UK: Academy of Royal Medical Colleges

Suffolkres

Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Moderation note:
The Academy of Royal Medical Colleges particularly came to our notice when they were a member of the Oct 2021 NICE Roundtable Meeting that took place to ensure support for the implementation of the 2021 ME/CFS Guideline. The ARMC is the coordinating body for the UK and Ireland's 24 medical colleges. It is primarily concerned with the training and monitoring of doctors.

There is some discussion of the Academy on the Members Only threads
NICE pauses publication of updated ME/CFS guideline hours before publication was due - 17th August 2021
Legal Advice for NICE process
Trainee Rep RCP & AoMRC new follower on twitter
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Anyone interested in the Academy Of Royal Colleges offer? ( my underlining and emphasis

'Patient involvement
Taking account of the patient and lay person’s view is an integral part of the Academy’s day to day work and is fundamental to helping us achieve our over-arching ambition which is to improve the quality of care. Only by connecting real-world patient experience to the way doctors are educated, trained or conduct medical practice can we improve the service patients receive across the whole of the UK. For this reason, the Academy ensures that patient or lay members are involved as much as possible in its workstreams and projects, as well as having the Academy Patient and Lay Committee (APLC) to work alongside the Academy on its priorities. The APLC also sets its own programme of work highlighting issues on healthcare where greater patient and lay perspective is needed.

The committee membership is drawn from representatives nominated by the Academy member College and Faculties and mirrors the organisation of the Academy Council. The Committee is Chaired by Ros Levenson and managed by Kate Tansley.

To increase the breadth of patient and lay views available to the Academy we also have a Stakeholder Reference group. This is a pool of patients and lay people who are willing to be involved in Academy work as and when it is needed, which can vary from responding to a survey to attending events. Members receive monthly updates detailing the Academy’s latest work with the patient/lay committee, opportunities to input their views, invitations to attend occasional events and join Academy Committees as required. The minimum commitment would require you to consider responding to the occasional email. Any further time spent contributing to the Academy is up to you and the nature of the work. It could be in the form of giving your views on a subject, attending events or joining a more formal committee. To find out more or if you are interested in being part of the Reference Group please see our recruitment advertisement.



2020 Seminar
The Academy Patient Seminar was an active and engaged event this year for adults, young people and children. The event took place, as much of 2020 did, virtually. In the morning a session ran just for the adults hosted by Ros Levenson, Chair of the Academy Patient and Lay Committee. We are grateful for excellent and very well received presentations from,

  • Professor Helen Stokes-Lampard, giving a welcome and introduction to the Academy’s work
  • Professor Jo Martin, on test and trace
  • Professor Paramjit Gill, regarding COVID-19 and the impact on health inequalities especially BAME groups
The afternoon session was hosted by the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health. Attendees heard directly from children and young people regarding their experiences with Test and Trace, difficulties for children and young people accessing medical appointments during the pandemic and how to keep children and young people healthy happy and well during the pandemic.

Representatives from across the medical royal colleges and faculties attended the event, as well members of their patient, public and lay groups, many who are involved in other representative organisations and networks.

It was a very well received event with participants feeding back many positive comments."
 
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The Work commissioned of the Academy of the Royal Colleges-......
https://www.hee.nhs.uk/our-work/patient-safety

Patient Safety

Patient safety is the guiding principle of all who serve in the NHS – the first and most important lesson staff should learn is how to act safely. Our work on education and training for patient safety looks at how Health Education England can best support individuals and the system as a whole to deliver this.

The Commission on Education and Training for Patient Safety published its report Improving Safety Through Education and Training in 2016. Since then Health Education England (HEE) has been delivering against the recommendations within the report nationally, regionally and in collaboration with partners. This has set a firm grounding for the next phase of educational development required to deliver the NHS Patient Safety Strategy (NPSS).

Hee hee! Never heard of this other ' ams length non gov body before.......

'Health Education England (HEE) exists for one reason only: to support the delivery of excellent healthcare and health improvement to the patients and public of England by ensuring that the workforce of today and tomorrow has the right numbers, skills, values and behaviours, at the right time and in the right place."

Allegedly!
 
Also once the new guidelines are published we can respond to such with the statement that they are acting against the conclusions of their own professional bodies, ie the medical Royal Colleges, whose representatives have agreed to support the new guidelines and that these interventions are unsafe and inappropriate at the NICE round table event.

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Question fo ME was, was all this 'stuff' goin' on......, put across at the Roundtable particularly in relation to NICE Guideline likely requirements?
 
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