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Welcome to our GPVTS website. If you are a GP Registrar on the scheme already, this is the place to come for the latest information about the course, social events and other activities. If you are thinking of joining us, have a look around and then apply - you know it makes sense!
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© Dr Dan Horton-Szar, April 2003. All rights reserved.
 
 • Canterbury VTS Registrar of the Year Dinner
Last night we held our annual VTS Awards dinner at Read's . The event takes place in honour of Mrs Kwan Chan, one of Peter Livesey's patients who generously bequeathed a fund to award an annual prize to the 'Registrar of the Year' - as voted for by all the other registrars on the Canterbury scheme. It was attended by trainers, GP trainees and medical students


Peter, Kim and new Course Organiser Alan spruced up quite nicely!


As did the boys...


And the girls!


Our current Psychiatry SHOs, Suzanne, Toyin and Bill

And our Friday night drinking regulars!


Peter made a great speech after dinner before awarding the prizes


The winners: 1st place Jenny Chodera, 2nd Bill Crawley and joint 3rd Stephen Hodgson and Jhumur Datta.
Merry Christmas to all!

Posted Thursday, December 09, 2004 by Jhumur
 • New Contract
This is the copy of the presentation about new contract by Dr Joy

You need powerpoint for this link New Contract introduction
If you don't have powerpoint then follow this link New Contract intro

Posted Thursday, December 09, 2004 by Siva
 • Evaluation
This is the Summary of the evaluation of Winter Term.
You need powerpoint for this link Evaluation

If you don't have powerpoint then follow the link
Evaluation

Posted Wednesday, December 08, 2004 by Siva
 • From The Eastern Deanery
http://www.pdptoolkit.co.uk/

Posted Sunday, December 05, 2004 by Siva
 • The Resourceful Patient
try visit and see if you are interested The Resourceful Patient

"The shifting balance of power "

Doctors were not always powerful. In the 19th century their social status was low, lower than that of the clergy or the legal profession. They were, of course, able to have a reasonable social status, but only if they were well connected, as was Mr Lydgate, the surgeon in George Eliot's Middlemarch, who was 'one of the Lydgates of Northumberland, really well connected', although, as Lady Chettam pointed out, 'one does not expect it in a practitioner of that kind. For my own part I like a medical man more on the footing of a servant, they are often all the cleverer'. Middlemarch (now available in its entirety online, thanks to the wonderful Project Gutenberg) was published in 1871, and describes perhaps better than any other book the ambivalent, but rising, status of the doctor in Britain during its first phase of modernisation"

Posted Sunday, December 05, 2004 by Siva