
We were made very welcome and the course was great, with talks on forensic medicine, the aforementioned Bristow Search and Rescue team and the new role being taken by Western Isles GPs in staffing the hospital Out of Hours . More than anything else, it was interesting to hear from other trainees, how they were getting on and what challenges and opportunities their different placements were bringing. Being based in Grantown-on-Spey, I feel a lot less remotely placed than I did last year in Oban, so it was great to catch up with a few old video conferencing faces from last year. It was a reminder that rural practice is really the most exciting option out there.
Having pestered them to do it for two days, a few of the other trainees agreed to say a few words on camera about their life and work in some of the more remote parts of the region. Apologies for the level of background noise on some of the clips. Friendly though they are, I didn't feel I could go into the kitchen of the cafe and ask them to keep the noise down. Heres a link to the film.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FCrMOqHWZ7g

Hi Mike
ReplyDeleteI'm a doctor, out of the country at the moment and looking into GP training and the rural GP programme. Would you be happy for me to contact you about your experience please, and if so is there an email address I could use? Thanks very much
Alison
Hi Alison,
ReplyDeleteThanks for the response. Yes, feel free to contact me; email mikemciver@doctors.org.uk . I am on the 4 year GP programme which has a substantial rural component, rather than on the rural track programme, but I will help if I can.
Cheers,
Mike.