Plymouth VTS
  • Welcome
  • Timetable
    • Autumn 2019
    • Spring 2020
    • Summer 2020
  • Contact
  • Resources & Links

Training Practices

We have a wide range of training GP practices available for the scheme. These vary widely in size and location, from inner city Plymouth to market towns and villages across the South Hams, West Devon and East Cornwall. You will be offered a choice of which practice you go to for your ST3 year placement. 

We're sorry if some of the allocation information seems complex and at times authoritarian. It is not in our nature at VTS to be this way, however with large numbers of trainees to manage through complex rotations it is important that we have appropriate rules to guide us.

ST3 GP placement allocation

Midway through your ST2 year you will be asked to make a choice about the training practice you would like to spend your ST3 year in.

Many VTS schemes do not give trainees a choice of practice, instead choosing to allocate trainees. Please therefore respect the benefits that you get from this process and respect the principles behind it. Choice of practices is not a trainee right that is guaranteed.

In order to fairly distribute ST3 trainees across our widely spread training practices the VTS and the trainers have agreed the following process.

  • A certain number of practice places will be released for each cohort of trainees to choose from. This will be equal to, or slightly more than the total number of trainees seeking a practice. The places released will be based on numbers of previous ST3 placements at that practice. It is therefore possible that one year a practice may have more or fewer places released for ST3 trainees than in previous years. This is to ensure fair shares of ST3’s across the patch training practices.

Sending e-mails, meeting or other efforts to influence trainers/TPDs and admin staff to open up additional training places in a practice of your choosing will not be effective and may result in you losing the right to choose at all. Any trainees who are felt by the team to be behaving unreasonably with respect to allocations risk negative judgments being made regarding their professionalism, which are taken with the utmost seriousness by all of those involved in GP training.

It is worth noting that all training practices have been visited and approved and all trainers have shown a high level of commitment to get the necessary training and approval to become a trainer. To choose your practice purely on what is geographically convenient does a disservice to this level of commitment.

  • You will be asked to select a top 3 from the available practices. It is mandatory that you have visited the trainers at these practices to ensure compatibility. Trainers retain the right to veto any trainee choosing their practice, but meeting in advance minimises the risk of trainer/ trainee mismatches.

  • We also ask you for an additional 2 practices that you would consider to aid with the allocation. If you are offered one of these it is imperative that you visit as soon as possible after the allocation is finalised for the same reason.

  • As with your initial rotation allocation, we use your interview rankings to decide placements with highest ranked getting first choice etc. Again we reserve the right to modify this if there are good educational reasons for doing so. 

  • It is possible that you won’t get any of your 5 choices although we will do our best to avoid this. To minimize this risk it is good to discuss your choices with peers to avoid you all choosing from the same limited pool of practices. If this is the case we will come to you and discuss your options and you will need to make choices from the remaining unallocated practices.

We hope that this is seen as a transparent and fair system. Please be reminded that it is in no way a guarantee and the Peninsula PGME team reserve the right to place trainees where they feel is most appropriate. Any trainees who are felt by the team to be behaving unreasonably with respect to allocations risk negative judgments being made regarding their professionalism, which are taken with the utmost seriousness by all of those involved in GP training.

When choosing a practice we would encourage you to look visit the practice websites, which are linked from the Peninsula PGME website - link below. Look at a map. Think what type of practice you want, e.g. large v small, rural v urban v suburban, geography and demographics of the practice area, interests and characters of the trainers and team at the practice etc. Some of this will be apparent from the website, but some will need you to make an appointment with the practice manager or trainer and visit. Chatting to your peers in years above can be a good source of information, and the programme directors also know the practices well and can offer diplomatic advice, if requested. 

Click below for a link to all our training practices on the Peninsula PGME website.
Click here
Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.