The College’s online Masters in Surgical Sciences is enjoying record student numbers and has a growing international reach
The Edinburgh Surgical Sciences Qualification (ESSQ) programme delivered its first group of Masters Graduates in July 2010 and, since its launch three years earlier, has consistently demonstrated that the format meets with strong approval from enrolled surgical trainees.
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The College has hosted its first ever facial aesthetic dissection course designed to provide multidisciplinary training
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Roger Currie looks at the College’s growing Regional Surgical Adviser programme
The Regional Surgical Adviser (RSA) programme is continuing to expand and be a voice for the College, representing Fellows and Members in Scotland, England, Wales and Northern Ireland. At present we have 36 RSAs throughout the UK, covering all surgical specialties with the exception of neurosurgery.
I am hopeful that by the Council meeting in May we will have reached 40, with all the SAC-recognised specialties represented. We are fortunate to have a diverse range of talent and experience within the RSA group, which includes a Postgraduate Dean and a number of Training programme and Foundation directors as well as many senior examiners.
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01 January 2011 |
The College has awarded a Fellowship ad hominem to Dr James Peter Robson, head doctor of the Scottish Rugby Union
Dr James Robson qualified as a physiotherapist at Queen Margaret College in Edinburgh and gained his medical degree from Dundee. From 1983, he was the North and Midlands rugby teams physiotherapist, a post he held throughout his medical training. He subsequently became the team doctor until 1991.
After qualification and house jobs he trained as a general practitioner. He became a member of the Royal College of General Practitioners and became a principal at Dundee’s Westgate Health Centre in 1992.
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A collaboration with Edinburgh University is combining state-of-the-art educational technologies with practical skills in the teaching of anatomy
The development of medicine has gone hand-in-hand with advances in the ways in which anatomy is taught. The application of modern imaging techniques requires that anatomy is viewed quite literally from new perspectives. Linking the application of anatomy to diagnosis and treatment demands that we prioritise not only how much we learn but also how we learn, to take advantage of modern technology.
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01 January 2011 |
The College’s new Director of Development and Appeals, Stuart Armstrong
It was in October last year that I noticed the advertisement for a fundraiser for the College. I thought that was a job ‘just up my street’. I’ve worked in heritage fundraising for Donaldson’s College, Falkland Palace, St Giles Cathedral and Rosslyn. I’ve also worked for membership organisations as fundraiser at the Royal Society of Edinburgh and as consultant to the Royal Society in London.
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01 January 2011 |
New Council member Graham Layer on his career background
I am a breast surgeon at Guildford, Surrey, and, interestingly, one of my predecessors was the late Professor Paddy Boulter, Past College President. I was honoured to be a Quincentenary Fellow and delivered the McKeown Lecture in 2010 and have had many other dealings with the College over the years in various roles including as an examiner.
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