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nMRCGP
Curriculum |
The three year
training program is based on the Royal College
of General Practitioners Curriculum for General Practice
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The full
RCGP curriculum can be viewed by clicking
"RCGP
Curriculum for General Practice"
The RCGP
WPBA website can be viewed by clicking "RCGP
WPBA" |
Clinical psychomotor skills from the
Curriculum statements have been collated into one document under the DOPS
section of WBA.
Click here to view
The Core Curriculum statement
[Being a GP]
[Communication and Consultation Skills]
[Practising Holistically]
[Data Gathering and Interpretation]
[Making a Diagnosis/Making Decisions]
[Clinical Management]
[Managing Medical Complexity]
[Primary Care Administration and Information Management
and Technology]
[Working with Colleagues and in Teams]
[Community Orientation]
[Maintaining Performance, Learning and Teaching]
[Maintaining an Ethical Approach to Practise]
[Fitness to Practise]
[Being a GP]
[The
GP consultation] [Clinical
Ethics and Values] [Evidence
based health care] [Clinical
Governance] [Equality
and diversity]
[Management in
primary care] [Information
technology] [Research
and academic activity]
[Patient
Safety Management] [Healthy
living] [Genetics]
[Acutely ill People]
[Children & Young People] [Older
Adults] [Women's health]
[Men's health]
[Sexual
Health] [Cancer &
Palliative Care] [Mental
Health Problems] [Drugs
and Alcohol] [Learning
Disabilities] [Respiratory]
[Cardiovascular] [Gastroenterology]
[Ophthalmology] [Neurology]
[ENT & Facial] [Rheumatology
and Trauma] [Dermatology]
[Metabolic]

[Teaching,
mentorship and clinical supervision]
Cancer
Direct link to the Cancer
reference material
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Specific problem solving skills |
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Knowledge of the signs and symptoms
of the early presentation of cancer |
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The ability to suspect a cancer
diagnosis early in the disease process |
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Knowledge of the appropriate
investigations of patients with cancer and of how they fit in with
national guidelines |
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Terminal care management: The ability
to manage pain. Knowledge about and skill in using a syringe driver:
(suitable drugs, conversion of drugs from oral dosage to syringe drive,
either, IV or subcutaneous) |
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The knowledge of various palliative
care emergencies and their appropriate management:
major
haemorrhage
hypercalcaemia
superior
vena caval obstruction
spinal cord
compression bone fractures anxiety/panic use of emergency drugs |
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The ability to define and apply
evidence-based care in patients with cancer. |
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Knowledge of normal and abnormal
grieving, and its impact upon symptomatology. |
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Community orientation
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Appreciate the importance of the
social and psychological impact of cancer on the patient’s family,
friends, dependants and employers. |
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