The programme offers a number of professional development courses and educational resources in the areas of teaching and learning in the workplace; assessment and feedback; and educational supervision and appraisal. Courses are held throughout the year and in the form of one or two day workshops. All of the courses are taught by practising anaesthetists.
A series of talks and panel discussion exploring the experiences of Black anaesthetists at the Royal College of Anaesthetists' Anaesthetic Updates events in London, February 2024.
The International Academy of Colleges of Anaesthesiology (IACA) is pleased to present its end of year webinar, “Putting doctors health and wellbeing into practice”.
The Anaesthetists in Training Representative Group (ATRG) was formed in July 2014 and consists of one trainee representative from each School of Anaesthesia along with co-opted members from the Faculties of Intensive Care Medicine and Pain Medicine.
Anaesthesia is the largest single hospital specialty in the NHS. The RCoA is the professional body responsible for the specialty throughout the UK, and it ensures the quality of patient care through the maintenance of standards in anaesthesia, critical care and pain medicine.
This webinar will move from low carbon anaesthetic techniques and carbon calculators through QI recipes and building networks to the impact of global supply chains and COP26 in Glasgow next year.
The Fellowship of the Royal College of Anaesthetists (FRCA) examination tests the knowledge, skills, behaviours and attitudes required by anaesthetists in training.
In this podcast Dr Soumen Sen, KSS Education Fellow, interviews Dr Chris Carey, RCoA Council Member to discuss how COVID-19 may affect your training, from what is happening with recruitment, ARCPs, an update on exams and the new curriculum.