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Portfolio & ARCP
Overview
In the NHS, progression is not judged only by how hard you work clinically. It is judged by the evidence you collect.
Your portfolio and ARCP are how the system decides whether you are progressing safely as a doctor.
Understanding this early protects your career.
What is a Portfolio?
Your portfolio is your professional record of development. It shows that you are:
- Learning
- Reflecting
- Improving
- Engaging with feedback
- Developing beyond service work
It usually lives on an online platform (e.g. Horus, Kaizen, Turas, ISCP, ePortfolio).
What Should Be in Your Portfolio?
Common evidence includes:
- Supervised Learning Events (mini-CEX, CBD, DOPS)
- Reflections on cases
- Teaching sessions delivered
- Audit / QIP projects
- Courses and certificates
- Feedback from colleagues (TAB / MSF)
- Supervisor meeting notes
- Exams passed
It is not about volume.
It is about relevance and consistency.
What is ARCP?
ARCP = Annual Review of Competence Progression
It is a formal review where a panel assesses whether you are:
- Meeting expected competencies
- Engaging with training
- Developing appropriately
- Safe to progress
Even trust-grade doctors increasingly need ARCP-style evidence when applying for training.
Common ARCP Outcomes (Simplified)
- Outcome 1 – Progressing well
- Outcome 2 – Minor issues, fixable
- Outcome 3 – More evidence needed
- Outcome 4 – Insufficient progress
The goal is not perfection.
The goal is demonstrable engagement.
What Consultants Actually Look For
Supervisors value:
- Honest reflection
- Willingness to learn
- Responsiveness to feedback
- Professionalism
- Safe practice
They are far less impressed by:
- Fake reflections
- Portfolio “box-ticking”
- Copy-paste evidence
- Quantity without meaning
Authenticity is obvious.
Common Mistakes
- Leaving portfolio until the last minute
- Uploading evidence with no reflection
- Avoiding feedback when struggling
- Not meeting supervisors
- Treating portfolio as a burden instead of protection
Your portfolio is your career insurance.
Reality Check
The system is bureaucratic.
It can feel frustrating.
But once you understand how to work with it, it becomes manageable.
Doctors who struggle most are usually those who ignore it.
Reassurance
You do not need a perfect portfolio.
You need a consistent, honest, and engaged one.
That is achievable for any doctor, even with a busy rota.