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| medical education in the united kingdom | |
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The ways in which these doctors work and train is undergoing significant changes in the UK. Average hours worked per week are falling as a result of pressures from junior doctors themselves and concerns about fatigue resulting in medical mistakes. In 1991 the government, the NHS and the British Medical Association agreed a package of measures on working hours, pay and conditions which was called the New Deal for Junior Doctors. This restricted these doctors' hours to a maximum average of 56 hours actual work and 72 hours on call duty per week, although it was not enforced until December 1st 2000. The European Working Time Directive requires the average Working Week to fall to 48 hours or less by 2009. New and extended roles in other clinical professions are blurring demarcation between what a doctor and, for example, some Nurse s can do. Shorter duty Shift s demand closer teamwork across professions and effective handovers. Medicine is becoming more specialised, but more cross-cover between specialites at night is needed to preserve doctors' working time during days and evenings when most patient care and learning under supervision takes place. The number of years of postgraduate training is set to reduce, which will require doctors to decide which specialty to follow sooner after graduation. The interaction with Health Care Manager s (who are not usually doctors in the UK) has changed during recent years to involve doctors in the running of hospital specialty groups and Community-based Practice . More developed leadership and financial training is required to equip doctors with the skills to manage budgets and responsibilities. SEE ALSO EXTERNAL LINKS
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