Buckinghamshire Healthcare NHS Trust

Community Medical Examiner

Information:

This job is now closed

Job summary

Buckinghamshire Healthcare NHS Trust are looking for 6 Community Medical Examiners to work 1 session per week to start as soon as possible. These are permanent posts.

Medical Examiners (MEs) are doctors who verify clinical information on Medical Certificates of Cause of Death (MCCDs) and ensure that the right referrals are made to the coroner for further investigation. They also screen the medical notes to review for any points of learning. In addition they discuss and explain the cause of death with next of kin/informants in a transparent, tactful and sympathetic manner and ask for any feedback regarding their care.

They work closely with the medical examiner officers.

Main duties of the job

  • To ensure compliance with the legal and procedural requirements associated with the current and proposed reformed processes of certification, investigation by coroners and registration of deaths.
  • To scrutinise the certified causes of death offered by attending doctors in a way that is proportionate, consistent and compliant with the proposed national protocol.
  • To discuss and explain the cause of death with next of kin/informants in a transparent, tactful and sympathetic manner. It is anticipated that such discussions will be predominately conducted through telephone conversations where barriers to understanding information may exist.
  • To ensure that all users of the ME system are treated with respect and are not discriminated against on the grounds of sex, race, religion, ethnicity, sexual orientation, gender reassignment or disability.
  • To maintain comprehensive records of all deaths scrutinised and undertake analysis to provide information to the National ME's office.
  • To participate in relevant clinical governance activities relating to death certification including audits, mortality review processes and investigations regarding formal complaints about patient care.
  • To support the training of junior doctors in their understanding of death certification and promote good practice in accurate completion of MCCDs.
  • To work with medical examiner officers (MEOs), delegating duties as appropriate.
  • Please see the Job description for a further list of duties

About us

What does Buckinghamshire Healthcare NHS Trust offer you?

  • As part of our BHT family, you'll benefit from learning and development opportunities to support your career progression.
  • We offer flexible and agile workingopportunities,alongside your NHS benefits ofgenerous annual leave entitlement, pension andaccess toNHS discount schemes.
  • We provide a range of health and wellbeing services to promote a healthy, happy workforce.

Why work for us?

  • We're committed to promoting inclusion and making sure all colleagues feel they belong. We encourage new colleagues from a diverse range of backgrounds to apply.
  • As an employer, we aim to create a workplace where differences are valued and colleagues treat one another with dignity and respect.
  • Greater diversity within our BHT family improves positive outcomes for the people and communities we serve.

What do we stand for?

  • Our vision is to provide outstanding care, support healthy communities and be a great place to work.
  • Our mission is to provide personal and compassionate care every time.
  • Our CARE values are collaborate, aspire, respect and enable.

Details

Date posted

18 February 2022

Pay scheme

Hospital medical and dental staff

Grade

Doctor - other

Salary

Depending on experience pro rata

Contract

Permanent

Working pattern

Part-time

Reference number

434-MFOP-CME

Job locations

Stoke Mandeville hospital

Mandeville Road

Aylesbury

HP22 8AL


Job description

Job responsibilities

Medical Examiner (Community), Buckinghamshire Healthcare Trust

Job Title: Medical Examiner (Community)

Remuneration: 1PA per week

Responsible to: Lead Medical Examiner within the Trust and then Lead Medical Examiner for the region

Reports to: Medical Director BHT

Context

This post has been created by the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) in response to observations made in the Third Report of the Shipman Inquiry. The introduction of the medical examiner system promotes robust, transparent and independent scrutiny of death certification processes.

Dimensions of role

Medical examiners (MEs) are appropriately trained doctors who verify clinical information on Medical Certificates of Cause of Death (MCCDs) and ensure that the right referrals are made to the coroner for further investigation. A practising medical practitioner who has been on the general medical council register for a minimum of five years post registration can apply to be a medical examiner. It is recommended that medical examiners are consultant grade doctors from a range of disciplines (including GP principals). MEs will take a consistent approach to the formulation of MCCD content, which must be clinically accurate and reflect any discussions with the next of kin/informant. MEs must not have been involved in the care of the deceased patients for deaths they scrutinise.

Within Buckinghamshire we have a well established Hospital ME service and we are now extending this into the community reviewing all primary care deaths. We are looking to appoint more MEs preferably with a community background to develop this service alongside the medical examiner officers and joining the services currently in place.

Main duties

  • To ensure compliance with the legal and procedural requirements associated with the current and proposed reformed processes of certification, investigation by coroners and registration of deaths.
  • To scrutinise the certified causes of death offered by attending doctors in a way that is proportionate, consistent and compliant with the proposed national protocol.
  • To discuss and explain the cause of death with next of kin/informants in a transparent, tactful and sympathetic manner. It is anticipated that such discussions will be predominately conducted through telephone conversations where barriers to understanding information may exist.
  • To ensure that all users of the ME system are treated with respect and are not discriminated against on the grounds of sex, race, religion, ethnicity, sexual orientation, gender reassignment or disability.
  • To maintain comprehensive records of all deaths scrutinised and undertake analysis to provide information to the National Medical Examiners office.
  • To participate in relevant clinical governance activities relating to death certification including audits, mortality review processes and investigations regarding formal complaints about patient care.
  • To support the training of junior doctors in their understanding of death certification and promote good practice in accurate completion of MCCDs.
  • To work with medical examiner officers (MEOs), delegating duties as appropriate.
  • To engage with lead ME and lead MEO for the region.
  • To adopt a collaborative working relationship with other MEs by sharing experiences and expertise to support peer learning and set uniform standards of service delivery.

Organisational chart

Medical Director Lead Mortality Nurse

Lead Medical examiner Senior MEO

Medical examiners MEOs

Knowledge and skills required for post

Qualifications

Registered with a licence to practice in the UK by the GMC.

As a pre-condition of practicing, an ME must have successfully completed the mandatory components of the national online medical examiner curriculum. Face-to-face training must be completed within the first three months of being in post.

Behavioural attributes

MEs should be aware of how their personal communication style impacts on others and be able to adapt their approach to suit a variety of situations and audiences. This will require:

  • Highly evolved self-awareness and empathetic skills to liaise effectively and sympathetically with bereaved families
  • The ability to demonstrate and combine appropriate levels of compassion with professionalism and discretion
  • Being open to constructive criticism, ideas and solutions
  • Acting as a positive role model and interacting appropriately with all stakeholders including MEOs, other MEs, the bereaved and the coroner
  • Having the integrity to gain trust and comply with the independent nature of the ME role in the context of other clinical specialty duties.

Performance criteria

Communications and key working relationships

To be a source of expert knowledge and advice for health professionals and wider stakeholder groups; these include:

Internal within own organisation:

  • Medical Director
  • All grades of clinicians
  • MEOs
  • Mortuary/undertaker staff.

External:

  • Coroners and their officers
  • Registrar of births and deaths
  • Local Authorities, including care homes and safeguarding teams
  • Spiritual and faith community leaders
  • Other health care providers including GPs
  • Lead MEs and lead MEOs
  • National Medical Examiner.

Knowledge

MEs must have up-to-date knowledge of medical conditions and treatments and be able to exercise judgement about when to seek specialist advice.

MEs must have detailed knowledge of the relevant legislation and processes which apply to:

  • The determination of whether a death is natural or unnatural
  • Deaths that must be reported to the coroner
  • Deaths abroad where bodies are returned to England and Wales for disposal
  • Deaths where relatives wish to transport the body abroad for disposal
  • Certifying and registering deaths and the regulations to authorise cremation or burials of stillbirths abroad.

Accountability

MEs will have professional independence in scrutinising deaths but will be accountable to the employing organisations Board for achieving agreed standards or levels of performance.

MEs will have an independent professional line of accountability to a regional structure of NHS Improvement/NHS England outside the employing organisation and immediate line management structure.

MEs will comply with guidance issued by the National Medical Examiner when carrying out ME duties.

Safety and Quality Clinical Governance

MEs will be required to participate in any relevant governance activities relating to scrutiny and confirmation of the cause of death where concerns have been raised by the next of kin/informant of the deceased and/or clinical staff and ME scrutiny.

MEs will facilitate routine analysis of MCCD information to identify trends, patterns and unusual features of deaths and report, as required, firstly to the regional Lead ME and ultimately to the National Medical Examiners office.

MEs will provide information to local Child Death Overview panels in respect of all child deaths which are not being investigated by the coroner.

Maintaining Trust

Equality and Diversity

MEs will act in accordance with Equalities and Human Rights legislation and the organisations Equality and Diversity policies.

Independence

MEs must avoid any potential conflicts of interest. In cases where they have a personal or professional relationship with the deceased person, next of kin/informant, or with the attending doctor preparing the MCCD, they must transfer any scrutiny of the death to another ME.

Continuing professional development

MEs are expected to take responsibility for their own continuing professional development in accordance with any standards for maintaining a GMC licence to practice and membership of any relevant professional body. The ME role should be included in the whole practice appraisal.

MEs should maintain a Personal Development Plan in agreement with their appraiser.

There will be opportunities to attend local and national activities to maintain up to date knowledge.

Working Conditions:

MEs may need to use a computer for prolonged periods of time. The ME system operates within a reactive area of service delivery interacting with people in variable degrees of distress and demonstrating potentially irrational/unpredictable behaviour.

Job description

Job responsibilities

Medical Examiner (Community), Buckinghamshire Healthcare Trust

Job Title: Medical Examiner (Community)

Remuneration: 1PA per week

Responsible to: Lead Medical Examiner within the Trust and then Lead Medical Examiner for the region

Reports to: Medical Director BHT

Context

This post has been created by the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) in response to observations made in the Third Report of the Shipman Inquiry. The introduction of the medical examiner system promotes robust, transparent and independent scrutiny of death certification processes.

Dimensions of role

Medical examiners (MEs) are appropriately trained doctors who verify clinical information on Medical Certificates of Cause of Death (MCCDs) and ensure that the right referrals are made to the coroner for further investigation. A practising medical practitioner who has been on the general medical council register for a minimum of five years post registration can apply to be a medical examiner. It is recommended that medical examiners are consultant grade doctors from a range of disciplines (including GP principals). MEs will take a consistent approach to the formulation of MCCD content, which must be clinically accurate and reflect any discussions with the next of kin/informant. MEs must not have been involved in the care of the deceased patients for deaths they scrutinise.

Within Buckinghamshire we have a well established Hospital ME service and we are now extending this into the community reviewing all primary care deaths. We are looking to appoint more MEs preferably with a community background to develop this service alongside the medical examiner officers and joining the services currently in place.

Main duties

  • To ensure compliance with the legal and procedural requirements associated with the current and proposed reformed processes of certification, investigation by coroners and registration of deaths.
  • To scrutinise the certified causes of death offered by attending doctors in a way that is proportionate, consistent and compliant with the proposed national protocol.
  • To discuss and explain the cause of death with next of kin/informants in a transparent, tactful and sympathetic manner. It is anticipated that such discussions will be predominately conducted through telephone conversations where barriers to understanding information may exist.
  • To ensure that all users of the ME system are treated with respect and are not discriminated against on the grounds of sex, race, religion, ethnicity, sexual orientation, gender reassignment or disability.
  • To maintain comprehensive records of all deaths scrutinised and undertake analysis to provide information to the National Medical Examiners office.
  • To participate in relevant clinical governance activities relating to death certification including audits, mortality review processes and investigations regarding formal complaints about patient care.
  • To support the training of junior doctors in their understanding of death certification and promote good practice in accurate completion of MCCDs.
  • To work with medical examiner officers (MEOs), delegating duties as appropriate.
  • To engage with lead ME and lead MEO for the region.
  • To adopt a collaborative working relationship with other MEs by sharing experiences and expertise to support peer learning and set uniform standards of service delivery.

Organisational chart

Medical Director Lead Mortality Nurse

Lead Medical examiner Senior MEO

Medical examiners MEOs

Knowledge and skills required for post

Qualifications

Registered with a licence to practice in the UK by the GMC.

As a pre-condition of practicing, an ME must have successfully completed the mandatory components of the national online medical examiner curriculum. Face-to-face training must be completed within the first three months of being in post.

Behavioural attributes

MEs should be aware of how their personal communication style impacts on others and be able to adapt their approach to suit a variety of situations and audiences. This will require:

  • Highly evolved self-awareness and empathetic skills to liaise effectively and sympathetically with bereaved families
  • The ability to demonstrate and combine appropriate levels of compassion with professionalism and discretion
  • Being open to constructive criticism, ideas and solutions
  • Acting as a positive role model and interacting appropriately with all stakeholders including MEOs, other MEs, the bereaved and the coroner
  • Having the integrity to gain trust and comply with the independent nature of the ME role in the context of other clinical specialty duties.

Performance criteria

Communications and key working relationships

To be a source of expert knowledge and advice for health professionals and wider stakeholder groups; these include:

Internal within own organisation:

  • Medical Director
  • All grades of clinicians
  • MEOs
  • Mortuary/undertaker staff.

External:

  • Coroners and their officers
  • Registrar of births and deaths
  • Local Authorities, including care homes and safeguarding teams
  • Spiritual and faith community leaders
  • Other health care providers including GPs
  • Lead MEs and lead MEOs
  • National Medical Examiner.

Knowledge

MEs must have up-to-date knowledge of medical conditions and treatments and be able to exercise judgement about when to seek specialist advice.

MEs must have detailed knowledge of the relevant legislation and processes which apply to:

  • The determination of whether a death is natural or unnatural
  • Deaths that must be reported to the coroner
  • Deaths abroad where bodies are returned to England and Wales for disposal
  • Deaths where relatives wish to transport the body abroad for disposal
  • Certifying and registering deaths and the regulations to authorise cremation or burials of stillbirths abroad.

Accountability

MEs will have professional independence in scrutinising deaths but will be accountable to the employing organisations Board for achieving agreed standards or levels of performance.

MEs will have an independent professional line of accountability to a regional structure of NHS Improvement/NHS England outside the employing organisation and immediate line management structure.

MEs will comply with guidance issued by the National Medical Examiner when carrying out ME duties.

Safety and Quality Clinical Governance

MEs will be required to participate in any relevant governance activities relating to scrutiny and confirmation of the cause of death where concerns have been raised by the next of kin/informant of the deceased and/or clinical staff and ME scrutiny.

MEs will facilitate routine analysis of MCCD information to identify trends, patterns and unusual features of deaths and report, as required, firstly to the regional Lead ME and ultimately to the National Medical Examiners office.

MEs will provide information to local Child Death Overview panels in respect of all child deaths which are not being investigated by the coroner.

Maintaining Trust

Equality and Diversity

MEs will act in accordance with Equalities and Human Rights legislation and the organisations Equality and Diversity policies.

Independence

MEs must avoid any potential conflicts of interest. In cases where they have a personal or professional relationship with the deceased person, next of kin/informant, or with the attending doctor preparing the MCCD, they must transfer any scrutiny of the death to another ME.

Continuing professional development

MEs are expected to take responsibility for their own continuing professional development in accordance with any standards for maintaining a GMC licence to practice and membership of any relevant professional body. The ME role should be included in the whole practice appraisal.

MEs should maintain a Personal Development Plan in agreement with their appraiser.

There will be opportunities to attend local and national activities to maintain up to date knowledge.

Working Conditions:

MEs may need to use a computer for prolonged periods of time. The ME system operates within a reactive area of service delivery interacting with people in variable degrees of distress and demonstrating potentially irrational/unpredictable behaviour.

Person Specification

Knowledge, Skills and Performance

Essential

  • Medical practitioner registered and licensed to practise in the UK by the GMC.
  • Candidates must have successfully completed the mandatory e-learning modules by the time they start the role. Candidates must attend a face-to-face training session within the first three months in post.
  • MEs should have up-to-date knowledge of causes of death and an understanding of the legal frameworks associated with death certification processes.
  • IT skills including use of email and commonly used software.
  • Knowledge of the special requirements of various faith groups and respect for equality and diversity

Safety and Quality - Clinical Governance

Essential

  • Knowledge of local and national clinical governance systems and an understanding of how the ME can work collaboratively to improve patient safety by identifying sub-optimal clinical and organisational performance.
Person Specification

Knowledge, Skills and Performance

Essential

  • Medical practitioner registered and licensed to practise in the UK by the GMC.
  • Candidates must have successfully completed the mandatory e-learning modules by the time they start the role. Candidates must attend a face-to-face training session within the first three months in post.
  • MEs should have up-to-date knowledge of causes of death and an understanding of the legal frameworks associated with death certification processes.
  • IT skills including use of email and commonly used software.
  • Knowledge of the special requirements of various faith groups and respect for equality and diversity

Safety and Quality - Clinical Governance

Essential

  • Knowledge of local and national clinical governance systems and an understanding of how the ME can work collaboratively to improve patient safety by identifying sub-optimal clinical and organisational performance.

Disclosure and Barring Service Check

This post is subject to the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act (Exceptions Order) 1975 and as such it will be necessary for a submission for Disclosure to be made to the Disclosure and Barring Service (formerly known as CRB) to check for any previous criminal convictions.

Certificate of Sponsorship

Applications from job seekers who require current Skilled worker sponsorship to work in the UK are welcome and will be considered alongside all other applications. For further information visit the UK Visas and Immigration website (Opens in a new tab).

From 6 April 2017, skilled worker applicants, applying for entry clearance into the UK, have had to present a criminal record certificate from each country they have resided continuously or cumulatively for 12 months or more in the past 10 years. Adult dependants (over 18 years old) are also subject to this requirement. Guidance can be found here Criminal records checks for overseas applicants (Opens in a new tab).

UK Registration

Applicants must have current UK professional registration. For further information please see NHS Careers website (opens in a new window).

Additional information

Disclosure and Barring Service Check

This post is subject to the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act (Exceptions Order) 1975 and as such it will be necessary for a submission for Disclosure to be made to the Disclosure and Barring Service (formerly known as CRB) to check for any previous criminal convictions.

Certificate of Sponsorship

Applications from job seekers who require current Skilled worker sponsorship to work in the UK are welcome and will be considered alongside all other applications. For further information visit the UK Visas and Immigration website (Opens in a new tab).

From 6 April 2017, skilled worker applicants, applying for entry clearance into the UK, have had to present a criminal record certificate from each country they have resided continuously or cumulatively for 12 months or more in the past 10 years. Adult dependants (over 18 years old) are also subject to this requirement. Guidance can be found here Criminal records checks for overseas applicants (Opens in a new tab).

UK Registration

Applicants must have current UK professional registration. For further information please see NHS Careers website (opens in a new window).

Employer details

Employer name

Buckinghamshire Healthcare NHS Trust

Address

Stoke Mandeville hospital

Mandeville Road

Aylesbury

HP22 8AL


Employer's website

https://careers.buckshealthcare.nhs.uk/ (Opens in a new tab)


Employer details

Employer name

Buckinghamshire Healthcare NHS Trust

Address

Stoke Mandeville hospital

Mandeville Road

Aylesbury

HP22 8AL


Employer's website

https://careers.buckshealthcare.nhs.uk/ (Opens in a new tab)


Employer contact details

For questions about the job, contact:

Lead Medical Examiner

Helen Pegrum

helen.pegrum@nhs.net

01296332600

Details

Date posted

18 February 2022

Pay scheme

Hospital medical and dental staff

Grade

Doctor - other

Salary

Depending on experience pro rata

Contract

Permanent

Working pattern

Part-time

Reference number

434-MFOP-CME

Job locations

Stoke Mandeville hospital

Mandeville Road

Aylesbury

HP22 8AL


Supporting documents

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