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Læknablaðið - 01.06.1972, Side 63

Læknablaðið - 01.06.1972, Side 63
LÆKNABLAÐIÐ 43 in clinical practice is only devoting say 40 hours to actual work with patients, the number of additional hours he must constantly spend to keep him fit for his clinical work is very substantial and will continue to increase. The Royal Commission on Medical Education in Britain which reported in 1967 stressed the importance of maintaining and extend- ing the provision for postgraduate education in all fields of medicine, both vocational and specialty trainings and continuing education. It recommended the establishment of a central body to have oversight of this work and at the end of last year a Council for Postgraduate Medical Education was appointed, consisting almost entirely of nominees of various professional and educational bodies and with the Vice-Chancellor of Sheffield University — himself a distinguished physician — as its chairman. That Council had been preceded by a voluntary committee which had laid the foundations for its work in advance of the general agreement within the profession for a Central Council financed from government funds. The Council with a small staff hopes to guide the Regional Committees which will be the advisers of universities and Regional Hospital Boards in every region. They will promote a programme of vocational and advanced specialty training, provide career guidance for young doctors and develop the continuing educational programmes in every district. I have described to you how much has been done by voluntary effort already, but we must now go beyond this to the organised national, regional and local programme supported by the health authorities. I can only give you this general outline now, but I would emphasise one point about the development. It must be a co-operative exercise between the profession and the Health Department and the fact that it is mainly financed from government funds must not become the pretext for detailed interference in professional training patterns. It is true that they depend very much upon the use of suitable training posts within the Health Service, but that should be a matter for discussion and agreement and not for dictation from either side. I cannot tell you yet that all is well with British postgraduate education. We started late with the comprehensive scheme, but we have been able to build upon much that has been developed volun- tarily and it is better that this should be so since it emphasises the responsibility of the profession for its own standards in its work and its training, both initial and ongoing. For myself I believe that the pattern which is now emerging will be able to meet the most exacting requirements of the future.

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