The transition from medical student to resident doctor is a difficult phase in medical training. Undergraduate medical education often provides a strong foundation in clinical knowledge. However, many newly qualified doctors report difficulty applying this in clinical environments. A national UK study analysing qualitative transition narratives found that 30.3% of accounts were explicitly classified as 'unprepared,' outnumbering those classified as 'prepared' (23.2%). Furthermore, a major UK multi-centre study revealed that only 38% of graduating students felt confident about prescription writing. In my view, these figures underscore that the transition crisis is not a collection of isolated student anxieties but rather a systemic flaw in institutional design. This editorial explores the mismatch between academic preparation and the practical demands of clinical practice. It focuses on key areas of difficulty, including task prioritisation, responsibilities, escalation of concerns, documentation, and communication under pressure. Learning during medical school is often heavily based on observation rather than active participation, and opportunities for independent decision-making remain limited. Consequently, students frequently experience insufficient exposure to the workload, administrative demands, and clinical responsibilities of a newly qualified doctor. Together, these factors widen the gap between theoretical knowledge and clinical practice, creating an intensely steep learning curve upon entering the healthcare workplace. Ultimately, this abrupt transition compromises graduate confidence and introduces vulnerabilities into patient safety. Some strategies to address this gap include early clinical exposure, structured shadowing programmes, simulation-based training, and trust-level induction processes. These interventions can facilitate bridging the divide between theory and clinical practice. This can then improve preparedness and reduce early-career stress. Strengthening preparedness at the point of transition may improve both clinician well-being and the quality of care delivered to patients. However, achieving this requires coordinated efforts from medical schools, healthcare institutions, educators, and regulatory bodies. Medical schools should provide greater opportunities for supervised responsibility, simulation-based learning, and practical clinical skills training, while hospitals should support graduates through structured induction programmes, shadowing opportunities, and ongoing mentorship. Addressing the gap between undergraduate training and clinical practice should therefore be prioritised not only as an educational concern but also as a patient safety imperative. By working collaboratively to better prepare future doctors for the realities of clinical practice, stakeholders can facilitate a safer transition into the workforce and improve outcomes for both clinicians and patients.
Vedant Lal (Mon,) studied this question.
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