The Scotsman

Graduate medicine course for more GPS

● Four-year course offers 40 places to graduates in bid to recruit doctors

- By KEVAN CHRISTIE Health Correspond­ent

The first graduate-level medicine course in Scotland has been set up to try to boost GP numbers.

Graduates from any disciple in an interest in the subject will be able to apply for the four-year course at the medical schools in St Andrews and Dundee universiti­es.

The course will begin next autumn as Scotland faces a projected shortage of 828 GPS by 2021.

Scotland’s first graduate-level medicine course is being establishe­d in a bid to address the GP crisis in rural areas.

The four-year course will be open to existing graduates from any discipline with an interest in pursuing a degree in medicine and will have 40 places available. It is being delivered by the medical schools in St Andrews and Dundee in collaborat­ion with the University of the Highlands and Islands.

The course will begin next Autumn and will offer students a route on to what is traditiona­lly a highly competitiv­e degree– requiringa­high-level of commitment.

For example the new MBCHB programme at the University of Edinburgh would take six years to complete – with students typically going on to complete a two-year foun- dation programme before becoming doctors.

The new course will begin next autumn against the backdrop of a recruitmen­t crisis throughout the NHS in Scotland, with a projected deficit of 828 GPS in Scotland by 2021. Senior doctors including Dr Miles Mack, chair of the Royal College of General Practition­ers (Scotland) and Dr Alan Mcdevitt of the BMA, have both spoken about the need to widen access to medical schools and the importance of recruiting GPS who can identify strongly with the local communitie­s in the areas they practice.

Health secretary Shona Robison said: “As part of our efforts to create a workforce fit for the future of the NHS, we are looking at innovative ways to attract talented people. this graduate-level course is ideally suited to those who did not choose medicine as their first degree, but now want to consider it as a career.”

The Scottish Government introduced a £20,000 “Golden Hello” incentive for GPS to move north but it has so far failed to alleviate the recruitmen­t problems.

Dr Elaine Mcnaughton, RCGP Scotland deputy chair, said: “We are pleased to see these places opening in September and call on the Scottish Government to keep up a long-term concentrat­ion on rebuilding the GP workforce. We have a real concern at the predicted shortfall of 828 GPS to serve patients by 2021. Unless that gap is filled, patients can only expect a poorer service.

Scottish Labour’s health spokespers­on Anas Sarwar MSP said: “While we welcome this attempt to address the shortage of doctors in the NHS, the fact we are in this situation shows just how far our NHS has fallen under a decade of mismanagem­ent by the SNP.”

Details of the course will shortly be posted on the medical schools’ websites.

 ?? PICTURE: GETTY IMAGES ?? 0 Existing graduates will be able to qualify as doctors through the four-year post-grad course
PICTURE: GETTY IMAGES 0 Existing graduates will be able to qualify as doctors through the four-year post-grad course

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom