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The mess that is the MMC has hit new lows, when the MTAS online application
process was condemned by the interview panel for General Surgery in the West
Midlands, who have declined to continue the interview process. The panel felt
that "the shortlisting process failed to distinguish adequately between
candidates, giving credibility to creative writing skills rather than hard
evidence of competency".
The panel released the following joint statement, to much acclaim by the
junior doctors who have experienced this unjust, non-validated selection
process:
Statement from the ST3 Interview panel in General Surgery
representing the West Midlands Deanery Panel.
Mr Rob Spychal Consultant Upper GI /General Surgeon City Hosp Birmingham
Mr Andrew Garnham Consultant Vascular /General Surgeon New Cross Hosp
Mr Arun Pherwani Consultant Vascular Surgeon UHNS Stoke on Trent
Mr Stan Silverman- Consultant Vascular Surgeon City Hosp Birmingham
Mr Allan Corder Consultant General Surgeon Hereford
Mr Amir Khan Consultant General / Vascular Surgeon Walsall Manor
Miss Colette Marshall- Consultant Vascular Surgeon UHCW Coventry
Mr Chandra Cheruvu - Consultant Upper GI /General Surgeon UHNS
Mr Rajiv Vohra Consultant Vascular Surgeon Univ Hosp Birmingham
Mr Alan Jewkes- Consultant General / Vascular Surgeon Good Hope
Dr Jeremy Owen Consultant Occupational Health MOD
Miss Jeanette Mortimer UHB Staffing Manager
The ST3 Interview Panel for General Surgery in the West Midlands have
unanimously come to the conclusion that the MTAS procedure for recruitment to
ST3 in General Surgery, has not been implemented according to agreed guidelines.
We have therefore declined to continue with the interviews today.
We have come to this conclusion after considerable debate. We feel that this is
the right course of action, which has at its heart the best interests of
surgical trainees, training and our patients.
A serious procedural flaw, which came to light this morning, has been the
complete lack of a longlisting process prior to selecting candidates for
interview. This alone is sufficient grounds for postponement or cancellation and
makes the entire recruitment process open to criticism and challenge.
Our meeting at 8.00 am today was the first available reasonable opportunity for
the panel members to meet, discuss the process and air their concerns and
reservations. With the limited information available today on-site, the
longlisting process could not be completed satisfactorily. In addition we feel
that the recruitment process for ST3 in its current format is in contradiction
to equal opportunities legislation and NHS best practice guidelines.
We have in addition, wider concerns about the current MTAS process as follows,
As far as we are aware, the shortlisting application form has not been validated
or demonstrated to be suitable for appointments to ST3 in General surgery which
in effect is a pre-consultant appointment.
The application form domains available to the shortlisters and its accompanying
scoring system have not been shown to select candidates best suited to be
surgeons. It fails to distinguish adequately between candidates, giving
credibility to creative writing skills rather than hard evidence of competency.
The time-scale imposed nationally has ensured that the whole process has been
rushed. The unrealistic deadlines and sheer number of applications caused the
MTAS computer system to crash. Changes in process have been implemented in order
to meet deadlines. The marking system for shortlisting has been inconsistent
throughout the country with forms being marked by a varying combination of
members of the medical profession and lay people. There has been a lack of cross
validation between markers and different marking methods (horizontal and
vertical) have been used in different deaneries. Therefore there has been no
standardisation or quality control.
The staff in the West Midlands deanery have worked tirelessly without adequate
resources in place to try to meet the deadlines set. This has meant working
holidays and weekends repeatedly entering marks onto an unreliable MTAS Website.
They have finally provided a shortlist of candidates for ST3 in General surgery
on the Friday evening prior to the Monday morning interviews. In all, the
deanery has received 11500 applications, well in excess of the projected 8000.
We owe it to our patients and the profession that we are able to select and
appoint the best candidates to surgical training posts and felt strongly that
this was impossible today.
We have agreed to return to help re-shortlist and interview once the entire
process has been proved to be reliable, robust, reproducible and has been
validated and agreed upon nationally.
Above all we have carefully considered the plight of the candidates outside
today, waiting to be interviewed. We have stayed and spoken to all the
candidates about our decision with honesty, openness and integrity. We have been
at pains to assure them of our best intentions towards trainees and surgical
training as a whole. We share their concerns and the concerns of the hundreds of
other young doctors who havent been shortlisted for any job. We share their
anxieties at a system, which is being described and unjust and unfair. We have
been overwhelmed by their positive responses to our action and are humbled by
their words of support. We have provided support for all the candidates with the
offer of contact email and telephone numbers if they require any further
assistance.
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