Kat (@katpaton13) 's Twitter Profile
Kat

@katpaton13

Peri-operative Clinical Fellow, Cornwall
BMBS iBSc (hons) Critical Care
Plymouth WAMS Co-President 2020-2022
She/her
Views are my own

ID: 1407992281781710850

calendar_today24-06-2021 09:21:39

2,2K Tweet

929 Followers

449 Following

Kat (@katpaton13) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I've reapplied for anaesthetics for the 3rd time but idk if I really even have the effort. Top 8% MSRA score last year and still no interview. 2 points off.

Kat (@katpaton13) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The even better thing about this is they obviously covered my strike shifts, paying whatever strike rate they paid. And then on the 2 shifts I was working, there were no patients.. Good planning, and a great use of money and resources

Kat (@katpaton13) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Confirmed. You can only be a great doctor if you score in the top 5% of MSRA scores. Nothing else matters. David says so. Any great or perhaps not great doctors want to chime in?

Kat (@katpaton13) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I guess writing a PHD thesis proves you're capable of completing all the discharge summaries necessary to get through IMT

Kat (@katpaton13) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Non my boyfs mum sending me a link to an IMG who completed GP training in the UK then went to practice in Ontario (boyf is from Toronto and they're trying to understand the job issues right now) and I'm like.... that's exactly part of the specialty training problem in the UK

Kat (@katpaton13) 's Twitter Profile Photo

TLDR, if you think it's okay to train someone to work as a UK consultant who never has any intention of working as a UK consultant from day 1, in the current climate of specialty training bottlenecks, please move on and agree to disagree.

Nick (@nickatralala) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Let's give them the full data shall we Department of Health and Social Care and while we are here, let's talk about why I am striking. I started medical school in 2019. Prior to that I was an intensive care nurse. I left to (hopefully) become an anaesthetist. When I started medical school the

Let's give them the full data shall we <a href="/DHSCgovuk/">Department of Health and Social Care</a> and while we are here, let's talk about why I am striking.

I started medical school in 2019. Prior to that I was an intensive care nurse. I left to (hopefully) become an anaesthetist.

When I started medical school the