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British Journal of General Practice

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Research Article

Working out of hours: the experiences and training needs of general practitioner registrars.

S Longhurst, C Shipman and J Dale
British Journal of General Practice 1998; 48 (430): 1247-1248.
S Longhurst
Department of General Practice and Primary Care, King's College School of Medicine and Dentistry, London.
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C Shipman
Department of General Practice and Primary Care, King's College School of Medicine and Dentistry, London.
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J Dale
Department of General Practice and Primary Care, King's College School of Medicine and Dentistry, London.
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Abstract

Out-of-hours work has been identified as a major concern for registrars, and as contributing to the steady decline both in the number of applicants to vocational training schemes and in those practising as principals on completion of their training. Until now, little has been known about registrars' views about their experience of working out of hours and how this might be improved. The present study describes general practitioner (GP) registrars' current patterns of out-of-hours working and their perceptions about training needs.

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British Journal of General Practice: 48 (430)
British Journal of General Practice
Vol. 48, Issue 430
May 1998
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Working out of hours: the experiences and training needs of general practitioner registrars.
S Longhurst, C Shipman, J Dale
British Journal of General Practice 1998; 48 (430): 1247-1248.

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Working out of hours: the experiences and training needs of general practitioner registrars.
S Longhurst, C Shipman, J Dale
British Journal of General Practice 1998; 48 (430): 1247-1248.
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