May 2008

1. Update from the President, Professor Sheila Hollins

Sheila HollinsMembers sometimes ask how the College is able to represent their views. This is quite a task, especially as there are more than 13000 members and by definition there will be a range of views on any given topic!

 

The Central Executive Committee (CEC), our College Council, is made up of the chairs of the Divisions, Faculties and Sections all of whom are elected by their constituency and all of whom work closely with other elected members. These are colleagues who have put their names forward for election, working alongside members throughout the UK and Ireland. Thus we have excellent geographical and specialty spread at CEC discussions.

 

Herewith the list of current members of CEC.  These members are also the Trustees of the College and are responsible for overseeing the management of College affairs.

 

Policy is headed up by the Registrar, Sue Bailey, with the support of a small Policy Unit.  Sue chairs the Central Policy Co-ordination Committee, also comprising representatives of Divisions, Faculties and Sections, which signs off most College policy. Any particularly sensitive policy decisions are taken to the trustees to consider at CEC before finally becoming College policy.

 

The Policy Unit has also been trialling the use of surveys as a way of testing members' opinions and I am sure there will be more surveys in the months ahead!

 

Other ways of finding out what members think include regular visits by Officers to meetings held by Divisions and Faculties, or by Trusts or other organisations. At the AGM, the President and Registrar hold Q & A sessions, and in addition there is a continuous stream of emails from members with a particular opinion or question-all of which are answered to the best of our ability and resources.

 

The Officers welcome debate and questioning, but it may not always be possible to incorporate everyone's views.  We do, however, want to hear from as many Members as possible so please do continue to respond.

 

I am pleased to announce that three of our short-term Scoping Groups are ready to report on their findings. We will be launching each of these Scoping Group reports with an evening seminar in Belgrave Square.

 

5.30pm 28 May 2008 – “Managing Urgent Mental health needs in the Acute Trust” This report has been endorsed by the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges.

 

5.30pm 2 June 2008 – “Assessment of Risk to Others” This report is relevant to all specialties in psychiatry.

 

5.30pm 13 June 2008 – “Psychological Therapies in Psychiatry and Primary Care” This report a joint report with the Royal College of General Practitioners.

 

If you would like to attend any of these events, please contact Elen Cook (ecook@rcpsych.ac.uk). There are only a limited number of tickets available and these will be allocated on a first come, first served basis.

2. GMC revalidation by Dr Laurence Mynors-Wallis, Associate Dean and Lead for Revalidation and Robert Jackson, Head of Postgraduate Education

 

The GMC has been considering revalidation for more than 10 years.  Criticisms of the earlier proposals led to a review and the publication of the White Paper (Trust Assurance and Safety, the Regulation of Health Professionals in the 21st Century) in 2007.

 

Revalidation should be considered as a single set of processes with two potential outcomes: relicensing (for all doctors) and recertification (for doctors on the specialist register).

 

The Medical Royal Colleges have a key role in recertification, the setting of the clinical standards against which specialists will be measured.  The College standards will form the basis of the standards expected of a specialist psychiatrist.  The GMC will have to agree that the standards meet the requirements for recertification.

 

What might revalidation look like for psychiatrists?

 

It is likely that a strengthened appraisal will be the core process in the assessment for revalidation.

 

We have developed a questionnaire which forms part of our consultation process looking at the acceptability and feasibility of potential methods for use in recertification. 

 

You can read the questionnaire together with the main information about revalidation for Psychiatrists www.rcpsych.ac.uk/training/postgraduateeducation/gmcrevalidation.aspx

 

Please complete the questionnaire.  The key issues raised in the questionnaire are around your views on the use of:

  • the appraisal process for revalidation
  • knowledge based assessments for recertification
  • workplace based assessments for recertification

 

There is space for free text on how you wish the College to support the recertification process and for comments to assist the College in implementing the changes.

 

 

3.  What do you think of the College website? Dr Martin Briscoe, Website Editor

Please participate in this short survey to tell us what you think of the College Website.

 

Questionnaire

 

 Please respond by 30th May 2008.

 

4. Translation of the College’s mental health information leaflets:

Update from Dr Syed Ahmer, Department of Psychiatry, the Aga Khan University, Karachi, Pakistan

 

As you know the Royal College creates mental health information leaflets in a very simple, jargon-free, and easy to understand language for the general public. These leaflets are freely downloadable from the College website and there is no restriction on their free distribution as long as the College is acknowledged.

 

Over the last year the College, in collaboration with the Department of Psychiatry, the Aga Khan University Karachi, has developed an Urdu version of the Mental Health Information section of its website. The work is now in initial stages but is steadily growing. The Urdu leaflets are slightly shorter than the English ones to include information that would be applicable to the global Urdu speaking population, and specifically to a Pakistani population.

 

After discussion with Dr Martin Briscoe, who is in charge of the languages section of the College website, it was decided to disseminate this information to all psychiatrists in Pakistan and abroad who see patients speaking Urdu as their first or second language.

 

Please feel free to print or download these leaflets for free distribution or training purposes. In case of any queries you can contact, Deborah Hart at dhart@rcpsych.ac.uk - Head of Communications and Policy at the College.

 

The url of the Urdu section of the College website is

http://www.rcpsych.ac.uk/mentalhealthinformation/languages/urdu.aspx

The leaflets are also available from the Public Education page of the Department of Psychiatry, AKU website in pdf format.

http://www.aku.edu/medicalcollege/psychiatry/public_education.shtml

 

We should all thank Dr Philip Timms who is the man responsible for creating these leaflets, and especially Dr Martin Briscoe who has spent months on trying to sort out all the problems to bring the Urdu section to its current position.

 

This is only the beginning and I am sure there are many mistakes which we hope you would point out to us so we can correct them.

 

We would love to hear your feedback and any suggestions for improvement, on this project. We are adding new leaflets to the Urdu section every month so you may want to keep visiting the website off and on.

 

5.  News from the Scottish Division

Following a joint Fringe meeting with the RCN at the recent Scottish Labour Party Conference, the Scottish Division submitted a short briefing to the Health Committee of the Scottish Parliament who are currently conducting an enquiry into mental health services in Scotland.

 

The topic of our briefing was “Do we have appropriate numbers of healthcare staff to deliver on the mental health agenda?'

and is essentially about how to increase access to psychological therapies. The full text of the briefing can be found on the Scottish Division webpages.

 

6. Sri Lanka Trek Information Evening on Wednesday 4 June 2008, at 6pm, at the College

Sri Lanka 2

 

All members are welcome to join this exciting trek to the beautiful island of Sri Lanka

 

Our route will pass through tea plantations, jungle, forests and mountains, and be followed by the opportunity to visit local psychiatric services. 

 

By joining the trek, you will also help to raise funds for the College’s Overseas Volunteer Programme, providing volunteers to work in the mental health services of developing countries.

 

Come and hear more about the trek to Sri Lanka, on Wedneday 4th June 2008, at 6pm, at the Royal College of Psychiatrists,

17 Belgrave Square, London SW1X 8PG.  If you would like to attend please email Liz Cowan, lcowan@rcpsych.ac.uk

7. Academy of Royal Medical Colleges: The Effectiveness of CPD

The Academy of Medical Royal Colleges, supported by the College of Emergency Medicine, is currently exploring the effectiveness of CPD through a variety of data collection strategies, including an online questionnaire. A questionnaire was piloted at the College of Emergency Medicine conference in the autumn and was then reviewed by the CPD leads of each College/Faculty. 

 

The final questionnaire is now uploaded onto Surveyor and is ready for distribution. The Project’s Steering group would like this questionnaire to be sent to as many doctors as possible across all specialties

 

Questionnaire

 

So please take 5 minutes to complete this questionnaire.

 

8.      Drugs advisors: Cannabis should remain class C - but Brown remains defiant on tightening laws

The government's drugs advisors are set to recommend that cannabis should remain a class C drug. The Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD) will report to the government later in April on its decision.

The prime minister has expressed concern with the stronger forms of the drug becoming available and asked the council to review its classification."Given the changing nature of the stock of cannabis that is coming into the country and greater damage that  it  appears to be doing to people who use it, there is a stronger case for sending out a signal that cannabis is not only illegal but it is unacceptable," Gordon Brown said earlier this week.

 

But the BBC has claimed that the council is in favour of  keeping the classification the same. A spokesperson for the ACMD would not confirm or deny the report but said the council is continuing its review and would present its advice to the home secretary on April 28th.

 

Cannabis was downgraded from a class B drug in January 2004, reducing the maximum penalty for possession from five years to two years imprisonment.

 

The mental health charity Rethink has sent an open letter to Gordon Brown, in which it has called on him to base his decision on cannabis classification solely on the evidence. It said that cannabis use had dropped since it had been made a Class C Drug, and claimed that this was due to greater awareness of the mental health risks. It has advised the Prime Minister not to waste funds  on reclassifying the drug, but called on him to invest these funds into health education.

 

The debate on cannabis classification must be free from political interference, according to Nick Clegg, the leader of the Liberal Democrats. He said that Gordon Brown "appears to have second guessed the conclusions of the drug and misuse advisory committee. I think this is exactly the kind of thing where you need a dispassionate view to see what is the link between cannabis use, its potency in its new contemporary forms, its link to the use of other more powerful drugs. And the committee in question does not believe...that the present categorisation should be changed yet again."

 

A senior Whitehall official has told the Times that the Prime Minister is prepared to reclassify cannabis even if the advisory body recommends a class C category in its final assessment.

 

9.  What’s new

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