Advice for trainees wanting to work abroad
There is no doubt that any trainee wanting to work abroad needs a basic skill set to be able to capitalise on the experience available. This is especially so if you intend to train in the developing world. You need to have the resilience to make work (in very different conditions to the UK) worthwhile. Trainees would be best advised to make such a trip towards the end of their training when it least conflicts with the pressures of accreditation exams and hunting for consultant jobs. It often takes a surprisingly long time to arrange an extensive trip - so adequate planning early in your career is essential.
Within reason you can go anywhere in the world. Whether your visit will be counted as part of your accredited training will depend upon the accreditation status of the centre being visited, the length of time being spent abroad and the benefits expect from the trip. The time you spend away will be determined by whether you expect the experience to be taken so as to minimise the impact on your training or by taking time away from training . A directory of centres visited by previous trainees and the experience they had whilst there is appended in the trainees section of working abroad.
Time abroad might be taken so as to be entirely a part of your postgraduate training or as private travel outwith your training programme.
The first issue for any surgical trainee to resolve is how you can get time away from their UK training programme without detracting from their accreditation date and compromising their future career.
Section 18 of the Joint Committee on Higher Surgical Training (JCHST) Pink Book gives clear guidance about what time may be counted as accredited training if approved prospectively. Support needs to be obtained from the following three groups:
your trainers in the proposed time of absence
your programme director
the Specialty Advisory Committee (SAC) in Urology.
The SAC will demand to have knowledge of:
a nominated trainer in the centre you are visiting (Form A)
the length of time you intend to be abroad (Form A)
a timetable including any on-call commitment (Form A)
the aims and objectives of your visit (Form A)
If the centre being visited has not been visited before then the SAC will require demographic information about the institution being visited, its facilities and the number of trainees, and training facilities on-site (Form B). This form may need to be completed for a centre that has previously been visited, but more than 3 years previously, and for all centres previously having unsatisfactory training assessments.
Trainees may spend up to one year in an overseas centre as long as it fulfils the SACs criteria.