Abstract

The Defence Medical Services, of which the Defence Secondary Care Agency (DSCA) is a part, has a total of 140 specialist registrars in training across all hospital specialties, of whom several are training in hospitals with no formal military connection. Most of these posts are funded by the DSCA and therefore the civilian department has, effectively, a free registrar. However, little is known outside of the Defence Medical Services about who these doctors are, where they have come from, and what can be expected of them. Indeed, is the presence of one of these registrars a blessing or an encumbrance?

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