Quality and impact of appraisal for revalidation: the perceptions of London's responsible officers and their appraisers
Quality and impact of appraisal for revalidation: the perceptions of London's responsible officers and their appraisers
BACKGROUND: To evaluate NHS England London region's approach to the revalidation appraisal of responsible officers in London, exploring perceptions of the quality and impact of the appraisal process. Revalidation is the process which aims to ensure doctors in the UK are up-to-date and fit to practice medicine thus improving the quality of patient care. Revalidation recommendations are largely premised on the documentation included in annual appraisals, which includes the professional development a doctor has undertaken and supporting information about their practice.
METHODS: A pan-London qualitative study exploring the views of responsible officers and their appraisers about the revalidation appraisal process. The study aimed to gain an in-depth understanding of the experiences and perceptions of the participants. Responsible officers were purposefully sampled to represent the broadest range of designated bodies. Data analysis generated themes pertaining to quality and impact of appraisal for revalidation with the potential to feed into and shape the evolving system under investigation.
RESULTS: The central importance of highly skilled appraisers was highlighted. Both groups reported educational opportunities embedded within the appraisal process. Independent appraisers, not matched by clinical speciality or place of work, were considered to take a more objective view of a responsible officer's practice by providing an 'outsider perspective'. However, covering the breadth of roles, in sufficient depth, was challenging. Participants reported a bias favouring the appraisal of the responsible officer role above others including clinical work. Appraisal and revalidation was perceived to have the potential to improve the healthcare standards and support both personal development and institutional quality improvement.
CONCLUSIONS: Responsible officers play a central role in the revalidation process. Getting responsible officer appraisal right is central to supporting those individuals to in turn support doctors and healthcare organisations in continuous quality improvement. The complexity and importance of the role of responsible officer may make achieving an appraisal of all roles of such individuals problematic. This evaluation suggests responsible officer appraisal was perceived as educational and effective.
Clinical Competence/standards, Clinical Governance/organization & administration, Credentialing/organization & administration, Humans, Interviews as Topic, London, Physicians/standards, United Kingdom
152
Griffin, Ann
f8792909-d467-40c1-8dec-b86ebe750b05
Furmedge, Daniel S
0ac9a55c-bdae-4c20-b04b-22bf0b157f14
Gill, Deborah
7efe669f-45e8-45d3-ab30-8717653353ca
O'Keeffe, Catherine
f8d29b19-1430-4384-baeb-9ddc10cea400
Verma, Anju
5a2d0658-ad11-40ab-bbe8-f1e83726eb55
Smith, Laura-Jane
719d303d-4279-4c8a-b38a-adbbbf33bb44
Noble, Lorraine
1fd33d2c-b1b6-409a-9d3c-0e6a90223ad2
Field, Ray
3911c3aa-2b3b-495b-80c0-4ecd8cbe4b44
Ingham Clark, Celia
11bd473a-05c1-4fa8-9e80-15bf0d2d6f7c
21 September 2015
Griffin, Ann
f8792909-d467-40c1-8dec-b86ebe750b05
Furmedge, Daniel S
0ac9a55c-bdae-4c20-b04b-22bf0b157f14
Gill, Deborah
7efe669f-45e8-45d3-ab30-8717653353ca
O'Keeffe, Catherine
f8d29b19-1430-4384-baeb-9ddc10cea400
Verma, Anju
5a2d0658-ad11-40ab-bbe8-f1e83726eb55
Smith, Laura-Jane
719d303d-4279-4c8a-b38a-adbbbf33bb44
Noble, Lorraine
1fd33d2c-b1b6-409a-9d3c-0e6a90223ad2
Field, Ray
3911c3aa-2b3b-495b-80c0-4ecd8cbe4b44
Ingham Clark, Celia
11bd473a-05c1-4fa8-9e80-15bf0d2d6f7c
Griffin, Ann, Furmedge, Daniel S, Gill, Deborah, O'Keeffe, Catherine, Verma, Anju, Smith, Laura-Jane, Noble, Lorraine, Field, Ray and Ingham Clark, Celia
(2015)
Quality and impact of appraisal for revalidation: the perceptions of London's responsible officers and their appraisers.
BMC Medical Education, 15, .
(doi:10.1186/s12909-015-0438-7).
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To evaluate NHS England London region's approach to the revalidation appraisal of responsible officers in London, exploring perceptions of the quality and impact of the appraisal process. Revalidation is the process which aims to ensure doctors in the UK are up-to-date and fit to practice medicine thus improving the quality of patient care. Revalidation recommendations are largely premised on the documentation included in annual appraisals, which includes the professional development a doctor has undertaken and supporting information about their practice.
METHODS: A pan-London qualitative study exploring the views of responsible officers and their appraisers about the revalidation appraisal process. The study aimed to gain an in-depth understanding of the experiences and perceptions of the participants. Responsible officers were purposefully sampled to represent the broadest range of designated bodies. Data analysis generated themes pertaining to quality and impact of appraisal for revalidation with the potential to feed into and shape the evolving system under investigation.
RESULTS: The central importance of highly skilled appraisers was highlighted. Both groups reported educational opportunities embedded within the appraisal process. Independent appraisers, not matched by clinical speciality or place of work, were considered to take a more objective view of a responsible officer's practice by providing an 'outsider perspective'. However, covering the breadth of roles, in sufficient depth, was challenging. Participants reported a bias favouring the appraisal of the responsible officer role above others including clinical work. Appraisal and revalidation was perceived to have the potential to improve the healthcare standards and support both personal development and institutional quality improvement.
CONCLUSIONS: Responsible officers play a central role in the revalidation process. Getting responsible officer appraisal right is central to supporting those individuals to in turn support doctors and healthcare organisations in continuous quality improvement. The complexity and importance of the role of responsible officer may make achieving an appraisal of all roles of such individuals problematic. This evaluation suggests responsible officer appraisal was perceived as educational and effective.
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More information
Published date: 21 September 2015
Keywords:
Clinical Competence/standards, Clinical Governance/organization & administration, Credentialing/organization & administration, Humans, Interviews as Topic, London, Physicians/standards, United Kingdom
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 502806
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/502806
ISSN: 1472-6920
PURE UUID: 111a8129-91b1-418b-aff1-95a210486a4f
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Date deposited: 08 Jul 2025 16:55
Last modified: 09 Jul 2025 02:04
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Contributors
Author:
Ann Griffin
Author:
Daniel S Furmedge
Author:
Deborah Gill
Author:
Catherine O'Keeffe
Author:
Anju Verma
Author:
Laura-Jane Smith
Author:
Lorraine Noble
Author:
Ray Field
Author:
Celia Ingham Clark
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