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Læknablaðið - 01.06.1972, Qupperneq 57

Læknablaðið - 01.06.1972, Qupperneq 57
LÆKNABLAÐIÐ 37 of graduates working in hospitals and who are not established in senior posts to established seniors, and this also occurs in the Federai Republic of Germany. But in Scandinavia the younger graduate, even if he has not the clinical independence expected by the established consultant in Britain at an earlier age, has remuneration at a level which compares favourably with that of others with comparable academic backgrounds in other professions. In Britain this was nct so and the pattern of remuneration was based rather upon the thesis that training would be completed in 7 or 8 years from passing the qualifying examinations and would be followed by establishment as a consultant in the hospital service. There were no opportunities for large increases in earnings by consultation privately or under an insurance system and the great majority of such consultations occurred in hospital out-patient departments which patients only reached after reference by their general practitioners and where no fee was payable. At the same time the pattern of remuneration in general practice offered little encouragement to the establishment of more doctors in that field and the provision of group practices or health centres from which doctors could work was very limited. In 1960 there was therefore both a low level of intake to the medical schools, poorly organised. training systems whether for specialist or general practice, and difficulty and delay in establishment in either. The high level of emigration of medical graduates to Australasia and North America, where both the demand for doctors and the pay offered was high, was therefore not surprising. If systematic preparation for establishment in any form of practice was ill organised and to an extent unencouraging, organised con- tinuation training was also inadequate. Yet the method of organisation of general practice in Britain was such as to emphasise the need for training of this kind. Only a minority of doctors in general practice had any direct association with hospital work, particularly in those specialties most likely to be helpful in general practice such as general medicine, psychiatry and paediatrics and there was therefore little of the opportunity that hospital staff members have of refreshing their knowledge from one another. True, in the six years up to 1960 there had been an increase in the number of general practitioners working together as groups and the provision made under the National Health Service for assistance in taking postgraduate courses, which were provided by the universities, was being used on a slowly increasing scale. The Royal College of General Practitioners had been established long enough for its influence on educational and research work in general practice to be felt, but it had not yet the authority it has since achieved. In fact there were few incentives to increase partici- pation in postgraduate work and there was too little general prac- titioner participation in the planning of what was presented to them in postgraduate courses. Early in 1960, quite independently, senior doctors from Stoke-on- Trent and Exeter came to see me to seek help in obtaining hospital land for the development of postgraduate centres in those two cities.
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