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Diaspora psychiatrists

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Presentation from the International Congress of the Royal College of Psychiatrists 24-27 June 2014, London
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Diaspora Psychiatrists, RCPsych and Global Mental Health
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Page 1: Diaspora psychiatrists

Diaspora Psychiatrists, RCPsych and Global Mental Health

Page 2: Diaspora psychiatrists

What are the issues facing IMGs?

For Trainees

For Consultants and SAS grades

Initiatives from RCPsych and Diaspora Committee

What are the remedies?

Academic

Legal

Pragmatic approach

Page 3: Diaspora psychiatrists
Page 4: Diaspora psychiatrists

▪ PMQ : Primary Medical Qualification

▪ IMG: International Medical Graduates

▪ EEA: European Economic Area

▪ UK: United Kingdom

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Total percentage of IMGs in Psychiatry is over 40%, but disproportionate spread amongst grades

Most non-Consultant grade doctors (probably >80%) are IMGs

Under-represented at Consultant level

Paucity of IMGs at high-ranking posts in NHS, Academia and RCPsych

Page 10: Diaspora psychiatrists

Paper 3 Pass Rates by Country with Attempts & Gender

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Page 12: Diaspora psychiatrists

CASC Pass Rates by Country with Attempts & Gender

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PLAB and UK graduates’ performance on MRCP(UK) and MRCGP examinations: data linkage study

McManus, BMJ 2014; 348 - GMC commissioned UCL study)

PLAB (Professional and Linguistic Assessment Board) exam marks good predictors of future performance in MRCP and MRCGP exams

IMGs lagged behind UK trained examinees – equivalence would be achieved by raising PLAB pass mark by 13-20%

Page 18: Diaspora psychiatrists

Academic performance of ethnic minority candidates and discrimination in the MRCGP examinations between 2010 and 2012: analysis of data

Esmail, BMJ 2013; 347 (RCGP commissioned study)

After controlling for age, sex, and performance in the applied knowledge test (AKT)

BME examinees (UK-trained) 3x more likely to fail in clinical skills exam

IMGs 14x more likely to fail clinical skills exam but this was accounted in part for by poorer performance in AKT (machine marked)

Examiner bias suggested but disproven by analysis (?methodology)

Page 19: Diaspora psychiatrists

Annual Review of Competence Progression (ARCP) performance of doctors who passed Professional and Linguistic Assessments Board (PLAB) tests compared with UK medical graduates: national data linkage study Tiffin, BMJ 2014, April 2014

IMGs more likely to have poorer outcomes in ARCP

Predicted by poor PLAB scores and IELTS scores

Ethnicity data not consistently reported

In Psychiatry majority are likely to have failed ARCP on account of failure in MRCPsych

Page 20: Diaspora psychiatrists

IMGs in Psychiatry more likely to face suspensions and referrals to regulators

IMG trainees in Psychiatry more likely to fail formative and summative exams

Predictors include PLAB scores and IELTS performance

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Analysis of 244,153 hospitalizations in Pennsylvania found that patients of doctors who graduated from international medical schools and were not U.S. citizens at the time they entered medical school had significantly lower mortality rates than patients cared for by doctors who graduated from U.S. medical schools or who were U.S. citizens and received their degrees abroad.

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“The first, and by now uncontroversial, issue is whether or not the public sector equality duty applies to the Royal College and the GMC. The GMC has always admitted that it does and the Royal College (RCGP) is prepared, for the purposes of these proceedings, to accept that it does. Both concessions are right.”

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The public sector equality duty is set out in section 149(1): "(1) A public authority must, in the exercise of its functions, have due

regard to the need to —

(a) eliminate discrimination, harassment, victimisation and any other conduct that is prohibited by or under this Act;

(b) advance equality of opportunity between persons who share a relevant protected characteristic and persons who do not share it;

(c) foster good relations between persons who share a relevant protected characteristic and persons who do not share it."

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“The public sector equality duty cannot require the Royal College to consider exercising public functions which it has chosen not to exercise, or even to require it to consider exercising those functions”

No requirement to run CASC courses, for example

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(2) For the purpose of attaining the aforesaid objects but not further or otherwise the College may exercise the following powers:

(a) to encourage and promote amongst its members and others the exchange of knowledge, information, experience and ideas relating thereto and to related subjects, sciences and disciplines;

(b) to encourage and promote amongst its members and others working in allied and related sciences and disciplines the achievement and maintenance of the highest possible standards of professional competence and practice;

http://www.rcpsych.ac.uk

Page 27: Diaspora psychiatrists

“Accordingly, in my judgement…….. If the Royal College were not to consider taking steps such as those, it might well be that it would not, as of now and in the future, discharge its duty under section 149”

“Such measures have, however, not been the target of this claim. Its target is the Clinical Skills Assessment itself. There it may be on weaker ground”

Page 28: Diaspora psychiatrists

(2) For the purpose of attaining the aforesaid objects but not further or otherwise the College may exercise the following powers:

(a) to encourage and promote amongst its members and others the exchange of knowledge, information, experience and ideas relating thereto and to related subjects, sciences and disciplines;

(b) to encourage and promote amongst its members and others working in allied and related sciences and disciplines the achievement and maintenance of the highest possible standards of professional competence and practice;

http://www.rcpsych.ac.uk

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Thus the Royal College is empowered to encourage the Deaneries to address the fact of underperformance by South Asian and BME candidates in the Clinical Skills Assessment by, for example, providing training to familiarise and equip them to deal with the assessment or to provide remedial training for those who have failed at the first instance.

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Key message from McManus study- raise PLAB pass mark but as Tiffin (BMJ, April 2014) himself acknowledges to attain true equivalence the pass mark will have to be increased to unrealistic levels

Raise IELTS requirement – but again even a score of 9 would still leave IMGs with a 50% higher chance of failing

Provide more UK-based experience

Page 31: Diaspora psychiatrists

Appoint IMG Champions to create awareness of IMG issues at all levels of training pyramid

Work with LETBs (Deaneries) to ensure creation of a system that enables early identification and remedial processes for IMG Trainees in difficulty

Work with Diaspora Groups to establish a culturally sensitive educational leadership

Improved examiner and Clinical Supervisor training to help recognise unconscious biases (accents, manner etc.)

Improved recruitment processes (ensuring commitment and suitability for psychiatry)

Good feedback to trainees in difficulty with appropriate remedial support

Page 32: Diaspora psychiatrists

Establishment of Diaspora Committee

Initiation of a mentoring scheme nationally

Relooking at the revalidation process to identify problems and remedial actions early

Raise cultural awareness in the organisations

Establishing a hotline to capture concerns and distress

Focussed training in key areas of leadership & management skills

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Page 34: Diaspora psychiatrists
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Acknowledge the problem

Diaspora Group

IMG Scoping Group

External Review of MRCPsych Exams

Diversity and Equality Training for CASC examiners

Diaspora Sessions at International Congress- Friday 27th June 2014

Establishment of MTI Scheme

Establishment of a sub-Dean post for IMG trainees

Conference for IMG trainees on 23rd September 2014

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Thank You for listening

Any Questions?

Page 38: Diaspora psychiatrists

1976: Community Relations Commission examined possible discrimination in career progression being faced by doctors from ethnic minorities

1984: Joe Collier and Aggrey Burke, two senior lecturers at St George’s Hospital Medical School, showed that some medical schools in London were consistently admitting fewer students with African, Asian, and Arabic names than were other schools

1986: Collier and Burke discovered that a computer program used to help select students at St George’s Hospital Medical School had been downgrading non-white applicants, and informed the Commission for Racial Equality of the situation

1987: Commission for Racial Equality showed that doctors from ethnic minorities who had trained in the UK faced barriers to securing senior medical posts

1989: A study showed that ethnic minority candidates were 23% less likely to be accepted into medical school than would be expected on the basis of their academic achievements

1990: Evidence found for discrimination in competition for training posts

1993: Aneez Esmail and Sam Everington showed that medical job applicants with Asian names were less likely than equivalent candidates with English names to be shortlisted for interview

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1994: Esmail and Everington showed that doctors from ethnic minorities were six times more likely than white doctors to be brought before the GMC’s Conduct Committee

1997: Esmail and Everington showed that candidates with Asian sounding names continued to be less likely to be shortlisted for interview than equivalent candidates with English names

1998: Esmail and colleagues showed systematic differences across ethnic groups in the allocation of distinction awards

2000: Plymouth Hospitals NHS Trust agreed settlement with two consultants who alleged racial discrimination

2003: Esmail and colleagues showed systematic differences across ethnic groups in the allocation of discretionary points awards scheme

2011: Researchers showed that ethnic minority doctors who trained in the UK perform less well in undergraduate and postgraduate examinations than do white candidates

2013: Esmail and Roberts concluded that racial discrimination may be behind the high failure rate of UK ethnic minority doctors taking the MRCGP’s clinical skills examination


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