Sir: Your readers might be interested to know about the changes to Irish training. Currently, the Irish Psychiatric Training Committee (IPTC) is the statutory body regulating psychiatric training in Ireland. Alongside the IPTC, the Royal College of Psychiatrists provides accreditation and educational approval to training schemes and programmes. There are currently 12 training schemes in Ireland, with approximately 500 trainees. The Certificate of Satisfactory Completion of Training (CSCT) and entry onto the specialist register of the Irish Medical Council are awarded after 3–4 years of basic training as a senior house officer/registrar followed by another 3–4 years of higher training as senior registrar.
Irish psychiatry is presently in a process of restructuring. On 1 January 2009, a new College of Psychiatry of Ireland, autonomous from the UK Royal College, came into being, and an indigenous training and assessment programme is expected to be in place from 2010. This change provides a unique opportunity for recent advances in medical education to form the basis of the new training programme. Steering groups are now developing the new training programme and its delivery. As part of this process, a pilot on workplace-based assessments is already under way in Dublin.
For Irish trainees, the initial anxieties brought on by these changes are fast giving way to corresponding levels of enthusiasm and a motivation to shape the changes as they occur. In this regard, the Trainees’ Section of the Irish College has recently embarked on a project to explore ways of optimising the awareness and participation of all trainees in College activities at this time of change, and to position themselves as key stakeholders in the emerging new College.
One key issue of concern for pre-membership trainees has been the prospect of being ineligible to sit the MRCPsych examinations after spring 2010 under the current eligibility criteria. However, the Royal College and its Irish Division are working to ensure that Irish trainees continue to meet eligibility criteria until the ‘Irish exams’ become fully established. Of note, as the Irish College emerges, Irish trainees will retain their entitlement to join the Royal College as international members, and thereby continue to enjoy the benefits that come with it, such as access to journals and rebates on conference fees.
We feel that collaboration and exchange of experiences with our peers both in the UK and in the wider European context, as occurs at the European Federation of Psychiatric Trainees (EFPT), will be beneficial. We would welcome an opportunity to retain our seats at the Psychiatric Trainees Committee of the Royal College, since we are likely to continue to sit the MRCPsych exams in the foreseeable future and an ongoing forum for exchange of ideas and experiences with our UK colleagues would be invaluable, especially in these initial stages of the Irish College’s inception.
For psychiatric trainees in Ireland, the time ahead is both challenging and exciting. We look forward to the advent of the new College of Psychiatry of Ireland – one that is committed to providing training that is comparable with the best in the world. This will ensure that Irish patients continue to enjoy the highest standards of mental healthcare.
Izu Nwachukwu MBBS MRCPsych
Chair, Trainees’ Section, Irish College of Psychiatrists, Senior Registrar/Lecturer in Psychiatry, St Vincent’s University Hospital, Elm Park, Dublin 4, Ireland
Elizabeth Barrett MB DCH MRCPI
PTC Representative, Trainees’ Section, Irish College of Psychiatrists
