UK-wide study of the opinions of gastroenterology trainees: COVID-19, Shape of Training and the future workforce

IntroductionThe COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted training. Gastroenterology higher specialty training is soon to be reduced from 5 years to 4. The British Society of Gastroenterology Trainees Section biennial survey aims to delineate the impact of COVID-19 on training and the opinions on changes to t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Frontline gastroenterology 2022-09, Vol.13 (5), p.386-391
Hauptverfasser: Raju, Suneil A, Harris, Rebecca, Cook, Charlotte, Harvey, Philip, Ratcliffe, Elizabeth, Abbasi, Abdullah, Allen, Ruridh, Bancil, Aaron S, Brown, Fraser C, Gadhok, Radha, Gulliver, James, Haddadin, Yazan, Hadjinicolaou, Andreas V, Hussenbux, Arif, Johnston, Michael P, McNeill, Lisa, Rahman, Adnan Ur, Selvarajah, Uma, Sweeney, Elizabeth
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:IntroductionThe COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted training. Gastroenterology higher specialty training is soon to be reduced from 5 years to 4. The British Society of Gastroenterology Trainees Section biennial survey aims to delineate the impact of COVID-19 on training and the opinions on changes to training.MethodsAn electronic survey allowing for anonymised responses at the point of completion was distributed to all gastroenterology trainees from September to November 2020.ResultsDuring the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, 71.0% of the respondents stated that more than 50% of their clinical time was mostly within general internal medicine. Trainees reported a significant impact on all aspects of their gastroenterology training due to lost training opportunities and increasing service commitments. During the first wave, 88.5% of the respondents reported no access to endoscopy training lists. Since this time, 66.2% of the respondents stated that their endoscopy training lists had restarted. This has resulted in fewer respondents achieving endoscopy accreditation. The COVID-19 pandemic has caused 42.2% of the respondents to consider extending their training to obtain the skills required to complete training. Furthermore, 10.0% of the respondents reported concerns of a delay to completion of training. The majority of respondents (84.2%) reported that they would not feel ready to be a consultant after 4 years of training.ConclusionsReductions in all aspects of gastroenterology training were reported. This is mirrored in anticipated concerns about completion of training in a shorter training programme as proposed in the new curriculum. Work is now required to ensure training is restored following the pandemic.
ISSN:2041-4137
2041-4145
DOI:10.1136/flgastro-2021-101965