Dr Peter Khin Tun, MBBS (1981)
MRCP
(UK, London, 1997)
SAS Tutor & Associate Specialist in
Neuro-Rehabilitation Medicine.
I graduated from the Institute of Medicine (1) in Rangoon,
Burma.
I started working as a Research Medical Officer in the WHO
sponsored, “Risk Approach in the Delivery of Maternal & Child
Health Care Project” for three years, and for nine years as a
General Practitioner in Burma.
My UK experience includes three years of Acute Medical SHO
training in Yorkshire, and almost 14 years in neurological
rehabilitation medicine (a year as a locum specialist registrar at
the Northwick Park Hospital in London, 5.5 years as a staff grade
and seven years as an Associate Specialist, at the Royal
Berkshire Hospital).
I am also a BMA Local Negotiating Committee Representative, and
a Principal Investigator in the Multicentre CLOTS Study.
I was appointed as an SAS Tutor in December 2009.
Role
My role is to facilitate continued medical education (CME) &
professional development (CPD) of the SAS doctors working at the
Royal Berkshire Hospital NHS Foundation Trust.
CME & CPD include:
- specialty courses
- top up training
- mentoring schemes
- starting a professional portfolio
- annual appraisal & job plan
- revalidation & relicensing
- application to GMC for Certificate of Eligibility for
Specialist Registration (CESR)
- up keeping Good Medical Practice, participating in Audit &
Research, innovation and learning other management, teaching &
supplementary skills.
My contact e-mail is Peter.Tun@royalberkshire.nhs.uk
and telephone number is 0118 322 6731; secretary 0118 322 6857.
I am available at the RBH Trust Education Centre Office on
Fridays between 3pm-4pm, by appointment.
I wish all 20,000 SAS doctors, fundamental to the provision of
care in UK health services, to get full job
satisfaction, equal access to demonstrate their
qualifications, experiences and training, to be recognised by the
Academy of Medical Royal Colleges, PMETB & GMC, and to achieve
eligibility for specialist registration, thus opening
opportunities to contribute more in the NHS.