TY - JOUR T1 - G444(P) Medical students embracing change: how do we learn from lessons of the past to be great doctors of the future? JF - Archives of Disease in Childhood JO - Arch Dis Child SP - A181 LP - A181 DO - 10.1136/archdischild-2018-rcpch.433 VL - 103 IS - Suppl 1 AU - Z Vickers AU - H Avula AU - CR Fertleman Y1 - 2018/03/01 UR - http://adc.bmj.com/content/103/Suppl_1/A181.2.abstract N2 - In order to improve clinical practice in the future we have to learn from our past. The issues discussed at the inaugural Great Ormond Street Hospital Advances in Paediatrics Conference 2017 were current and pressing and should be dealt with now to raise the bar of healthcare in the UK. As medical students, we considered the salient messages from this conference and discuss how to apply them to our future training. Staff were frank and honest about where paediatric medicine was heading. They alluded to mistakes made allowing for reflection and open discussion, whilst suggesting changes we hope would make us more rounded paediatricians.Key themes that shaped the inquisitive, open mind-set that medical students should have throughout their training and beyond were highlighted. Three points seemed especially important: having a realistic perspective on the ‘crisis of the NHS’, awareness of the lack of transparency in clinical research and the advancement of technology and associated impact on patient-centred care. If we are able to address some of these issues it might help to not only maintain but also raise the standards of healthcare that we can provide.Overall, we feel that by embracing change, especially at the beginnings of our education, we can overcome miscalculations made by our predecessors. It is easier to have the right attitude ingrained in you from the start than it is to alter one already set in stone. By shifting focus to patient-centred care we can put patients and families back in the driving seat of their own health. Changes supporting openness in clinical trials approach can ensure that patients are not harmed by poor clinical decisions based on research misconduct and publication bias. To be great future doctors we must be receptive to changes going on around us. Technology is revolutionising medicine; we should embrace it and adapt it into our practice to provide the best care. As Professor Tony Young—Head of NHS Innovation England—said, this will enable the clinicians of now and the future to be ‘advisors and navigators’ and not just ‘gatekeepers to medicine.’ ER -