Here’s the glossary
AHCS - Academy of
Healthcare Scientists (http://www.ahcs.ac.uk) – An umbrella organisation that
endeavours to ‘look after’ all healthcare scientists, providing a membership
subscription service, manage the healthcare scientist and technology registers,
organise meetings etc.
NSHCS – National
school of healthcare science (http://www.nshcs.org.uk ) – A virtual school that
produces a national curriculum for both PTP, STP and HSST training (see below
for definitions). Is responsible for organising assessment of training and
administration of examinations and recruitment into these programmes.
HEE - Health
Education England (http://www.hee.nhs.uk). Part of the NHS, the HEE is
responsible in defining how education and training will be delivered
specifically for the NHS workforce. NB Local Education and Training Boards (LETBs), are statutory committees of HEE.
IPEM – Institute
of Physics and Engineering in Medicine (http://www.ipem.ac.uk) – A charity
organisation and professional body that invites membership from Physicists and
Engineers working in the medical sciences or healthcare. Endeavours to provide
support to its members in the form of scientific conferences, information
networks and to provide information to the public about all matters to do with
physics and engineering in medicine.
PTP –
practitioner training programme. (http://www.nhscareers.nhs.uk/explore-by-career/healthcare-science/training/nhs-practitioner-training-programme-(ptp)/)
STP – Scientist
training programme (http://www.nhscareers.nhs.uk/explore-by-career/healthcare-science/training/nhs-scientist-training-programme-(stp)/).
HSST – Higher
specialist scientist training programme (http://www.nhscareers.nhs.uk/explore-by-career/healthcare-science/training/nhs-higher-specialist-scientific-training-(hsst)/).
How do they all fit together?
One could argue that the creation of the AHCS is in direct
competition to the IPEM in that it is an entity that purports to be a professional
body and does all the things that we want to do but for ALL healthcare
scientists ~ 55K at last count against our ~5K of physicists and engineers. But
then one could also argue we already have that situation with the Institute of
Physics (IOP) and yet we still exist and most of us are happy to distinguish
ourselves from the general physics community in much the same way I’m sure that
we would distinguish ourselves from the majority of healthcare scientists. It’s
also worth a mention that the IPEM already have representation in both these
organisations. 3 IPEM trustees sit on the Medical Physics Group at the IOP and
the President sits on the council of the AHCS alongside ~ 40 other healthcare
science professions who it has to be said are quite glad to be able to ally
themselves to a larger and possibly better provider of community resources than
they are. I think that it is important to note at this point that it is the AHCS that have
been commissioned by the HEE to administrate the statutory register for
healthcare science professions.
Similarly the NSHCS could also be seen as a direct
competitor to the IPEM, and the side that won the fight!! Most of us know that
about 5 years ago the IPEM training underwent a radical change, namely that it
was subsumed into the NSHCS training programme for all healthcare scientists in
the NHS as part of the Modernising Scientific Careers commissioned by the Dept.
of Health (DOH). I will not be providing a history lesson here. Much has already
been said and ranted about the IPEM losing status as a well respected provider
of an already thorough training scheme but what I do think worth ranting about
now is in fact that rather than being shut out, members of the IPEM are still
very much involved in the design and delivery of the syllabus for the physics
and engineering streams of PTP and STP. It has far from slipped from our
fingers. However, while members have tried to provide a good solid content to
the syllabus we would not want the IPEM to be identified with the slightly
chaotic administration of the programmes.
But it’s early days and I’m sure that after another couple of rounds of trainees
it will feel more robust. Which brings me to the HSST. I guess the biggest
criticisms that members of IPEM have hurled at the NSHCS is the speed at which
things have been done, often times before resources are ready. The HSST programme is no exception.
Launched this year with the first interviews to take place on Mon July 14th
the delivery of academic content still has not been confirmed and I suspect that many
hospital employers may not even know about it yet, or at least understood their
role in it. Again I want to shout
out that members of IPEM have been closely involved in the development of the
HSST programme. We haven’t always got we want but we have made it better than
it would’ve been had we not been involved. I believe this is exciting (may be a
little scary) times for the profession and by proxy for the IPEM. The IPEM membership should take this environment
of radical change and use it’s momentum to initiate change in the way we perceive
and use IPEM resources. Put
yourself in Sue Hill’s shoes – Modernising Physics and Engineering Careers –
what would you turn on its head?
No comments:
Post a Comment