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Public Health and General Practice ST12026 Application Guide

Complete guide to applying for Public Health and General Practice ST1 in the 2026 recruitment cycle. This page covers eligibility requirements, self-assessment scoring criteria, portfolio sections, key dates, required forms, and evidence guidance — building on Specialty Training.

Oriel route name: Public Health and General Practice ST1 · Route family: msra

Interview preparation guide for Public Health and General Practice ST1

Medically reviewed by MedNext Clinical Team. Last reviewed 27 April 2026. See our editorial policy and correction policy.

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Scored Questions
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Scoring Sections
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Eligibility Criteria
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Source Documents

About Public Health and General Practice ST1

Public Health and General Practice ST1 is a general practice programme entering at specialty training at ST1 level, following foundation training. Selection uses MSRA and interview-based selection. The full training pathway typically takes 5-10 years total.

Entry Level

ST1

Training Duration

5-10 years total (2yr foundation + 3-8yr run-through specialty training)

Selection Method

MSRA + Interview

Training Pathway

Foundation Programme (FY1-FY2)
Public Health and General Practice (ST1-ST3)

Official Source Documents

The scoring criteria, eligibility requirements, and self-assessment guidance on this page are derived from the following official documents. Always refer to the latest published version before your application.

Public Health and General Practice ST1 person specificationPerson SpecificationConfirmed 2026

Published by: NHS England Medical Hub

View original document

Key Dates & Deadlines

Important dates for the Public Health and General Practice ST1 2026 recruitment cycle. Check the official recruitment timeline for the most up-to-date information, as dates may change.

Application opened(application open)
23 Oct 2025passed
Application closed(submission close)
20 Nov 2025passed
Interview window(interview window)
3–5 Mar 2026active
Initial offers(offer window)
31 Mar 2026upcoming

Eligibility Requirements

You must meet all essential eligibility criteria to be considered for Public Health and General Practice ST1. These are assessed at the application stage. Failure to meet any essential requirement will result in your application being rejected.

QualificationsEssential

You must hold a Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery (BMBS, MBBS) degree or other equivalent medical qualification.

Registration & right to workEssential

You must: Be eligible to work in the UK. Hold full registration with the General Medical Council (GMC) at the time of application, **and** hold a current licence to practise on the date your post commences.

Evidence hint: GMC registration details or licence evidence.

Career historyEssential

You must be able to provide complete details of your employment history, including any gaps.

DisclosureEssential

You must complete all sections of the application form fully and truthfully, in accordance with written guidelines. You must disclose in your application if you are subject to any ongoing fitness to practise proceedings or are subject to any fitness to practise conditions.

CAPABILITY/Competences FOR ST1/CT1 ENTRYEssential

You must have evidence of achievement of foundation competences in the three and a half years preceding the advertised post start date for the vacancy, via one of the following four methods: Current employment in a UK Foundation Programme Office (UKFPO) affiliated foundation programme; **or** Current employment in a GMC approved Specialty Training Programme holding either a National Training Number (NTN) or Deanery Reference Number (DRN); **or**

Evidence hint: GMC registration details or licence evidence.

Additional ELIGIBILITY CRITERIAEssential

You must: Be eligible for UK Medical Performers’ Lists. Hold a current and in date valid driving licence or provide an undertaking to provide alternative means of transport when providing emergency and domiciliary care to fulfil the requirements of the whole training programme.

Entry Criteria — Person Specification

The following entry criteria are extracted from the official 2026 person specification for Public Health and General Practice ST1. You must meet all essential criteria at the point specified. Failure to meet any essential criterion will result in your application being rejected.

Qualifications

  • You must hold a Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery (BMBS, MBBS) degree or other equivalent medical qualification.

Registration & right to work

  • You must:
  • Be eligible to work in the UK.
  • Hold full registration with the General Medical Council (GMC) at the time of application, and hold a current licence to practise on the date your post commences.
  • Meet the standards set out in Good Medical Practice, and not be subject to fitness to practise conditions which would prevent you taking up the post or performing fully within it.
  • You must not
  • Already be eligible for the specialist register for either specialty, nor
  • Hold, or be eligible to hold, a Certificate of Completion of Training (CCT), Certificate of Eligibility for Specialist Registration (CESR), or Certificate of Eligibility for GP Registration (CEGPR) for either of these specialties.

Career history

  • You must be able to provide complete details of your employment history, including any gaps.

Disclosure

  • You must complete all sections of the application form fully and truthfully, in accordance with written guidelines.
  • You must disclose in your application if you are subject to any ongoing fitness to practise proceedings or are subject to any fitness to practise conditions.
  • If you are currently in specialty training and applying to continue training in the same specialty in another region, you must obtain a Support for Application to another region form signed by the Training Programme Director/Head of School of your current Specialty Training Programme. This must confirm satisfactory progress and be submitted with your application.
  • If you have previously resigned, or been removed from, a training programme in any specialty, you must obtain a Support for Reapplication to Specialty Training form signed by the Training Programme Director/Head of School and Postgraduate Dean from the region you previously undertook training in. This must be submitted with your application.
  • If you have previously resigned, been removed from, or relinquished a Foundation post or training programme and failed to gain the award of a Foundation Programme Certificate of Completion (FPCC), or Foundation Achievement of Competence Document 5.2 (FACD 5.2) you must obtain a Dean's Supporting Declaration proforma signed by the Postgraduate Dean from the region you previously undertook Foundation training in. This must be submitted with your application.

CAPABILITY/Competences FOR ST1/CT1 ENTRY

  • You must have evidence of achievement of foundation competences in the three and a half years preceding the advertised post start date for the vacancy, via one of the following four methods:
  • Current employment in a UK Foundation Programme Office (UKFPO) affiliated foundation programme; or
  • Current employment in a GMC approved Specialty Training Programme holding either a National Training Number (NTN) or Deanery Reference Number (DRN); or
  • A Foundation Programme Certificate of Completion (FPCC) from a UK affiliated foundation programme; or
  • 12 months medical experience after full GMC registration (or equivalent post licensing experience), and a Certificate of Readiness to Enter Specialty Training (CREST).

Additional ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA

  • You must:
  • Be eligible for UK Medical Performers’ Lists.
  • Hold a current and in date valid driving licence or provide an undertaking to provide alternative means of transport when providing emergency and domiciliary care to fulfil the requirements of the whole training programme.

Selection Criteria — Person Specification

Shortlisted candidates are assessed against these selection criteria. Essential criteria are requirements; desirable criteria can strengthen your application. Understanding both columns helps you target your evidence and interview preparation.

Eligibility

  • You meet all criteria specified in the Eligibility to Apply section above.

Clinical knowledge

  • Interest in, and understanding of, the training programme.

Workplace skills

  • Ability to work in multi-professional teams and supervise colleagues.
  • Ability to lead, make decisions, organise and motivate other team members.
  • Ability to manage/prioritise own and others’ time effectively.
  • Ability to work safely under pressure and deliver good clinical care in the face of uncertainty.
  • Ability to monitor developing situations and anticipate issues.
  • Good basic IT skills, including Microsoft Office, email, and ability to learn new systems.

Academic knowledge

  • Understanding of research, including awareness of ethical issues.
  • Understanding of the basic principles of audit, clinical risk management, evidence-based practice, patient safety, and clinical quality improvement initiatives.
  • Knowledge of evidence-informed practice.

Personal skills

  • Commitment to personal and professional development.
  • Ability to work on own initiative, demonstrating curiosity.
  • Strong attention to detail, preparation and planning.
  • Ability to communicate messages effectively to a range of audiences.
  • Ability to negotiate and build positive professional relationships.
  • Strong problem-solving skills, with a scientific approach to problem solving.

Values

  • Understands, respects, and demonstrates the values of the NHS

Knowledge and experience

Essential

    Desirable

    • Understanding of NHS management and resources.
    • Experience of management.
    • Experience of research.
    • Experience of audit and Quality Improvement.
    • Experience of teaching.

    Specialty: Technical skills – technical knowledge and clinical expertise

    • Demonstrates an understanding of the concepts of health, disease, and illness and of structural, environmental, and behavioural determinants of health at a population level.
    • Demonstrates understanding of public health concepts and inequalities and an appreciation of the importance of health protection.
    • Demonstrates awareness of situations in which work is undertaken, including political awareness, understanding of the impact of national policy on health, and awareness of the importance of clinical and corporate governance.

    Specialty: Academic and research skills

    • Demonstrates understanding of the importance and basic principles of scientific research and evidence-based practice.
    • Demonstrates basic understanding of research methodology including research ethics, statistics and epidemiology, basic ability to appraise critically a scientific research paper.

    Specialty: Conceptual thinking and problem solving

    • Capability to use critical and strategic thinking to understand and solve complex problems.
    • Capability for numerical, critical thinking and verbal reasoning.
    • Capability to handle uncertainty.

    Specialty: Managing others and team involvement

    • Demonstrates capability and willingness to work in multi-disciplinary teams and respects multi- agency contribution to health.

    Specialty: Organisation and planning

    • Capability to work with long time scales for delivery within agencies with differing priorities.

    Specialty: Coping with pressure

    • Demonstrates initiative and resilience to adapt and respond to changing circumstances, timescales, organisational structures, and systems.

    Specialty: Commitment to specialty

    • Demonstrates evidence of interest and realistic insight into public health, with an understanding of, and commitment to, public health principles in relation to interventions around the needs of an individual and the population in general.

    Specialty: General

    Essential

      Desirable

      • Understands the respective roles of Public Health and General Practice and the interaction between the two and can articulate reasons for pursuing both.

      Self-Assessment & Scoring

      Public Health and General Practice ST1 uses MSRA (Multi-Specialty Recruitment Assessment) combined with an interview. The MSRA score determines shortlisting, and the interview assesses clinical knowledge and professional attributes.

      Scoring Sections

      The self-assessment is structured across 4 sections with 0 scored questions. Each question has variable points — refer to the official self-assessment guidance for exact marking tiers.

      Eligibility

      You meet all criteria specified in the Eligibility to Apply section above.

      0 questions

      Clinical knowledge

      Interest in, and understanding of, the training programme.

      0 questions

      Workplace skills

      Ability to work in multi-professional teams and supervise colleagues. Ability to lead, make decisions, organise and motivate other team members.

      0 questions

      Academic knowledge

      Understanding of research, including awareness of ethical issues. Understanding of the basic principles of audit, clinical risk management, evidence-based practice, patient safety, and clinical quality improvement initiatives.

      0 questions

      Interview Format

      Shortlisted candidates will be invited to interview. Below is the expected interview structure for Public Health and General Practice ST1. Prepare for each station by reviewing the relevant areas of your portfolio and clinical experience.

      MSRA

      Format: Exam result

      Primary ranking signal for the route.

      Interview

      Format: Route-specific selection

      Track the stage that follows MSRA.

      Evidence Packaging & Export

      Understanding how to package and present your evidence is just as important as having the evidence itself. Poorly organised submissions can result in lost marks even when the underlying evidence is strong.

      Export Mode

      bundle

      Each scored readiness bundle requires its own file

      File Size Limit

      MB per file

      Compress images and merge PDFs to stay under the limit

      Title Page

      Not required

      Index Page

      Not required

      Ordering guidance: Track shared readiness evidence and interview material in one bundle.

      Evidence Validation Checklist

      Before submitting your application, check your evidence against these validation rules. Items marked as errors will block your submission; warnings indicate areas that may cost marks.

      warning

      Map evidence to a route target

      Evidence should be assigned to a section or question before export so the pack builder can assemble the right output.

      error

      Check route-specific forms

      The route requires supporting forms or certificates in addition to the core evidence uploads.

      Evidence Guidelines

      General guidance for evidence preparation and organisation for your Public Health and General Practice ST1 application.

      • Keep uploads mapped to the route targets shown on this dashboard rather than storing undifferentiated files.
      • Selection appears MSRA-led or without public portfolio self-assessment guidance.
      • Dual programme; MSRA + interview, no portfolio scoring

      Frequently Asked Questions

      What qualifications do I need for Public Health and General Practice ST1?
      You must hold a Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery (BMBS, MBBS) degree or other equivalent medical qualification.
      How competitive is Public Health and General Practice ST1?
      Public Health and General Practice ST1 uses MSRA (Multi-Specialty Recruitment Assessment) followed by interview, making both exam performance and interview skills important. Competition ratios vary by year and deanery. Strong preparation of your portfolio, clinical experience evidence, and interview skills are essential for a competitive application.
      What is the training pathway for Public Health and General Practice ST1?
      The training pathway is: Foundation Programme (FY1-FY2) -> Public Health and General Practice (ST1-ST3). 5-10 years total (2yr foundation + 3-8yr run-through specialty training)
      When does Public Health and General Practice ST1 2026 recruitment open?
      Public Health and General Practice ST1 2026 recruitment: applications opened 23 Oct 2025, closed 20 Nov 2025, initial offers expected 31 Mar 2026.

      Related Specialties

      Compare adjacent specialties that share a recruitment family, training pathway, or portfolio structure.

      Ready to Build Your Public Health and General Practice ST1 Portfolio?

      MedNext Portfolio helps you collect evidence, score your self-assessment, and generate an Oriel-ready submission pack. Start free — no credit card required.