Their work will be overseen and regulated by the General Medical Council. To date UK medical schools have set their final exams independently in line with the GMC’s Outcomes for graduates. The major benefit of the MLA is that it will, for the first time, be possible to demonstrate that graduates from each medical school have met an agreed standard of proficiency and are well prepared to practise medicine as Foundation Year doctors.
The MLA will provide assurance that anyone who obtains a UK medical degree has shown that they can meet a common and consistent threshold for safe practice before they are licensed to work in the UK. The agreement means that the GMC will:
Under this agreement UK university medical schools will continue to develop and deliver their own curricula and prepare students for the MLA which will be regulated by the GMC. The exam will consist of two parts – an applied knowledge test (AKT), and a clinical and professional skills assessment (CPSA).
The exam will consist of two parts – an applied knowledge test (AKT), and a clinical and professional skills assessment (CPSA). Under this approach the UK’s medical schools will work together to:
All of the UK’s medical schools and their parent universities have agreed that the assessment will be built on the MLA content map published by the GMC in 2019, and based on Good medical practice, Outcomes for graduates and the Generic professional capabilities framework.
A process of phased introduction will begin from 2021 with robust testing and piloting, and the assessment will be fully implemented for students graduating from UK medical schools from the academic year 2024/25.