You can use your existing Medical Independent, MediLearning or PharmacistCPD account to log in.
Established in 2010, along with its sister publication The Medical Independent, our stated aim is to investigate and analyse the major issues affecting healthcare and the medical profession in Ireland. The Medical Independent has won a number of awards for its investigative journalism, and its stories are frequently picked up by national digital, broadcast and print media. The Medical Independent is published by GreenCross Publishing.
Address: Top Floor, 111 Rathmines Road Lr, Dublin 6
Tel: 353 (01) 441 0024
GreenCross Publishing is owned by Graham Cooke.
Sign up now for ease of access to The Medical Independent, Ireland’s most frequently published medical newspaper, delivering award-winning news and investigative reporting.
You are reading 1 of 2 free-access articles allowed for 30 days
Minutes of the meeting, obtained by the Medical Independent (MI) following a Freedom of Information request to the Department, stated that “over 12,000 registered medical practitioners are required to enrol on a professional competence scheme (PCS). Postgraduate medical training bodies (PGTBs) reported approximately 100 doctors who haven’t engaged in any CPD in the last three years”.
The Medical Council had commenced “proportionate regulatory activity” and the first step was to contact each individual doctor, according to the minutes. “This is resource-intensive. In 2019, the Medical Council intend to undertake a review of the PCS model operated by the PGTBs to determine if it is fit-for-purpose, specifically in the areas of quality assurance for CPD activity, operation systems that support doctors and compliance with the MPC [maintenance of professional competence] requirements.”
A Council spokesperson told MI: “All doctors in this group have been contacted and have been asked to take steps to rectify this issue. The Medical Council will monitor these doctors going forward to ensure that they maintain their professional competence as set out in the Medical Practitioners Act 2007.”
In respect of the plan to undertake a review of the PCS model operated by the PGTBs, the Council’s spokesperson said, “this project is scheduled for 2019-2020”.
Last year, the Council published Maintenance of Professional Competence: Report of Progress 2011-2018, which stated that monitoring of doctors’ compliance with professional competence obligations needed to be strengthened, with a greater role indicated for postgraduate colleges and employers.
In May 2011, mandatory MPC came into effect, requiring doctors to undertake one practice improvement or clinical audit activity and accrue 50 credits or more in CPD activity annually.
In 2016, the Council identified that a significant number of doctors had failed to enrol on a scheme, which they were mandatorily obliged to do. However, the Council stated last year that the number of non-enrolled doctors had fallen to around 1 per cent through a collaborative effort with the postgraduate bodies.
Nevertheless, the Council’s 2018 report on MPC noted that “approximately three-quarters of registered doctors in Ireland are fully compliant with MPC requirements at present”, leaving one-quarter who were not.
Potentially counterfeit Covid-19 tests have been offered for sale to Irish individuals and businesses, the Health...
Healthcare professionals providing care without the support of systems and diagnostics following the recent HSE ransomware...
Dr Vincent Maher, Consultant Cardiologist, Tallaght Hospital, Dublin, told delegates that there could be up to...
An update to the Covid-19 vaccination programme as a result of the threat posed by the...
There is “no central collation” of data on Covid-19 staff derogations during the pandemic in either...
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.