International Medical Graduate trainees
Bradford Trainers’ Workshop
12 5 2010
Maggie Eisner
Session plan
 Sharing experiences of IMGs – Amanda Nix
 IMGs and the CSA – Louise Riley
 The IMGs’ point of view
 How can trainers and the training scheme best
support IMGs?
Sheffield IMG survey
 Sent to Sheffield IMGs in 2009
 Headings under nMRCGP competencies
 Also sent to educators
 42 full responses
 Report includes comments by many others to
whom initial responses were sent
 Full report on Deanery website
Communication
 The biggest issue by miles!
 Underlies many of the other problem areas
 Language and culture interlinked but useful to
consider separately
Communication - language
 Colloquialisms
 Pronunciation and accents – both the doctor’s
and the patients
 Difficulty with humour
 Learning stock phrases is of limited use  may sound formulaic and insincere
 doesn’t help doc adapt language to patient
 Non verbal and para verbal (e g intonation) skills
also important
Communication - culture
 IMGs (like all hospital doctors) may have
difficulty explaining their thoughts and plans to
patients
 NB – not confined to IMGs – like many of the
difficulties, applies to any doctor and patient
communicating across language and cultural
barriers
Working with colleagues
 Cultural differences important (medical and social
culture)
 Most IMGs come from more hierarchical medical culture
– adapting to ours may be uncomfortable, with
disorientating sense of loss of role
 Forms of address may cause discomfort (on both sides)
 Cultural learning should be 2 way – it is as important for
team to understand IMG’s culture as vice versa.
 We are all ambassadors for our culture – colleagues’
behaviour has great influence on how we perceive and
interact with others from the cultures they represent.
Holistic approach
 Not true that IMGs don’t understand a holistic
approach – but theirs is in different social context
(extended family system)
 Psych illness stigmatised in some cultures, may
make doctors reluctant to explore
 Fee paying health service in home country may
make Dr reluctant to waste patient’s time
discussing psychosocial stuff
 Biomedical -> holistic shift also experienced by
UK trained docs moving from hosp to GP
Clinical management
 Different approaches determined by patient
expectations the doctor is used to, or range of
management options available
 Incidence of different conditions in different
countries, implications of same sympts and signs
(e g fever in tropics and in UK)
 Cultural communication factors may create
clinical management problems if sensitive issues
need to be discussed (esp male Dr and female
pt)
Medical complexity
 Hard for all trainees (? and trainers) to grasp at
first
 IMGs may find it especially hard because of
lack of experience earlier in career of
 managing elderly patients with many co morbidities
 NHS type primary care system
 Idea of health promotion as integral to GP’s work
Professionalism
 Values vary between cultures, including ethical
values underlying professional codes like ‘Duties
of a doctor’
 Apparently ‘unprofessional’ behaviour can
reflect lack of familiarity with current UK
professional codes and the values underlying
them
Teaching methods
 Student-teacher relationship differs between
cultures. Most IMGs used to expectation that
teachers should be respected unconditionally
and not challenged
 Concept of self directed learning AND skills
needed for it may be unfamiliar
 NB – all learners have individual learning styles;
educational culture IMGs have come from is
only one factor you need to know to design an
appropriate teaching programme
IMGs on Bradford STS
 Currently 12 (11 Indian subcontinent, 1 EU)
 3 meetings in 2010, ½ day at HDR and 2 full days at
Broughton Hall
 Found out about their point of view – all felt that
communication is most important issue
 Discussed areas of concern
 Discussion and role play about difficult
communication areas – sex and death
 Watched London Deanery video
Helping IMGs - principles
 Start early
 Be aware of challenges faced by IMGs
 Respect them – don’t see them as a problem
 IMGs in difficulty may need multifaceted support
(trainer, ES, TPD)
Helping IMGs – encourage to

Recognise and practise pt centred consultation skills (ICE, looking for
cues, sharing options) early

Be curious about patients’ lives, ask about them in consultation

Self assess on competencies early, and understand what they mean

Observe experienced colleagues’ consultations

Get involved in informal aspects of practice life

Watch TV soaps with local accent (Emmerdale), read newspapers

Get involved with English social groups

Try to speak English at home
Helping IMGs – trainers – at
the beginning
 Get to know them as a person as early as poss, show
interest in their background, ? Invite them home
 Team social activity early in their attachment
 Go out/sit in with different team members
 Early tutorial on practice patients’ help seeking
behaviour, perceptions of GP, role of GP in NHS
 Assess their English (speaking, listening, reading, writing);
plan to address language needs
 Explore their learning style and educational background
in order to plan your approach to their training
Helping IMGs – trainers
 Tutorials about cultural/linguistic aspects of
 Care of the elderly
 Death, bereavement, care of the dying
 Sexuality, sexual behaviour, sexual health
 Tutorials on ethics and professionalism, sharing
dilemmas and areas which might be dealt with
differently in different cultures
 Lots of video and role play
 Lots of feedback (more than UK graduates)
 To give confidence and encouragement
 To identify learning needs