In the third instalment of this blog, I cover the area of CV preparation, writing and presentation. For the historical diversion, I've included references to two key figures from the history of psychiatry, with widely differing views on certain things.
The curriculum vitae (CV) is, in theory at least, the ultimate record of all the history and development of your career to date. It can be thought of as a detailed passport or medical autobiography. While every doctor has had high points and low points in their medical career, your CV should paint you in the best possible light and should be the most positive and coherent representation of where you've come from, where you're at right now and where you plan to be in the immediate and longer term future. Your CV should also demonstrate how there has always been a seamless transition from one stage of your career to the next and an overarching grand plan (even if you were never consciously aware of such a grand plan until you sat down to write your CV).
Your CV should be
comprehensive but focused and well written, with an easy to follow
layout, structure, style and flow from beginning to end. It should take the
reader on an interesting journey, providing a coherent story of your origins
and how you got to where you are right now. There should be a logical and
coherent narrative that demonstrates your progress through the various steps of
your medical career to date.
While there are 15 sections
outlined below, I tend to think of the five main pillars in a medical career as
follows: clinical experience; teaching experience; research and audit;
management and leadership experience; formal qualifications.
Your CV should be kept in an
easily accessible electronic file and it should be updated frequently, ideally
every month. This means that your CV is a live and detailed document and it can
be shared at short notice if required with colleagues or potential new
employers. Leaving a CV untouched for even a year leads to a stale document
that lacks updated information and provides only a snapshot of your career from
a previous perspective. A useful way to motivate yourself to keep your CV updated is to imagine that you will have an interview for a dream job in a week or two and you have to have your CV ready in advance.
I would advise
that you start your CV as early as possible in the very first post of your
career and keep it as a live document that you are constantly updating. You
should set aside some time every month at least to update your CV. Ideally,
whenever you have done something noteworthy e.g. set up a new clinical
initiative, presented a poster, given a lecture or completed an audit, you
should input that information into your CV. When reviewing your CV, a key
question to ask yourself is whether you think your CV would be ready in its
current state to be shared with a senior colleague or a potential employer. If
the CV is not ready for this, then you need to work more on updating the
content, editing and improving the format.
For those who don't have
English as their first language, it's always useful to get editing help from a
colleague who does speak English as their first language. Native English
speakers will use current and recognizable idioms and will pick up on any
linguistic or grammatical errors. Regarding the language style, it is advisable
to use ‘I’ as far as possible, and to paint a picture of you taking control and
initiative and driving various projects and phases of your career.
It's also useful to have
both a ‘long’ and ‘short’ version of the CV. The long version contains all
necessary detail and may run to 20 or 30 pages. The short version is a 2-3 page
summary with the key points only. The short version may be required in certain
situations such as applications for research grants and it may also be useful
when e.g. asked to provide a brief biography for a conference programme at
which you are presenting.
It’s also very useful to
look at the CVs of senior colleagues to get an idea as to how they have
progressed through the ranks of medical training and reached their current
positions. It’s possible to do simple google searches and obtain the CVs or at
least the list of research publications of nationally and internationally
renowned Psychiatrists and these should also act as useful guides as you set
out on your career with a blank CV.
And now a brief historical diversion:
And now a brief historical diversion:
Sigmund Freud (1856-1939) founder of psychoanalysis and someone whose CV may have looked somewhat haphazard, as he started off working in the area of neuropathology
The structure of your CV can
be outlined as follows:
1.
Title page.
This should contain the
‘Curriculum Vitae’ heading with your name, qualifications, personal
circumstances and contact details below.
2.
Contents
This is a table with a list
of the key headings under which the CV is structured. Software packages such as
Microsoft Word have a facility for automatically updating this contents list in
a table form as the document is changed over time.
3.
Opening statement
This should be a 2-3
sentence statement outlining briefly your current career position, how you
arrived at this point and your immediate and longer term plans for your future
career. While this is an aspirational statement, try not to be too ‘Miss World’
in your ambitions, i.e. you may plan to develop mental health services in your
region of Ireland and do some clinical research but you're unlikely to be able
to deal with world poverty, hunger and nuclear disarmament.
4.
Current appointment
This is a brief description
of your current post, including your clinical role and responsibilities and
relevant key points relating to teaching, research, audit, management,
leadership initiatives and current examinations or postgraduate studies in which
you are engaged.
5.
Previous appointments
From your current position,
work backwards, listing your previous posts to date. As with point 4 above,
give only brief and focused descriptions of your clinical role and
responsibilities and relevant key points relating to teaching, research, audit,
management, leadership initiatives and examinations or postgraduate studies.
There should be a clear and logical connection between the posts, even if some
of your career moves have been completely random and unplanned. If there was a
seeming ‘knight’s move’ change in your career (e.g. moving from Cardiothoracic
Surgery to Child Psychiatry) then it may be best to address this in the CV and
highlight what you learned and brought from a previous phase of your career to
where you're at now.
Any gaps in your CV should
also be addressed and explained as potential interviewers will latch on to such
gaps in an effort to ensure you haven't taken time out to e.g. serve a jail
sentence or work as a drug dealer.
6.
Clinical experience (this will be covered in more detail in the next blog)
This section provides a
summary and overview of your experience in the clinical posts listed in
sections 4 and 5 above. You should attempt to summarize the main areas of
clinical experience, listing the specialty areas and clinical contexts in which
you have worked. Again, there should be a logical flow to this section, taking
the reader from your earliest clinical experience through subsequent posts in a
seamless fashion that illustrates an overarching plan and constant progress towards
an ultimate goal. For each post, try and emphasize how you took on leadership
roles in developing clinical services and improving patient care, along with
some key learning and personal development points. You should avoid getting too
bogged down in detail for this section. For example, there is no need to
include the number of new and return patient clinics or the frequency of your
on-call duties for every post from Internship onwards.
7.
Research (this will also be covered in more detail in a later blog)
My own anecdotal and
completely unscientific research suggests that the most common phrase uttered
by NCHDs when it comes to this part of the CV is ‘I have done NO research’.
Therefore, for most people, this is the section of the CV that causes the most
anxiety. Trainees often believe that a gap or relative gap in this section is a
major weakness that must be addressed as a priority, with a hurried effort to
‘get some research done’.
However, while some
experience of clinical research is helpful for overall career development, it
has been my experience that research achievements rank low down in the priority
list for interviewers for standard Consultant posts, although there will
obviously be much more emphasis on your research record if you are applying for
a senior academic post.
For any research in which
you have been involved, make sure to emphasize the ultimate outputs and
remember the maxim ‘no research without action; no action without research’.
Outputs should include academic products such as posters, oral presentations,
papers, grant applications and grant awards. You should be able to highlight
the clinical relevance of your research and how it has helped to improve
patient care and clinical services. Finally, you should describe briefly how
your research may have helped in the development of your clinical skills and
everyday practice. For example, you may have used diagnostic tools or
questionnaires in your data collection that have proven useful in your clinical
practice.
8.
Audit
Whether you are a CPsychI
Trainee, on a PDP-SS or working at Consultant level, there is an expectation
that you perform regular clinical audits, generally on a yearly basis. I would
advise that you keep the scope of these audits at a manageable level and within
a clearly defined timetable. Ideally, your audits should be based on your
everyday clinical work, to ensure that the work is clinically relevant to your
practice and to reduce the amount of duplication involved in doing clinical
work and then auditing your work separately. The quality of your audit should
also be presentable as a poster or oral presentation at an academic meeting and
presenting your findings at meetings is a good way of making the most of what
is often a tedious and dreary process. Furthermore, the more audit findings you
present, the better your chances of beefing up section 9 and 13 (see below) of
your CV.
9.
Publications
Any publications should be
listed here, with the full details of authors and your name highlighted in
bold, the article title and journal details. If you have a long list of
publications, then they can be grouped into publications in peer reviewed
journals and publications in non-peer reviewed journals or maybe grouped into
different research themes and projects in which you've been involved. Poster
and oral presentations can also be included here as separate sections,
especially if they have been published as abstracts in the programme of the
relevant conference.
10. Teaching
If you have held a formal
teaching role with undergraduate medical students, then emphasize here your key
roles and responsibilities and how the experience has helped with your overall
career development, e.g. helping your communication skills and helping you keep
abreast of new developments in Psychiatry. Even if you haven't held a formal
teaching role, it's likely that you will have had at least some contact with
medical students and students from other disciplines on clinical attachments or
in delivering occasional lectures and tutorials. Again, emphasize this
experience and how it has helped your development as a Psychiatrist, in terms
of communication skills and in discussing and explaining issues to colleagues
from other disciplines and even in your dealings with patients and their
families.
11. Management
and leadership
Experience of management and
leadership begins from the earliest days of your career. From your early years
as a Trainee you can highlight any work you may have taken on as e.g. NCHD Representative
for your group and how in that role you were able to improve working conditions
for your colleagues, leading ultimately to better standards of care for
patients. You may have had the (unenviable)
task of drawing up the NCHD on-call rota. This particular
role frequently leads to clashes and difficulties. You can briefly highlight
how you dealt with such challenges (and how there was always a positive outcome
that reflected well on you and from which you were able to learn and develop,
even if this was not always exactly the case).
Management and leadership
skills become more important as you progress through your career, especially at
HST and Consultant level. Any key developments and initiatives that you have
led out or been involved in should be listed, including details on how they
impacted positively on patient care and how such experiences made you a better
clinician, manager and leader in the long term. For example, you may have
reduced waiting lists for new patient assessments at your service. You can
describe briefly how you delivered this change, the positive impacts for
patient care, how it helped your professional development and, ideally, how
your initiative can be extended to other healthcare settings and your future
roles.
12. Qualifications
This section should involve
a list in reverse chronological order of your formal qualifications, back to
your primary medical or other degrees. You may include a sentence or two on the
importance of each qualification and how it helped you progress from one stage
of your career to the next.
13. Prizes
I have a few key points to
make about prizes. Firstly, it's likely that some prizes in Psychiatry go
unclaimed due to a lack of interest. While poster and oral presentation prizes
at conferences are well subscribed and competitive, there are a number of essay
prizes run by the CPsychI and RCPsych that have few submissions. Therefore, I
would advise that you familiarize yourself with what's on offer and make
submissions, as you may be the only entrant. Secondly, if you do win a prize,
make sure to emphasize it and provide a description of what it entailed and how
it has helped your career development.
14. Other
information
Include here any interesting
and/or unique personal interests, skills or achievements, even if they don’t
seem extraordinary to you, e.g. the number of languages you can speak fluently,
interests in the arts and humanities (always relevant to Psychiatry and of
interest to Psychiatrist interviewers) and activities that demonstrate perseverance,
conscientiousness and healthy living (e.g. long distance running, mountain
climbing, etc.). Try and avoid using the clichéd ones such as ‘travel’ and
‘reading’.
15. Referees
Consider including
references from different phases of your career and from different countries if
you have had international experience. It's also worth considering asking for
references from individuals who are not working in the medical profession, e.g.
allied healthcare professionals in organizations with which you've had indirect
contact as a result of any initiatives you may have developed. For example, I
have done some voluntary and fundraising work with the Alzheimer's Society of
Ireland and I have included one of their officers as a referee in my CV. Most
importantly, make sure to first ask your referees if they would like to be
included in your CV. This gives a potential referee the option of politely
refusing, which may be a better outcome for you than receiving a lukewarm or
negative reference. Furthermore, being asked by an employing authority to
provide a reference for someone who has not already asked you directly
themselves can be irritating and again lead to a less than effusive
reference.
And finally, a more recent historical figure:
So that's the CV done.
For next week's blog, I will be covering the area of clinical experience.
And finally, a more recent historical figure:
Anthony Clare (1942-2007), Psychiatrist, writer, broadcaster. In contrast to the gentleman pictured at the start of this blog entry, Professor Clare famously referred to psychoanalysis as 'the most stupendous confidence trick of the century'.
So that's the CV done.
For next week's blog, I will be covering the area of clinical experience.
Fascinating insight, Henry. I’m learning something new with every blog. Keep it going!
ReplyDeleteThanks Sean for taking the time to read this and for providing feedback. As a teacher/coach/educationalist, I'm sure there should be a good deal of material that's relevant to at least some of your multiple roles! Henry.
ReplyDeleteVery useful! Was scratching my head on where to start for a while. Will keep up with this blog. Thank you Proff O'Connell.
ReplyDeleteCareer development is a lifelong process that involves continuous learning, growth, and self-reflection. It’s about identifying your goals, acquiring new skills, and building a fulfilling professional path. In today’s fast-paced world, it’s more important than ever to invest in your career development.
ReplyDelete