23 episodes

A podcast for hospital doctors

Medical expertise is fundamental to the practice of medicine. But other skills and knowledge are important too. Doctor Informed gives the inside story on the evidence about giving the best care and having positive relationships with patients and colleagues.

Created in collaboration with THIS Institute, and sponsored by Medical Protection.

www.bmj.com/podcasts/doctorinformed

Doctor Informed talk medicine

    • Technology

A podcast for hospital doctors

Medical expertise is fundamental to the practice of medicine. But other skills and knowledge are important too. Doctor Informed gives the inside story on the evidence about giving the best care and having positive relationships with patients and colleagues.

Created in collaboration with THIS Institute, and sponsored by Medical Protection.

www.bmj.com/podcasts/doctorinformed

    Addiction in doctors

    Addiction in doctors

    Everyone has coping mechanisms, but sometimes those ways of coping become problem behaviours - addictions.
     
    In this episode of Doctor Informed, we're focussing on how to spot the signs that you may be sliding into addiction, how to have conversations with friends and colleagues if you worry about their behaviour, and how seeking treatment is the best way to avoid GMC scrutiny.
     
    Joining Clara Munro are Liz Croton and Zaid Al-Najjar, GPs who work for NHS Practitioner health - a mental health and addiction service specifically for health professionals. They are also joined by Ruth Mayall, a retired consultant anaesthetist who has experienced addiction herself, and has contributed to the Association of Anaesthetists guidance on drug and alcohol abuse.
     
    Some resources mentioned in the podcast;
     
    NHS Practitioner Health
    https://www.practitionerhealth.nhs.uk/
     
    The Sick Doctor's Trust
    http://sick-doctors-trust.co.uk/
     
    British Doctors & Dentists Group
    https://www.bddg.org/
     
    Substance use disorder in the anaesthetist
    https://anaesthetists.org/Home/Resources-publications/Guidelines/Substance-use-disorder-in-the-anaesthetist
     
    Substance abuse in anaesthetists
    https://academic.oup.com/bjaed/article/16/7/236/2196385?login=false

    • 59 min
    The problem with trainees - The GMC’s National Training Survey results data

    The problem with trainees - The GMC’s National Training Survey results data

    In our final episode of this season, we're going quantitative, with the newly released data on how trainees in the UK are faring.
    Each year the UK's General Medical Council, the doctor's regulator, surveys trainees in the NHS to ask them questions about stress and burnout, harassment and discrimination, and how well supported they feel in their training. They also ask trainers about the same things.
    Unsurprisingly, the year the results look bad - with increasing levels of burnout across the board, but particularly in new trainees. At the same time trainers are feeling unable to use their time supporting learning, and instead are propping up the system.
    To discuss this, Clara Munro and Ayisha Ashmore are joined by Colin Melville, medical director, and director of education and standards, at the GMC. 
     
    All the data discussed, and the interactive tool that Colin mentions, are available on the GMC's National training survey 2023 results page.
     

    • 49 min
    Pride in healthcare

    Pride in healthcare

    We're in pride month, and this year the celebration of LGBT+ people seems to be increasingly contentious.  Healthcare's treatment of queer people has improved hugely since the days when being gay was considered a mental disorder, and would end a doctor's career - but that doesn't mean that everything is equal.
    In this episode of Doctor Informed, we're hearing from two doctors who are out and proud at work, about what  it's been like to be queer in medicine, and what good allyship looks like.
    Our Guests
    Michael Farqhuar is consultant in sleep medicine at the Evelina London Children's Hospital, he also helped set up the NHS Rainbow badge scheme.
    Greta McLachlan is a general surgical trainee, and member of the Royal College of Surgeon's Pride in Surgery Forum

    • 47 min
    Nappuccinos and circadian rhythms

    Nappuccinos and circadian rhythms

    Fatigue can have as much of an affect in your ability to function as alcohol, and yet while you would be chastised for drinking before appearing on the ward, hospitals have systematically removed the spaces where tired clinicians can rest and recover.

    The Royal College of Anaesthetists have been campaigning to raise awareness of the dangers of fatigue, and it seems that anaesthetic trainees have benefitted from that, with sleep pods and flexible schedules - but other specialties are lagging behind.

    In this podcast, Roo McCrossan, a consultant anaesthetist joins our host Clara Munro, a surgical trainee, and Ayesha Ashmore, obstetric trainee, to talk about how to fight fatigue. They discuss circadian rhythms, what to eat, nappuccinos, and why trusts should make more sleeping spaces.

    For more information about fighting fatigue;
    https://anaesthetists.org/Home/Wellbeing-support/Fatigue/-Fight-Fatigue-download-our-information-packs

    • 52 min
    Got grit?

    Got grit?

    Grit is one of those concepts (like the dreaded resilience) that has a specific meaning, but has become a buzzword in healthcare.
    It’s the ability to persevere in the pursuit of a goal, in the face of obstacles - and it’s something all doctors have.

    However that trait has benefits and drawbacks. It’s not necessarily fixed, but will depend on context, and it is measurable but not a very helpful measure in isolation.

    In this episode, Clara Munro is joined by Declan Murphy and Ayisha Ashmore - and they sit down with neurourgeon and researcher Simone Betchen, who has measured grit in women surgeons, and helps them understand their grit scores.

    Reading list
    Grit in surgeons
    https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34218313/

    • 53 min
    Formal Training Pathways, are they really all that?

    Formal Training Pathways, are they really all that?

    One size doesn’t fit all - so what are the alternative career paths of doctors in the NHS? The treadmill of medical school, to foundation training, to specialist training, to a consultant position takes years and is not very trainee-centric in it’s design.

    So are there other ways for doctors to be able to work in the NHS, still progress their career, but also tailor the job to themselves? And what are the drawbacks of trying to do that?

    In this podcast, Clara Munro is joined by Flo Wedmore and new panelist Jason Ramsingh, a surgical trainee in Newcastle. They speak to Rob Fleming an SAS (speciality and associate specialist) doctor in anaesthetics.

    • 59 min

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