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Læknablaðið - 01.06.1972, Blaðsíða 60

Læknablaðið - 01.06.1972, Blaðsíða 60
40 LÆKNABLAÐIÐ all general practitioners and it would not of itself be sufficient. It is difficult to tell how much this incentive has meant in promoting our postgraduate educational schemes. It has been alleged that it is an invasion of the doctor’s freedom since he should do postgraduate education, but by his own choice. In specialist medicine there is of course the knowledge that to practice in a specialty a man must be appointed to a specialist post in the hospital service, if he is to be credible to the general practitioner colleagues who refer patients to him and to have a place to do his work. Doctors are selected for such appointments on the advice of professional Advisory Committees and all know that they would have little chance if they have not been properly prepared. There is no such requirement, actual or implied, in recruitment to general prac- tice. The logic of this would suggest that there should be some such requirement for entry into general practice, but the shortage of re- cruits would have made it difficult to introduce this even if the profession were ready for it. There is a financial inducement, but it is small compared with the immediate financial advantages of earlier entry into general practice. Some action will undoubtedly be necessary eventually here and may well be sought by the profession. Various specialty associations and colleges play a very important part in British medical life, as they have done since the foundation of the Royal College of Physicians of London over 450 years ago and the establishment of other Royal Colleges of Surgeons and of Phy- sicians, and now of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, General Prac- titioners, Pathologists and Psychiatrists. The original educational activities of the older Royal Colleges were limited. They were rather the assessors of standards of professional attainment and along with the Society of Apothecaries of London they were the first to introduce qualifying examinations. They have remained the arbiters of standards of postgraduate training, although the universities also give higher degrees in medicine and surgery. The plethora of higher diplomas in Britain is commonly a source of astonishment to doctors from other countries. They are less systematically organised than the Specialty Boards of North America, the Registration of Specialties in Scan- dinavia, the Netherlands, Australasia and many European countries. Possession of a diploma is not necessarily evidence of complete train- ing, but rather of success in a competitive examination, often only indicating fitness for further training. The colleges may well become certifying bodies as to the completion of training in a specialty. The Royal College of Surgeons of London does undertake organised teach- ing in basic sciences and the associated Faculty of Anaesthetics has its own teaching and research department. But in the main the teaching activities of the Royal Colleges and the Faculties and Specialty Associations are intermittent and additional to the con- tinuing instruction the aspirant to a specialty requires. However, the Royal Colleges have drawn up programmes of training in the various specialties in consultation with other specialty associations where appropriate and have published these proposals as recommendations,
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