CURRICULUM VITAE Keith John Barkclay RIX 21.4.50

CURRICULUM VITAE Keith John Barkclay RIX 21.4.50

CURRICULUM VITAE Keith John Barkclay RIX 21.4.50 The Grange 92 Whitcliffe Road, Cleckheaton, West Yorkshire BD19 3DR Tel: 01274 878604 Fax: 01274 869898 [email protected] www.drkeithrix.co.uk 2 School Wisbech Grammar School Medical School Aberdeen Qualifications Bachelor of Medical Biology (Honours) (Aberdeen University) 1972 Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery (Aberdeen University) 1975 Master of Philosophy (Edinburgh University) 1980 Chartered Biologist, Member of the Institute of Biology 1985 Doctor of Medicine (Aberdeen University) 1986 Fellow of the Royal College of Psychiatrists 1991 (Member from 1979) Member of the British Academy of Experts 1995 Fellow of the Expert Witness Institute 2002 (Member from 1997) Master of Laws (Distinction) 2010 (De Montfort University, Leicester) General Medical Council registration Registration number: 1346657 Specialties listed under the provisions of Schedule 2 of the European Specialist Medical Qualifications Order 1995: Psychiatry Forensic psychiatry 3 Scholarships, Grants and Distinctions M.R.C. Award for Intercalated Courses in Biological Sciences 1971-72 Grant from Maggie Whyte Bequest for Research into Nervous System Diseases 1972 Henderson Trust Travelling Trust Scholarship to the U.S.A. 1973 Class prize in community medicine (jointly) 1975 M.R.C. Project Grant for study of Allergy to Food Substances in Acute Psychoses 1980-82 Mental Health Foundation Project Grant for study of two alternative approaches to a magistrates court mental health assessment and diversion scheme 1993 4 Previous Appointments House Physician and House Surgeon, Aberdeen Royal Infirmary 1975-76 Research Fellow, Department of Physiology University of Aberdeen 1975-76 Senior House Officer and Registrar in Psychiatry, Royal Edinburgh Hospital 1976-79 Lecturer in Psychiatry, University of Manchester and Honorary Senior Registrar, North Western Regional Health Authority 1979-83 Senior Lecturer in Psychiatry, University of Leeds and Consultant Psychiatrist, St James's University Hospital, Leeds 1983-90 Divisional Medical Adviser, Leeds Community and Mental Health Services Teaching NHS Trust 1991-94 Consultant Psychiatrist, St James's University Hospital, Leeds 1990-94 'C' Distinction Award 1992 Consultant Psychiatrist, High Royds Hospital, Menston, Ilkley, West Yorkshire 1994-97 ‘B’ Distinction Award 1996 Consultant Forensic Psychiatrist, High Royds Hospital, Menston, Ilkley, West Yorkshire 1997-2000 Senior Clinical Lecturer, University of Leeds 1990-2000 Locum Consultant appointments: Leeds CMH Trust, 2001 Norfolk Mental Health Trust 2001 Cheshire and Wirral Partnership NHS Trust 2002 Worcestershire NHS Trust 2003 Victoria Hosp, Blackpool 2003 Dorset HealthCare NHS Trust 2004 Rowan House, Care Principles, Norwich 2004-2005 HMP Birmingham 2006 5 Present Appointments Visiting Consultant Psychiatrist, H.M. Prison, Leeds (since June 1983) Consultant Forensic Psychiatrist, The Grange, Cleckheaton, West Yorkshire (since July 1st 2000) Consultant Forensic Psychiatrist, Cygnet Hospital, Wyke, West Yorkshire (since June 2006) Part-Time Lecturer, Department of Law, School of Business and Law, De Montfort University, Leicester (since October 2010) 6 CAREER SYNOPSIS House Officer Appointments As house physician to Dr W R Gauld I worked on a general medical ward and as house surgeon to Mr A Davidson and Mr D W Blair I worked on a busy general surgical ward. Both appointments were at Aberdeen Royal Infirmary. Senior House Officer and Registrar Appointments These appointments were on the three year rotational training scheme based on the Royal Edinburgh Hospital. I undertook the following placements: general psychiatry and drug dependence (Dr W D Boyd), general psychiatry and sleep disorders (Prof I Oswald), alcoholism (Dr E B Ritson), psychogeriatrics (Dr R A Robinson and Dr A Jacques), liaison psychiatry and poisons unit (Prof R E Kendell, Prof I Oswald and Dr N Kreitman) and rehabilitation psychiatry (Dr J W Affleck). The training also included supervised in-patient psychotherapy groups (Dr Ritson), out- patient psychotherapy groups (Dr Ritson and Dr P O'Farrell) and individual psychotherapy (Dr O'Farrell). I was also supervised in the conjoint behavioural approach to marital and sexual problems (Dr J Bancroft). Lecturer in Psychiatry and Honorary Senior Registrar appointments As honorary senior registrar to Professor (now Sir) David Goldberg I was mainly responsible to him for running his general psychiatry firm at the University Hospital of South Manchester. However, I also gained experience in the psychiatric sequelae of cancer (Dr G P Maguire), affective disorders (Dr E Szabadi), transsexualism (Professor Goldberg), forensic psychiatry including R.S.U. and prison work (Dr A Campbell) and I was responsible to Prof Goldberg for providing a liaison psychiatry service to the Professorial Medical Unit. I was also the senior registrar responsible for the ward for violent and potentially violent patients. I was responsible for introducing a new system for the psychiatric records based on 'The New Aberdeen Medical Record'. Senior Lecturer and Consultant Psychiatrist with Special Interest in Liaison Psychiatry I was third consultant in the Professorial Psychiatric Unit at St James's University Hospital, Leeds, where I was responsible for contributing to the provision of a general psychiatry service primarily to East Leeds. The post included a special interest in liaison psychiatry which meant that in practice I organised the Parasuicide Assessment Service, provided a consultation psychiatry service to the rest of the hospital and to Seacroft and Killingbeck Hospitals and provided liaison psychiatry services to the Bone Marrow Transplantation Unit, the Accident and Emergency Department, the Palliative Care Team and the Neurology Service. My senior house officer was on the medical rotation and in organising the training of this doctor I tried to ensure that the S.H.O. had sufficient involvement in consultation psychiatry to make better use of a consultation-liaison psychiatry service in his or her subsequent career 7 in medicine. I provided training in clinical skills to the S.H.O. on an individual basis using videotaped recordings of interviews with patients. One of my first tasks when I arrived in the Professorial Psychiatric Unit was to prepare 'A Guide for Trainees in the Professorial Psychiatric Unit' which dealt with various day-to-day matters such as case summaries, out patient clinic arrangements, procedure for admissions and discharges, the nature and format of supervision etc. It was the development of these guidelines to cover various other aspects of day-to-day practice, some relevant to psychiatric trainees in general, which led to the publication of the 'Handbook for Trainee Psychiatrists' which I edited and which was published by Baillière Tindall in 1987. I assisted Dr Snaith, then psychiatric tutor, in the provision of interview skills training to the trainee psychiatrists. In order to keep up-to-date in this area I attended a course for psychiatric tutors organised by the University of Manchester Department of Psychiatry. In order to save the time of my secretary and S.H.O. I introduced wordprocessed admission and discharge summaries. The greatest savings are in the long-term when patients with summaries already on file are readmitted. This approach also ensures that important sections are not omitted by trainees from their summaries and it facilitates the audit of summaries and care programmes. I became a member of the recently resurrected St James's University Hospital Medical Records Committee. Before joining the committee I was responsible for the introduction of 'coloured dividers' to the hospital records and the system of filing investigation results and nursing records etc together rather than by specialty. Eventually, more than 15 years later, when the new system for records at St James's was introduced, my major contribution to this was the inclusion of integrated filing of correspondence and summaries irrespective of specialty. I had already introduced this for some of the more complicated 'liaison' patients under my care and other selected patients. The new system for records in the Leeds Community and Mental Health Services Teaching NHS Trust was also based on my recommendations. I had regular meetings with local probation officers and the staff of the Roundhay Road Social Services Day Centre. For six years I held two out-patient clinics a month at the Shaftesbury Medical Centre and had a monthly meeting with its primary health care team. I then started a clinic at the practice's new Church View Medical Centre and one at the new nearby Ashfield Medical Centre with a different general practice team. Consultant Psychiatrist, St James's University Hospital, Leeds I was one of two general psychiatrists who provided a general psychiatry service to a group of general practices with surgeries and health centres along the axis of the York Road. They included one of the practices where I did outpatient clinics in my previous post so I continued to provide a service for their patients in this post. My services included provision for inpatients, day patients and outpatients. My initial task on taking up the appointment, which followed an eighteen month period since the retirement of the previous consultant, was to draw up a case register of 'active' and 8 'discharged' patients. This included a means of identifying vulnerable patients for whom particular aftercare safeguards needed to be established

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