Everything you need to know about the UK Public Health Specialty Training application — from eligibility and key dates, to the assessments that decide your ranking, and the regional data that could shape your strategy.
A five-year run-through programme leading to the Certificate of Completion of Training (CCT) in Public Health.
Public Health Specialty Training (PHST) is a nationally-run postgraduate training programme in England, Wales, Scotland, and Northern Ireland. It is open to both medical and non-medical candidates, making it one of the few NHS specialty training programmes accessible without a medical degree. Trainees work toward dual registration with the Faculty of Public Health (FPH) and, for non-medics, the UK Public Health Register (UKPHR).
Competition is intense. Hundreds of applicants compete for fewer than 120 posts nationally each year. Your score on three psychometric assessments determines whether you are invited to interview — and it is your performance at interview that determines your national rank, and ultimately which region, if any, you are matched to. Understanding how that scoring works, preparing thoroughly for both stages, and knowing what the regional post landscape looks like is therefore not optional. It is the whole game.
Dates are indicative based on the 2025–26 cycle and subject to change. Always verify at NHS Oriel and the UKPHR website.
The person specification is published by NHS England. Check your eligibility carefully — you must meet the essential criteria at the point of application, not just at the start of training. Non-medical candidates must demonstrate an equivalent portfolio of evidence.
Applications are submitted through NHS Oriel. You will complete a structured application form covering your qualifications, experience, and supporting statement. The window is typically open for three to four weeks. Late applications are not accepted.
Applications are checked against the person specification. Those who meet the essential criteria are invited to sit the Pearson VUE assessments. Longlisting is not scored — it is pass/fail against eligibility.
The three assessments are sat in person at official Pearson VUE test centres within a set testing window. You will need to book your centre and slot in advance — availability can be limited, so book early once you receive your invitation. Your performance on these assessments determines whether you are invited to interview. Book your slot promptly — Pearson VUE centre availability fills up quickly.
Candidates who pass the assessment threshold are invited to interview. Interviews are typically competency-based and assessed against the person specification. Your interview score determines your national rank, which in turn governs which region you are matched to when preferences are submitted.
Candidates are informed of their national rank. You then submit regional preferences in rank order. Higher-scoring candidates are allocated first. Once all posts in your preferred region are filled, the system moves to your next preference.
Conditional offers are issued through Oriel. You have a short window to accept, reject, or hold your offer. Upgrade offers (where a better regional preference becomes available due to withdrawals) may be issued up to a deadline.
ST1 training begins. Pre-employment checks including DBS, occupational health, and reference verification must be completed before your start date.
Your combined score across Watson Glaser, RANRA, and the SJT determines your national rank. There is no other scored component.
The Watson Glaser is the gold-standard measure of critical thinking used across law, medicine, and public sector recruitment. You are presented with passages of information and must evaluate inferences, assumptions, deductions, interpretations, and arguments. The test rewards careful, disciplined reading rather than prior knowledge. Speed matters — each section is timed.
RANRA assesses the ability to work with complex numerical data at a senior professional level. Unlike basic numeracy tests, RANRA presents multi-table and graphical data requiring you to identify relationships, calculate rates and ratios, and draw reasoned conclusions under time pressure. Public health practice is fundamentally data-driven, and this test reflects that directly.
The SJT presents realistic public health workplace scenarios and asks you to rank possible responses or select the most appropriate action. It assesses professional values, ethical reasoning, and judgement in contexts relevant to public health practice — including working across organisations, handling sensitive data, and responding to health inequalities. Familiarity with FPH Good Public Health Practice guidance is essential.
An FOI request to NHS England (ref: FOI_2503) revealed the lowest-ranked candidate to accept a post in each region — a figure that defines exactly how competitive each region is in practice.
NHS England released data showing, for each region, the number of posts available and the national rank of the lowest-ranked applicant who accepted a post. This tells us the effective cut-off rank for each region. A higher cut-off rank means more posts and greater flexibility — a lower cut-off rank means only candidates near the very top of the national list will secure a place there.
| Region | Posts Available | Lowest Rank Accepted | Assessment |
|---|---|---|---|
| West Midlands | 16 | 126 Most accessible | Highest cut-off rank — the most posts and the greatest flexibility for mid-ranking candidates. |
| North West | 11 | 120 | Strong volume of posts. A realistic option if you rank in the top 120 nationally. |
| Scotland | 11 | 124 | High post volume; the cut-off rank reflects strong accessibility for well-ranked candidates. |
| North East | 6 | 116 | Fewer posts but a relatively accessible cut-off. |
| East Midlands | 6 | 105 | Moderate competition. You need to rank in the top ~105 to stand a strong chance. |
| Wales | 2 | 101 | Very few posts; only top-ranked candidates are likely to secure a place. |
| Kent, Surrey & Sussex | 9 | 95 | Proximity to London drives competition. Reasonable post volume but a tighter cut-off. |
| Wessex | 6 | 93 | A competitive region with a cut-off in the low nineties. |
| Yorkshire & the Humber | 8 | 76 | Despite reasonable post numbers, the cut-off is tighter than some larger regions. |
| South West | 6 | 80 | Popular lifestyle region; competition is reflected in the cut-off rank. |
| Thames Valley | 4 | 55 | Few posts and a demanding cut-off. Only strong performers are likely to match here. |
| East of England | 4 | 59 | Similarly few posts and a tight cut-off, requiring a high national rank. |
| London | 15 | 49 | High post volume but extreme demand makes London one of the most competitive regions nationally. |
| Northern Ireland | 1 | 4 Hardest to enter | Just one post. The lowest-ranked candidate to accept was ranked 4th nationally. |
The FOI data makes the regional picture starkly clear. Northern Ireland is statistically the most difficult region to enter — with a single post, only a candidate ranked in the very top handful nationally has any realistic chance. By contrast, West Midlands offers the greatest strategic opportunity: 16 posts and a cut-off at rank 126 mean that a well-prepared candidate sitting in the middle of the national field still stands a genuine chance of matching there. If you are serious about securing a training post and your regional flexibility allows it, the data strongly supports listing West Midlands as a high preference. Listing Northern Ireland as a primary preference, unless you are confident of a top-five national ranking, is a significant strategic risk.
Source: Freedom of Information request to NHS England, reference FOI_2503 (2024). Data relates to the most recent completed recruitment round at the time of publication.
Your score is almost entirely determined before interview season begins. Focused, structured preparation on the right material makes the difference.
The five question types require different habits of thought. Learn each type distinctly before combining them under time pressure. Rushing is the single most common cause of avoidable errors.
Practice reading complex tables and graphs quickly and accurately. Focus on understanding what is being asked before touching the numbers — misreading the question type accounts for most marks lost.
Read the Faculty of Public Health's Good Public Health Practice guidance before sitting the SJT. The correct answers reflect professional public health values — patient safety, honesty, collaboration, and evidence-based decision making.
Use the FOI-derived cut-off data above to match your expected rank to realistic regional options. List preferences in order of genuine willingness to go there — upgrade offers do materialise, but cannot be relied upon.
Every year, otherwise competitive candidates are longlisted out because they do not demonstrate meeting the essential criteria clearly on their application form. Address each criterion explicitly — never assume it is obvious.
All official communications come through Oriel. Check your registered email daily during key periods. Missed offer deadlines cannot be appealed.
Our 2027 study guides cover Watson Glaser, RANRA, and SJT with full worked examples, timed practice sets, and model answers.
Access the Study Guides