Membership of the Royal College of General Practitioners (MRCGP) is a postgraduate medical qualification in the United Kingdom (UK) run by the Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP). On successful completion of the assessment, general practitioners are eligible to use the post-nominal letters MRCGP that indicate Membership of the RCGP.
The MRCGP exam was first offered to doctors in 1965 and was originally an optional qualification. In 2007 the MRCGP became an integrated training and assessment system to prepare doctors for working in general practice. Doctors now require to succeed in the MRCGP assessments in order to be issued with a certificate of completion of their specialty training (CCT) in general practice.
In 2007 a new system of assessment was introduced, delivered locally in conjunction with deaneries, with the qualification awarded on completion of a three-year specialty training programme.
Immediately after the introduction of the 2007 changes the term "nMRCGP" had helped to differentiate between old and new assessment procedures (with n meaning new). After several years, once all trainees were being assessed using the new methods, the "n" was dropped.
The GP Curriculum was first published by the RCGP in 2006. The Postgraduate Medical Education and Training Board (PMETB) approved it to be used for GP Specialty Training, and it was introduced for all programmes starting from 1 August 2007. The curriculum is continually updated.
Having taken over from PMETB as the body responsible for assuring postgraduate medical education, the General Medical Council (GMC) approved the GP curriculum and assessment blue print against the published standards in 2010.
MRCGP assessment comprises three components, each of which tests different competences using validated assessment methods. In combination these assessments cover the spectrum of knowledge, skills, behaviours and attitudes that are outlined in the GP Specialty Training curriculum.
The MRCGP exam was first offered to general practitioners in 1965 and from 1968 it has been a requirement for GPs to hold this in order to join the college. Before 2007 the MRCGP was a credit accumulation exam. Candidates needed to pass four modules within three years, or retake the whole exam.