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Læknablaðið - 01.06.1972, Blaðsíða 53

Læknablaðið - 01.06.1972, Blaðsíða 53
LÆKNABLAÐIÐ 35 forward for themselves in a hospital specialty. There was an assump- tion by the hospital specialists of a superiority which had its origin in the traditionally antagonistic relationship between physician and apothecary in London in the 18th and 19th centuries. Indeed 20 years ago the standard adopted for admission to the Medical Register by the General Medical Council, which is the registering authority in Britain, was essentially that the man so admitted should be a safe doctor, capable of entering general practice and sufficiently trained for that purpose. Even then practice was ahead of this declared in- tention and most doctors recognised that they needed more experi- ence in hospital before the year in hospital work became compulsory in 1954. By 1957 the General Medical Council in its recommendations to medical schools had clearly moved away from the concept of the doctor who was safe for independent practice at the time of his full registration and it relaxed the rules previously imposed on medical schools, on the assumption that any doctor would intend to undergo further training before becoming independently established. Four years earlier a Committee of the British Medical Association chaired by the present President of the General Medical Council, Lord Colen, had produced a report, recommending a pattern of training which would involve three years more of varied experience after passing the qualifying examinations before a doctor entered general practice on his own account. The B.M.A., however, did not endorse the report. Ten years later the General Medical Council further modified its regulations to give the schools even greater discretion about the way in which they arranged their courses. Despite this obvious intention of the central registering authority, the early postgraduate training of recently qualified practitioners was poorly organised. Even the compulsory one year after qualification before full registration was not effectively supervised or planned by the schools. The young graduate had to have a certificate from his school of satisfactory performance of his duties during that year, but few of the schools put themselves in a position of being really well informed. The universities approved a sufficient number of posts and then more or less left the rest to the senior staff of the hospitals where those posts were located. Even the posts approved included a very odd mixture which could include for instance radiotherapy as a medical or obstetrics as a surgical post. With few exceptions schools did little to place their graduates in posts best suited to their needs and the new graduate was left very much to his own devices to aetermine where he should go. The position was not helped by the fact that remuneration paid through the health service to doctors in these earliest appointments was low by contemporary standards, even if it was better than the unremunerated work which an earlier generation had had to do. In the period after full registration it was possible for the new graduate to apply for a variety of junior posts
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