Physician Associate Training Primary Care Placements

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Physician Associate Training Primary Care Placements September 2017 Cohort The Physician Associate (PA) is defined as someone who is: A new healthcare professional who, while not a doctor, works to the medical model, with the attitudes, skills and knowledge base to deliver holistic care and treatment within the general medical and / or General Practice team under defined levels of supervision. PAs in General Practice Physician Associates are trained as generalists and have the potential to undertake a wide range of roles under the supervision of a GP including: Telephone triage Open surgery, managing their own lists Chronic disease management Ordering investigations Home visits Liaison and referrals with other teams and services Procedures such as coil fittings, contraceptive implants 6/52 mother and baby checks Minor surgery Complete reports: holiday cancellation forms, DWP forms and insurance medicals Assist GP (for example, HGV exams, DVLA forms etc which are then signed by the GP) For more examples see the case studies at the end UWE PA Student Placements Thank you for expressing interest in hosting Physician Associate students. Currently, year one of the UWE PA programme is delivered through didactic and problembased learning (PBL) methods which follow system- and symptom-based presentations. GP placements will compliment and consolidate university learning during this first year. Year one will consist of four blocks of practice: 09/-1/18-11/01/18 (3 days Tues -Thurs) 19/03/18-22/03/18 (4 days Mon - Thurs) 08/05/18-11/05/18 (4 days Tues - Fri) 09/07/18-11/07/18 (3 days Mon - Wed)

Year two will then focus on a longer clinical attachment to consolidate knowledge, skills and behaviours. This will involve a four week GP block sitting in between hospital rotations, and then a potential elective four weeks in primary care at the end of the year to ready them for practice. National PA curriculum outlines a set of core clinical procedures and common patient presentations (although not exhaustive) expected to be achieved by a PA student on graduation (at end of this document). Please note it is not expected that individual attachments will be able to fulfil these entirely, but it is anticipated that each area will have a unique contribution. Please refer to the clinical placement handbook for details of the professional standards, and student & provider placement expectations. PA students are expected to log a minimum of 180 community placement hours (in line with the 1600 total placement hours required by the national curriculum). These hours are to be signed off by the supervisor at the end of year one and each week in year two. Students will also be creating a portfolio which will be assessed longitudinally. We are hoping that most practices will have PA students for their whole GP experience, thus allowing a PA-Practice relationship to form that might encourage the PA to stay working for that Surgery after graduation. Who should they see on placement? The make-up of primary care teams can vary widely. Part of the time on placements should be devoted to meeting the members of the team, understanding their roles and how they communicate with each other to meet the needs of their patients, after all, qualified Physician Associates and Physician Associate Students work as part of the multi-disciplinary team. Members of the team can also get involved in some of the assessments that the students need to complete on placement, such as skills competency assessments or multisource Feedback on professionalism and team working. Practice Team Community teams Community services GPs Midwives Pharmacists GP receptionists Health visitors Dentists Administrators Counsellors Opticians Practice Manager Nurses and Health care assistants Nurse practitioners Visiting community teams eg. drug and alcohol team, mental health team District nurses, advanced practitioners and community matrons Young person clinics Family planning GP with special interest clinics Support groups eg. Relate, Age Concern. 2

When should a student attend? Students should get a good impression of what takes place during the whole day in Primary Care but they do not work well when tired! Do feel free to allow the students to leave earlier than the end of surgery if you think this is appropriate. If the students have down time during the day they can be encouraged to engage themselves in self-directed learning. Placement intentions In year one of PA training, university learning and placement experience will focus predominantly on general adult clinical medicine. By the end of their first term students would have learnt the basics of patient-centred communication skills, history taking and physical examination skills. For the rest of year one, GP placements should aim to expose students to examples of good practice and immerse students in the practice and application of general medicine. PA students should be able to practice basic history taking and basic physical examination skills as they progress through year one. By the four-week block in year two the focus should shift towards consultation skills, management aspects and the unique value of community medicine. An overview of this timeline and the intended GP placement learning outcomes is set out below: 1. At the beginning of the placement (block 1), the student will mostly observe and see role-modelling - They can rotate between different GPs (if applicable), nurse-run clinics, reception and other associated activities to see wide variety of processes. 2. During block 2 students should start to merge observation with practice of directed history taking and clinical skills on selected patients, overseen by the GP supervisor. 3. Blocks 3 & 4 will aim to increase student exposure to patients and consultations, with the aim of increasing supervised practice in these skills. - The GP supervisor will be asked to observe a small number of student-patient interactions to ensure communication and history/physical skills are acceptable (approximately equivalent to the level of an early years medical student in skills and supervision). - The student will present the patient to the GP supervisor in the room with the patient, and they will discuss differential diagnosis, treatment/management plan in collaboration with the patient. 3

- Students will be expected to document at minimum a short summary of the consultation for the medical record they may do full documentation at the guidance of the GP supervisor. 4. By the end of the year two block students should consult with and then present patients at the GP tutor s discretion. Depending on their progression, students could start seeing patients in a PA-student clinic manner if deemed appropriate by the supervisor. - By the end of the second-year PA students should be approximately equivalent to a later years medical student in terms of skills and attitudes. In year two the students will choose 2 cases each week to discuss in further depth with the GP supervisor. 5. Global intended learning outcomes for PA GP placements are outlines on page 4&5 Supervision It is imperative that all patients seen by PA students are reviewed by the GP supervisor. The amount of direct supervision with the GP supervisor will vary over the attachments (less to start with due to sitting in with other team members, more in the latter stages of the placement because the student will be seeing patients themselves and then presenting/discussing with the GP). Second year placements are more time-intensive to the supervisor given that the student will be present 5 days a week, although we advise time to be spent with all members of the primary care team. Supervising Arrangements for Physician Associate Students Each PA student will be assigned a supervising Consultant / GP during their placement. Students can be taught and trained and have competencies signed off by any qualified member of the multi-disciplinary team; however, the overall accountability lies with the Supervising GP. Below are three examples of PA student supervision: Example 1 Physician Associate Student on one week hospital placement in Neonates. Supervising Consultant develops timetable, arranges teaching, and meets with individuals, signs off both competencies and end of placement assessment. Example 2 Physician Associate Student on six-week placement in A&E. On a day to day basis they shadow and undertake clinical duties working closely with the Foundation Year 2, Senior Training Grades and multi-disciplinary team. Qualified staff sign off their competencies. Their timetable was developed by the ANP who also signed off their end of placement assessment, however, overall accountability was with the named supervising Consultant. 4

Example 3 Physician Associate Student on four-week placement in GP Practice. On a day to day basis they shadow and undertake clinical duties working closely with the GP and Practice Nurse, as well as with other members of the health care team, who can sign off their competencies, as well as working with the multi-disciplinary team. Their timetable was developed by the Practice Management Assistant working with practice colleagues; however, overall accountability was with the named supervising GP. 5

MSc Physician Associate Studies Primary Care Learning Objectives KNOWLEDGE By the end of their training a PA would need to know about? Diagnosis and management of chronic conditions in the community (e.g. Diabetes, COPD, asthma, heart failure, ischaemic heart disease, hypertension, leg ulcers) Recognition and management, especially natural resolution of, minor illness in adults and children Diagnosis and initial management of acute and chronic skin conditions in adults and children Community antenatal care Community recognition and initial management of common mental health disorders (e.g. depression, anxiety, grief, bereavement and dementia) Recognition and initial management of common gynaecological and women s health problems Diagnosis and initial management of common ENT and ophthalmic conditions Recognition and initial management of acute respiratory disease in children and adults, including the indications for use of antibiotics and recognition of conservative management Diagnosis and initial management of common GI conditions (e.g. Irritable bowel syndrome, constipation, gastroenteritis, dyspepsia Knowledge and application of red flag and 2 week wait criteria for possible cancer diagnosis referral SKILLS By the end of their training a PA would need skills in? Bio-psycho-social assessment Eliciting of Ideas, Concerns and Expectations (ICE) Core systematic clinical examinations appropriate for primary care To be able to take mental health history appropriate to Primary Care Assessment of suicide risk and assessment of severity of depression Recognise opportunities for and perform opportunistic health promotion (e.g. blood pressure and weight measurement, smoking, alcohol, exercise, immunisation and screening advice Understand and be able to implement an appropriate safety netting plan Take a venous blood sample using appropriate technique Undertake respiratory function tests including peak flow measurement Instruct patients on the use of inhaled medication devices Take nose, throat and skin swabs Perform an ENT examination Obtain a cervical smear and cultures for HVS 6

ATTITUDES By the end of their training a PA would need to have attitudinal, higher and organisational learning in? Awareness of how a Physician-PA team can work in practice and how PAs can function in multi-professional teams used in the community Awareness of the PAs professional and clinical competence boundaries and effective team working under supervision Understand and recognise how workload, time management and organisation influences performance and patient care Understand and recognise strengths and learning challenges with personal work load and time management issues Common Patient Presentations PA students should be familiar with the following patient presentations upon graduation and should be able to manage/diagnose/refer appropriately as stipulated in the Competence and Curriculum Framework for PAs: Addiction Altered sensation (including loss of feeling in lower limbs) Anxiety: abnormal Appetite/weight: alteration Back pain Blood loss Breast problems (lump, pain, discharge, surface changes) Children: Failure to thrive Children: Developmental problems Children: Short stature Children: Unexplained injury Circulatory abnormalities of the limbs Collapse/reduced level of consciousness (including fits) Cough Cutaneous/subcutaneous swellings Disordered mood Disordered thinking Distension: abdominal ENT problems ENT Emergencies Eye problems Eye Emergencies Falls/faints (syncope)/dizzy turns Fertility / Infertility Fever GI disturbances including vomiting/altered bowel habit Head and neck lumps Headache Hypothermia Injury: Head & Neck Injury: Extremities Injury: Abdominal & Pelvic Injury: Thoracic Joint pain/swelling Mass: abdominal Memory loss Menstrual changes / problems Micturition abnormalities (including frequency, volume, colour and incontinence) Movement: loss of/abnormal (inc. inability to walk, shaking hands) Oedema Pain: abdominal Pain: chest (including heartburn) Pregnancy: problems in Prolapse Sciatic leg pain Scrotal and groin swellings / pain Sexual dysfunction Sexually transmitted infection: concerns about Shortness of breath Skin changes: colour, ulceration, pruritis, rashes Sleep disorder Speech disturbances Swallowing difficulties (dysphagia) Tiredness Visual disturbances Voice changes Weakness (both focal and general) 7

UWE Physician Associate Studies GP Placement Tariff 2017 cohort Year one = 750 for 15 individual days Year two = 1250 for a 4 week block Who should I contact? Programme lead: Alex Stevens Alexander3.stevens@uwe.ac.uk Director of Professional Placements: Steve Booth Stephen.Booth@uwe.ac.uk 8

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