In my country, there's a bunch of doctors (HOs, MOs, residents, attendings, and consultants) 66 votes, 87 comments. Have any GP trainees had there ARCPs yet? Lots of potential things to talk about! Link it back to what you wish to do long term e. I’m a PGY-3 FM (GP) residency and I finish training in 3 months. However following GP CCT, people rarely retrain. I work as a SpR in medicine and A&E, but only part time, as I switched The information about our Strikes needs to be targeted at Junior Doctors outside of this forum. The theoretical minimum for a consultant is 7 years, and that's for Radiology. I would highlight I think you need similar attributes for both. They don’t doi: F2 in GP, really have enjoyed my job overall and think general practice is, on the whole, a good job. For your long-term care, your registered doctor will now be working closely with a small team called a clinical firm. Also housing is expensive as is most of Devon due to second home owners and holiday let's. My score is 443. The US is not all roses, but on a doctor's salary you'll do fine. *Or rather, I’m sure they’ll give you useful knowledge but you don’t need to spend thousands of pounds acquiring it, and you’ll be spending a lot of time learning far more than you’l need in general practice. I’m not a doctor and I’m new here so apologies if this is inappropriate - no worries if the mods want to remove. A lot of my patients live in crowded houses or are in emergency housing (a. I’m coming up to the end of GP training now but will be starting Radiology soon. 10 minutes including notes, 300 times a week, with the full range of Your GP jobs are easily doable without burnout. glzt utozlb mjvt zuaxyn lexxn vhchz ijtpt sxxlyh rmmzcvce xhmdd