Grow Our All - Doctors for Tomorrow (GOAT) event

Saurav Roy, Hussein Lubbad, Jeremy Howick, Ed Briggs, Wen Wang

31 May 2026

Introduction

Trainee doctors are a vital component of the UK health workforce, constituting a quarter of total NHS doctors. Despite being an invaluable part of the health system, they are bearing the varying burdens of the adverse impacts of poor workplace culture. Medical educators play an essential role in their training experience and learning outcomes. The Grow All Our Doctors for Tomorrow (GOAT) initiative is devoted to sharing evidence-based medical education, fostering collaboration between academic and NHS doctors for innovation and growth. This is done through constructive dialogue among medical educators, NHS England-Midlands, and academics.

 

About the Event

The GOAT event took place on 15 May 2026 at Brookfield House, University of Leicester School of Business. The day enabled constructive discussion between medical educators, NHS England representatives, and academic researchers. It was attended by 105 guests: 85% (NHS medical educators), 10% (academics including 12  researchers  from 6 different Universities shared their ongoing NHS-related research projects), and six resident doctors shared their lived experience. The remaining attendees included NHS England senior leaders and representatives from the Medical Defence Union (MDU) and the British Medical Association (BMA).

 

Key Speakers and Sessions

Professor Fang Gao Smith OBE, FMedSci, University of Birmingham

Professor Jonathan Corne, Regional Postgraduate Dean, NHS England (Midlands)

Professor Mathew Hughes, Dean of Research and Enterprise, University of Leicester

Professor Deborah Price, Head of Management, University of Leicester School of Business

Academic and NHS Doctors’ Collaboration:

Professor Huabing Yin, Professor in Biomedical Engineering, University of Glasgow

Dr Mehran Habib, Lecturer, UK Management College, Derby

Dr Liu Peng, Senior Lecturer, Loughborough University

Dr John Richmond, Assistant Professor, University of Leicester School of Business

Dr Xuebing Cao, Senior Lecturer, Keele University

Dr Dennis Pepple, Associate Professor, University of Leicester School of Business

Safe Learning (SLEC):

Dr Caroline Brown, Associate Postgraduate Dean, NHS England Midlands

EDI & Differential Attainment:

Dr Salma Baz Lecturer, University of Leicester School of Business

Dr Hussein Lubbad, Core Surgical Trainee (CT1) | PhD Researcher, University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust

 

Evidence-based medical education

Almost all medical trainers who provided feedback – about 8 out of 10 – see the value in and are interested in using our video clips in their teaching.

This is what medical educators said about these video clips:

“The video clips were a really succinct and effective way of getting across the findings. I was especially pleased to see the incorporation of personal input from resident doctors, which really gave a strong sense of their lived experience.”

“They capture a lot of information in a short period of time.”

“Very appealing and engaging videos.”

Presenters in evidence-based medical education

Dr Wen Wang (PI), Professor Deborah Price, Dr Edward Briggs at Q&A after the first plenary session
Dr Hussein Lubbad, Dr Salma Baz shared research on differential attainment among doctors
Professor Fang Gao Smith, OBE, gave keynote speech on fostering research capacity through medical education
Dr Peng Liu shared research projects for potential collaboration with NHS doctors

Great academic and NHS doctors networking

Evidence-based medical education

This is what medical educators said about the event:

“Well-organised. Could have more big leaders, maybe, who can really help drive change and decision-making for the NHS.”

“Thank you so much to you and your team for organising today’s meeting. I really enjoyed it.”

“Excellent event with a lot of insight.”

Recommendations

Doctors have suggested that future events include short sessions on scenarios to allow for discussion and generate ideas, and to bring senior NHS Trust leaders into the room. Your wish is our command! We hope to see you in 2027.

Acknowledgements

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