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Time to revisit the skills and competencies required to work in rural general hospitals

Cormac Doyle, Chris Isles and Pauline Wilson

PLOS ONE, 2020, vol. 15, issue 10, 1-14

Abstract: Objectives: To determine the structure and demographic of medical teams working in Rural General Hospitals (RGHs) in Scotland, and to gain insight into their experiences and determine their opinions on a remote and rural medical training pathway. Design: Structured face-to-face interviews. Interviews were partially anonymised, and underwent thematic analysis. Setting: Medical departments of the six RGHs in Scotland 2018–2019. Participants: 14 medical consultants and 23 junior doctors working in RGHs in Scotland. Results: Of 21 consultant posts in the RGHs, only eight are filled with resident consultants, the remainder rely on locums. Consultants found working as generalists rewarding and challenging, and juniors found it to be a good training experience. Consultants feel little professional isolation due to modern connectivity. The majority of consultants (12/14) and all junior doctors favour a remote and rural medicine training pathway encompassing a mandatory paediatrics component, and feel this would help with consultant recruitment and retention. Conclusion: RGHs medical departments are reliant on locum consultants. The development of a remote and rural training medical training pathway is endorsed by the current medical teams of RGHs and has the potential to improve medical consultant staffing in RGHs.

Date: 2020
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:plo:pone00:0240211

DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0240211

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