RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 General practitioners' attendance at courses accredited for the postgraduate education allowance. JF British Journal of General Practice JO Br J Gen Pract FD British Journal of General Practice SP 290 OP 293 VO 42 IS 360 A1 F Difford A1 R C Hughes YR 1992 UL http://bjgp.org/content/42/360/290.abstract AB An analysis was undertaken in the northern half of the South Western Regional Health Authority of general practitioners' attendance at courses accredited for the postgraduate educational allowance over one year. A total of 358 courses provided 2341 hours of accredited education and produced a total general practitioner attendance of 50,389 hours. The mean attendance per principal in the area was 49.2 hours although the region may be a net importer of attenders from outside the area. Of the 50,389 total hours of attendance, 28.3% were in health promotion, 48.2% in disease management and 23.5% in service management. Course provision and attendance varied considerably over the year. September, October and November accounted for 42.7% of the total hours of attendance, compared with 6.8% in June, July and August. Courses of two to four days or of one week duration accounted for 48.3% of total attendance hours; 10.1% of total attendance hours were at commercially organized courses and 5.6% at courses organized by practices. A total of 66.1% of attendance hours were in postgraduate centres and 6.8% in the practice. Courses with more than 30 participants accounted for 15.9% of courses attended. A total of 174 general practitioners and others organized courses, 21 of them influencing 33,521 hours of general practitioner education. The study shows that in this area, there was an encouraging provision, range and uptake of continuing education courses for general practitioners. The concentration of educational activities in postgraduate centres underlines the need for increased provision for developing educational skills for clinical tutors.