RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 UK endoscopy trainees provide a significant quantity of service delivery JF Gut JO Gut FD BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and British Society of Gastroenterology SP A120 OP A120 DO 10.1136/gut.2011.239301.254 VO 60 IS Suppl 1 A1 L P Griffiths, * A1 K Dowler A1 R Valori A1 P Dunckley YR 2011 UL http://gut.bmj.com/content/60/Suppl_1/A120.1.abstract AB Introduction In September 2009, the JAG Endoscopy Training System (JETS) e-portfolio was launched. Since its release, over 75% of UK trusts have set the system up and over 70 000 procedures logged by trainees. Within the JETS e-portfolio, trainees record their data under pre-defined lists. These are dedicated service lists (reduced points and/or tailored case mix), ad-hoc training lists (training occurring on a standard service list) or service lists. With the European Working Time Directive, trainees have less opportunity for endoscopy training. Furthermore, in a cash-strapped NHS, training may become a low priority over service delivery. We studied the proportion of endoscopies performed on each of the list types by trainees to assess when trainees start to provide service lists within the NHS. Methods All endoscopy data from the JETS e-portfolio from September 2009 to 30 October 2010 were analysed. Results There were 70 499 procedures from 16 433 procedure lists. All non-trainee roles were then excluded, leaving 60 124 endoscopies performed by trainees, and of these, 22 358 (37%) were on service lists. 34 186 endoscopies were performed by registrar-level doctors and 9726 (28%) of these were on service lists. Of these, gastroenterology registrars did 29 876, of which 8686 on service lists (29%) and GI surgical registrars did 4310, of which 1040 were on service lists (24%) (Figure 1). The remaining 25 938 endoscopies, of which 12 632 were service (47%), were performed by others such as associate specialists and nurse endoscopists. Figure 1 PTU-126 100% stacked column of registrar-level endoscopy procedure type expressed proportionally, split by year of training and specialty, with total endoscopy numbers below. Conclusion UK trainee endoscopists contribute towards a large volume of service provision; in fact by year 5, gastroenterology registrars perform the majority of their endoscopies on service lists. This data shows that hospital trusts should prioritise endoscopy training. High quality training will result in competent, experienced, independent trainee endoscopists who can support the service of the trust in which they work and gain further valuable experience.