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Practitioner registration. Working for practitioners and the public health community David Kidney Chief Executive, UK Public Health Register Practitioner Registration for London Friday 14 th March 2014 RSPH, Portland Place, London W1B 1LY. Purpose of the UKPHR.
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Practitioner registration Working for practitioners and the public health community David Kidney Chief Executive, UK Public Health Register Practitioner Registration for London Friday 14th March 2014 RSPH, Portland Place, London W1B 1LY
Purpose of the UKPHR The UKPHR aims to protect the public and promote public confidence in public health practice through: • Setting and promoting standards for admission to the Register and for remaining on the register (with FPH and other standard setting bodies) • Publishing a Register of competent professionals • Dealing with registered professionals who fail to meet the necessary standards
Public Health Workforce Department of Health/Public Health England/ Local Government Association: Healthy Lives, Healthy People: A public health workforce strategy(April 2013) Identifying the public health workforce: • Leadership group (Specialists) • Public health practitioners • Wider workforce (education, social care etc)
Regulation of specialists Routes to register: • Standard – FPH’s training course (usually 5 years) • Recognition of Specialist Status – (exceptional) retrospective portfolio assessment • Defined Specialist – retrospective portfolio assessment • Dual registration – optional (MoU with GMC & GDC) • Developmental Portfolio Route (paused)
Local practitioner schemes There are currently 10 schemes across the UK They cover major UK cities (Birmingham, Bristol, Cardiff, Glasgow, London, Newcastle ...) Over 100 Practitioners have so far registered There are over 400 more working towards registration The local schemes have recruited over 130 volunteer assessors and verifiers who have been trained and approved by UKPHR
Assessment of competence – a devolved system • Potentially large volume of practitioner registrants • Therefore localised approach is feasible (in contrast to arrangements for specialists) • Assessment and verification undertaken (and co-ordinated) through local schemes • Currently, local scheme can refuse to take applications from outside its ‘geographical’ area and UKPHR cannot accept applications centrally • UKPHR wants to change these features
Feedback • [Practitioner]“It allows the world to know that we are ‘up to scratch’, that we are fit for purpose” • [Scheme coordinator] “...saw this as a structure and a ‘hook’ to help develop a culture of learning within the public health system” • [Employer] “... individuals aware of strengths and development needs.... credible workforce in all sectors.... ability to plan the workforce and flex capacity.... more motivated workforce means better health outcomes”
UKPHR’s Public Health Community UKPHR works with partner organisations UK Faculty of Public Health, Local Government Association, Royal Society for Public Health and more UKPHR works with UK-wide institutions Governments, agencies, professional bodies UKPHR works with curriculum, education & training providers UKPHR works with other regulators
UKPHR’s Community Engagement UKPHR Board has lay representation The register is publicly available UKPHR operates a Consultative Forum UKPHE engages with wide range of stakeholders: • Public Health Workforce Advisory Group • Public Health England skills passport steering group • PHORCaST careers website • Centre for Workforce Intelligence • Higher Education Institutions
UKPHR’s vision for its future An effective regulator removing bad apples A proactive regulator correcting slips in practice early An active regulator sharing knowledge and good practice A positive regulator committed to continuous improvement in its own performance A team player regulator committed to continuous improvement in public health practice
With thanks to Wiltshire Council(and Dahlgren & Whitehead of course!) Public Health England Cancer Respiratory Disease Heart Disease Knowledge Management JSA Trading Standards Clinical Evidence Mental Wellbeing Smoking Reducing Health Inequalities Clinical Commissioning Secretaryof State Licensing Emergency Planning Screening Programme Promoting Health Protecting People Alcohol Communities & People Environmental Health Improving Health Preventing Disease Maternity & Child Health Drugs Health Protection CommunitySafety ClinicalEffectiveness Physical Activity Obesity Sexual Health Local Authority Chief Medical Officer
Thank you for listening For further information about UKPHR’s practitioner registration please contact: David Kidney Chief Executive, UK Public Health Register Tel: 020 7827 5841 Email: d.kidney@cieh.org Website: http://www.publichealthregister.org.uk