Duration of specialty training in Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery in the United Kingdom for trainees joining the OMFS specialist list between 2002 and 2019

2020 
Abstract Introduction OMFS Specialty Training in the UK is usually 5 years and ‘starts’ at Specialty Training Year 3 (ST3).. In 2007 a pilot of ‘run-through’ training started with Core Training (CT) posts linked to specialty training (ST1 posts). ST1 posts are usually 12 months but may be up to 24 months. Method UK OMFS consultants joining the OMFS specialist list between 2002 and 2019 were contacted regarding their training. If their training was extended beyond the expected date of completion, they were asked to give a primary and secondary reason from a simplified list. Results were analysed with Winstat©. Results A total of 382 consultants were contacted, 325 responding (86%) and of these 290 were appointed at ST3 and their mean extension of training time was 0.63 years. For those 35 who were appointed to ST1, their training was on average 0.77 years longer. Undertaking a Fellowship (33%) was the commonest reason for extension, followed by administrative delay (24%), unsuccessful attempts at the FRCS exam (12%) and training reasons (10%). Female trainees (n = 37) spending on average 1.28 years longer than planned compared to male trainees (288 - 0.67 years). Gender differences were also present in the main reasons for extension with 12% of female respondents giving family reasons as the main cause, whereas only 2% of males gave this reason. Problems with training was the main cause for extension for 19% of females compared to 8% of males. Conclusions Understanding factors which extend training and the length of these extensions could have the twin benefits of openness for new trainees and directing support to existing trainees. Differential attainment and Equality Diversity & Inclusion (EDI) are domains whose monitoring is required by the General Medical Council and undertaken by training authorities. The small numbers of trainees in OMFS programmes may not always allow training variance to be recognised.
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