Are you eligible to apply?
There are strict rules about eligibility to apply for specialty
training in England. If you are submitting an application in
2011, you will need to make sure that you meet all the eligibility
criteria by the application closing date or job starting date in
some specialties. These requirements are indicated on
national person
specifications and will be clear in your application
details. Full details will be available from the
recruiting office advertising the post you are interested in.
Application forms will ask for information to show that you satisfy
the criteria and you may be asked to provide further written
evidence at interview.
In preparing for this, we would recommend you
use the following eligibility checklist. Use the links
to jump to more information about each point.
Eligibility checklist
Confirmed registration with the
GMC or GDC
You will need to hold full General Medical
Council registration status and a current licence to practice
(General Dental Council registration status is also required for
OMFS) by the time of appointment to the post (unless you
are applying to Public Health training and you are from a
background other than medicine). You will need to confirm
this when you apply. More information is available on the
GMC website.
Right to work in the
UK
UK and EEA nationals and doctors whose immigration status
entitles them to work as a doctor in training in the UK are
eligible to apply for specialty training. Evidence of
immigration status would be a biometric residence card, date
stamped passport and an accompanying letter from the Home Office
detailing which type of visa has been granted. All of
these documents need to be dated as at or prior to the application
closing date.
Other non-UK or non-EEA nationals with limited leave to remain
in the UK, whose employment will require a Tier 2 visa, are subject
to the resident labour market test. This would include, for
example, doctors on student visas or Tier 1 Points Based System who
are restricted from taking employment as a doctor in
training. The labour market test means that you would only be
considered if there were no suitable UK or EEA national (settled
status) candidate for the post.
You will be asked to bring your passport and proof of your
immigration status to any interviews or assessments you attend.
English language
skills
All applicants will need to provide
evidence of their English language skills at any interview
attended.
If your undergraduate training was not in English, you will need
to provide written evidence of English language skills e.g.
your English Language Testing System (IELTS 7.0) results
showing the score of 7 in all domains (speaking, listening, reading
and writing, to be achieved in a single sitting and within 24
months of the time of application: or a letter from a UK medical
supervisor or employer attesting to your competence in English at
the appropriate level.
If your undergraduate training was in English, but not in the
UK, you will need to provide written evidence of this.
Suitable evidence would include an original letter or certificate
from the institution where you qualified confirming that the
language of instruction and examination was English.
College exams
If college exams are a requirement for entry at the level to
which you are applying, you must have received notification of
having sat and passed the exam by the closing date of your
application. If college exams are a requirement for
exit, you will need to have passed by the time of your
appointment.
Match to person
specification
Each specialty has a nationally agreed person specification that lists the required
competences for that specialty. You will need to provide
evidence to prove that you have achieved the specified
competences.
Match to specialty
level
The following shows the possible levels of entry to specialty
training and a general guide to the required competences. You
should refer to the appropriate person specification for
details.
It is important that you study the person
specification for each entry level for the specialties to which you
are considering applying. The person specifications clearly
state the entry requirements for each level and this will help you
decide which is the most appropriate for you. Applying to the
most appropriate level will optimise your chances of success.
- Specialty training year 1 and core training year 1
(ST1/CT1)
If you are applying
straight from the UK Foundation Programme, you will need to show,
through your portfolio, that you will have achieved the Foundation
Programme competences by the end of July 2011. You must have
achieved the competences or equivalent within three years prior to
your application.
If your training was with a different programme, you will need to
provide written evidence that you have achieved the equivalent
competences. (See further details in the section below on
evidence of achievement of Foundation competences.)
To enter at ST1 and CT1 you cannot have already held a post for
more than 18 months (by the time you take up the new post) in the
specialty to which you are applying. The exceptions to this
are the following specialties:
- Chemical pathology
- Histopathology
- Medical microbiology/virology
- Public Health
- Specialty training year 2 and core training year 2
(ST2/CT2)
Typically, you will have achieved the competences or equivalent
from the first year of specialty training (ST1) or will be on track
to do so by end July 2011. For further information, see the
specialty training curriculum available from the relevant royal
college website. There is no limit on experience for
eligibility for selection to ST2/CT2.
- Specialty training year 3 (ST3)
Typically, you will have achieved the competences or
equivalent from the first two years of specialty training (ST1
and 2). For further information, see the specialty training
curriculum available from the relevant royal college website. There
is no limit on experience for eligibility for selection to
ST3.
- Specialty training year 4 (ST4)
Typically, you will have achieved the competences or
equivalent from the first three years of specialty training
(ST1, 2 and 3), or you will have the entry requirements for former
higher specialty training programmes (i.e. Specialist Registrar
(SpR) programmes). For further information, see the specialty
training curriculum available from the relevant royal college
website. There is no limit on experience for eligibility for
selection to ST4.
Evidence of achievement of Foundation or
equivalent competences
The 2011 person specification
for entry to all specialty training programmes (including FTSTA
posts) includes "Evidence of achievement of Foundation competences
between 1st August 2008 and 3rd August 2011 in line with GMC
standards/Good Medical Practice including:
- Good clinical care
- Maintaining good medical practice
- Good relationships and communication with patients
- Good working relationships with colleagues
- Good teaching and training
- Professional behaviour and probity
- Delivery of good acute clinical care
All applicants to Core or Specialty training at CT1, ST1 or
FTSTA level must demonstrate all the competences without exception
using the prescribed evidence as outlined below.
Possession of foundation competences is essential for successful
applicants to cope with, and progress through specialty training.
Demonstrating foundation competences also ensures that doctors can
practise safely in line with GMC standards. To achieve this, it is
crucial that this submitted evidence is current. It is not
sufficient to have achieved each competence once. Competences must
be achieved, maintained and demonstrated.
The acceptable methods for demonstrating foundation competences
are listed below. No other evidence will be accepted as
previous experience has shown it to be unreliable. For example,
specialist qualifications do not demonstrate the breadth of
foundation competences and candidates are not typically readily
able to cope with the first year of core or specialty training.
Candidates who did achieve foundation competences in the past but
since then focused their career in a small specialised area would
also find it difficult to cope in the first year of core or
specialty training. The broad spectrum of foundation competences
must be demonstrated to qualify the candidate for entry to
year one of core or specialty training. It is the candidate’s
responsibility to satisfactorily demonstrate that this criterion
has been fulfilled
Demonstrating Achievement of
Foundation Competences (updated for 2011)There are a 3
ways you can demonstrate your achievement of foundation competency.
The application form will ask you a series of questions to help you
determine the most appropriate form of evidence. Your answers to
these questions will also allow us to assess your eligibility to
apply for a specialty training programme and you will be expected
to provide standardised documentation to verify your answers.This
guidance is provided to help you to prepare your 2011
application.
- If you are currently undertaking a recognised foundation
programme in the UK which is due to finish in August 2011, we will
ask you to confirm the name of your Foundation School. You do not
need to do anything else. Any offer of a programme will be
conditional upon you successfully completing this programme and
being awarded an FACD 5.2 before August 2011. If you are
undertaking a “stand alone” FY2 post that is NOT part of a
recognised foundation programme attached to a UK foundation school,
then you must answer NO to this question on the application form
(Are you currently on a UK Foundation Year 2
Programme?) and you will be required to submit
alternative evidence as detailed below.
- If you have completed a UK foundation programme within the last
3 years (since 1st August 2008), we will ask you to confirm that
you have been awarded an FACD 5.2. You MUST attach a scanned copy
of your FACD 5.2 to your application. You will be expected to
provide the original certificate at a later date.
- If you have not undertaken a UK foundation programme within the
last 3 years, you will be able to submit alternative evidence by
asking a consultant who has supervised you for at least 3 months
since 1st August 2008 to attest to your achievement of foundation
competences. There are two "Alternative Certificates" available for
download; one for specialties WITH acute medical responsibilities
and one for specialties WITHOUT acute medical responsibilities. A
list of specialties with acute medical responsibilities is
available below. You may submit more than one Alternative
Certificate from different posts in order to show evidence of
achievement of all competencies but all certificates must relate to
posts undertaken for at least 3 months since August 2008. You MUST
attach scanned copies of the certificates to your application
form.
- We expect ALL doctors applying to a specialty training
programme to have had a least 24 months experience in certain
posts, either in the UK or overseas, since gaining their primary
medical qualification and before commencing a specialty training
programme. You will be asked to confirm that you
have:
12 months satisfactory completion of
either a pre-registration, internship or FY1 post AND 12 months
full time satisfactory completion in posts approved for the
purposes of medical education by the relevant
authority.
OR
12 months satisfactory
completion of either a pre-registration, internship or FY1 post AND
12 months full time experience at a publicly funded hospital in at
least two specialties listed in Appendix 1
OR
12 months satisfactory
completion of either a pre-registration, internship or FY1 post AND
a 12 month full time FY2 post
With regard to the Alternative certificates,
please note that:
- The signatory does not necessarily have to
personally witness the demonstration of every competence, but he or
she must be able to judge whether the evidence they have seen/had
presented to them demonstrates competence. The deanery/specialty
have no discretion in this regard.
- The post the certificate refers to must be of
at least 3 months duration (whole time equivalent), has to have
been completed by the time of the submission deadline and
undertaken within the 3 years before the post starts.
- Clinical attachments do not count as
experience
- If you are unable to provide any of the above because, for
example, you have not worked since 1st August 2008 then you are
advised to secure a second year UK foundation programme post before
applying for a specialty training programme. Alternatively, you
could secure a post that will enable you to demonstrate foundation
competency to a consultant who could then provide you with an
"Alternative Certificate", eg. A locum or Trust post.
- We understand that refugee doctors may have less access to
standardised documentation and in rare cases may not be able to
obtain an "Alternative Certificate". If you are unable to provide
any of the above because of your refugee status, you should contact
your first choice postgraduate deanery for advice before submitting
your application form. Refugee doctors will be required to provide
an Alternative Certificate wherever possible.
Download Alternative Certificate
A - (for posts with acute medical
responsibilities)
Download Alternative Certificate
B - (for posts without acute medical
responsibilities)
Download List of
Specialties with Acute Medical Responsibilities
here
Note: Applications for August 2011 must use the 2011
Alternative Certificates. Previous documentation from 2010 will not
be accepted.
Please note:
- Evidence of higher professional exams in other disciplines is
not accepted as evidence of Foundation competency.
- Evidence in a non-standard format is not accepted