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Quality Assurance

In our first year of operation, the Managed Educational Network began to establish a process for defining key quality standards for clinical skills education, and to establish a quality assurance process for clinical skills educational resources. Over the three years of the CS MEN we are developing/collating common educational resources for agreed core clinical skills, are mapping current approaches to using simulation in delivering core clinical skills training, and in conjunction with Skills for Health in Scotland, are mapping clinical skills training to appropriate national qualification frameworks.

In 2009 we piloted a self-assessment questionnaire to be used for Quality Assurance of educational programmes (available to download or from the  CS MEN Office), and also a one-page questionnaire for use with individual skills sessions where simulation is used (also available to  download  or from the  CS MEN Office). Over the course of 2010 the one-page questionnaire is being rolled out for adoption by all Health Boards, starting with NHS Grampian, NHS Lothian and NHS GGC.

More about Quality Assurance

The common quality standards, educational resources and training programmes developed and delivered through the Scottish Clinical Skills Strategy are subject to an independent, robust and open quality assurance process. This will give the public and health service managers confidence in the quality of clinical skills education and delivery and enable the skills training to be explicitly linked with UK and Scottish competency frameworks.

Clinical skills training impacts directly on the quality of care patients receive. Consequently, the quality assurance process must encompass not only educational governance but clinical and staff governance issues as well. In Scotland, QIS is responsible for promoting patient safety through ensuring clinical standards of care. This is achieved through the setting of standards and performance assessment of how these are delivered in the workplace. NHS QIS is committed to working collaboratively on the development of the Managed Educational Network as we seek to promote best practice and improve the quality of healthcare.

NES has responsibility for providing and promoting education to all NHS staff and has developed an educational governance framework for ensuring that educational resources and processes can be measured against explicit quality standards and criteria.

Competency frameworks

All clinical skills education delivered through the national strategy shall be referenced to UK and Scottish competency frameworks. This will ensure transferability of the skills achieved by staff moving between different healthcare settings in the UK as well as formal recognition of the training as contributing to the professional development of staff completing specific skills training programmes.

Key Contacts for the Network

Clinical Lead:
Prof Jean Ker
Email j.s.ker@dundee.ac.uk


Regional Champion South and East:

Dr Janet Skinner
Email janet.skinner@ed.ac.uk


Regional Champion North:

Jerry Morse
Email jerry.morse@abdn.ac.uk


Regional Champion West:

Dr Anna O'Neill
Email anna.o'neill@glasgow.ac.uk

 


Related Information

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Designed by: NHS Education for Scotland