A physician is a person who practices medicine. In the United States the term physician is traditional and commonly used. In
Britain and Australia,
the term doctor is more common as physician refers to specialists in internal medicine.
Because of the extensive training requirements, physicians are traditionally considered to be members of a learned profession.
Training
- See also: medical school, medical residency
United Kingdom
Medicine in the UK is an undergraduate subject. Students can begin training after leaving the equivalent of high school at 18
years of age. The minimum time spent at medical school in the UK is typically 5 years but at some schools is 6 years. In the UK a
doctor's training normally follows this path:
- Degree level preclinical - Doctors must study medicine in university
or medical school for two to three years "preclinical" (meaning little
patient contact). However following recommendations by the British Medical Association (BMA) many universities are following a "Problem-based learning"
approach, which stresses basing the studies around actual patient cases.
- Clinical - This time is spent in a teaching hospital
and typically lasts two or three years. After this is completed the student doctor is awarded a Bachelor of Medicine (BM or MB)
and Bachelor of Surgery (BCh or BS). An honorary pefix of "Dr" is now entitled to be used, although it is not recognised in the
academic sense of the word (see Doctorate).
- The Foundation Programme - Due to recent changes in the training of junior doctors, newly qualified doctors enter a
two year Foundation Programme, where they train in a variety of different specialities. These must include training in General
Medicine and General Surgery but can also include other fields such as Paediatrics or General Practice.
Following completion of the Foundation Programme a doctor can choose to specialise in one field. All routes involve further
assessment and examinations. The majority in the UK work in the community as General Practitioners (GPs), who are the first port
of call for patients. They diagnose illness and refer patients for further examination by specialists if necessary. The majority
of patients are managed by their GP without the need for further referral.
Hospital doctors are promoted after sitting relevant postgraduate exams within their chosen specialty (e.g. Member of the
Royal College of Physicians MRCP, Member of the Royal College of Surgeons [MRCS]) and a
competitive interview selection process from SHO to Specialist Registrar and eventually Consultant on
completion of the CCST (Certificate of Completion of Specialist Training), which is the highest level in a specialty team (with
the exception of university-linked professors). The competition is great for those who wish to attain consultant level and many
now complete higher degrees in research such as a Doctorate of Medicine (MD) which is a thesis-based award based on at least two
years full-time research or PhD which involves at least three years of full-time research. The time taken to get from graduation
from medical school to becoming a Consultant varies from speciality to speciality but can be anything from 7 to 10 years, or
longer in some specialities.
United States
In the United States and countries following the U.S. method, the path
to a medical degree is somewhat different.
- Admissions: Admission into medical school requires either three years of undergraduate study or a four-year post-secondary bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university, depending on medical institution. Most
require that the applicant have attained a bachelor's degree prior to matriculation. Admissions criteria include overall
performance in the undergraduate years and performance in a group of courses specifically required by U.S. medical schools, the
score on the Medical College Admissions
Test (a national standardized test), application essays, letters of recommendation (number varies, but at least 1 from
science faculty and 1 from non-science faculty), and interview(s). The list of courses required are as follows:
- biology (1 year)
- general chemistry (1 year)
- organic chemistry (1 year)
- physics (1 year)
- calculus or sometimes statistics (1 year)
- English composition (1 year)
- sometimes behavior science and/or biochemistry (1 semester)
- Medical School: Once admitted to medical school, it takes four years to earn a Doctor of Medicine (M.D.) or Doctor of
Osteopathic Medicine (D.O.) degree. The course of study is divided into two roughly equal parts. Preclinical study
generally comprises the first two years and consists of classroom and laboratory instruction in core subjects such as anatomy, biochemistry, physiology, pharmacology,
microbiology, pathology,
and neurosciences. Once the student successfully completes preclinical
training, he or she moves on to the clinical portion. This usually occupies the final two years of medical school and
takes place almost exclusively on the wards of a teaching
hospital or, occasionally, with community physicians. The students observe and take part in the care of actual patients under
the supervision of residents and attending physicians. Rotations on clinical services such as internal medicine, surgery, pediatrics, obstetrics/gynecology, and psychiatry are the foundation of this
curriculum, but many specialty electives may be chosen as well. Upon completion of medical school, the student earns the title of
doctor, but cannot practice independently until completing further training. Also, several universities across the U.S. admit
high school students to both their undergraduate colleges and the medical schools simultaneously; students attend a single
seven-year or eight-year integrated program consisting of three or four years of an undergraduate curriculum and four years of
medical school curriculum, culminating in both a bachelor's and M.D. degree.
- Internship: During the last year of medical school, students apply for postgraduate residencies in their chosen
field of specialization. These are more or less competitive depending upon the desirability of the specialty, prestige of the
program, and the number of applicants relative to the number of available positions. All but a few positions are granted via a
national computer match which pairs an applicant's preference with the programs' preference for applicants. The first year of any
residency is known as "internship". Completion of this year is the minimum training requirement for obtaining a license to
practice medicine in the U.S.
- Residency: Each of the specialties in medicine has established its own curriculum, which defines the length and
content of residency training necessary to practice in that specialty. Programs range from three years after medical school for
internal medicine to five years for surgery to eight or nine for neurosurgery. This does not include research years that may last
from 1 year up to a completion of a Ph.D. Each specialty incorporates an internship year to satisfy the requirements of
licensure. All specialties hold a board exam (either written or written and oral) at the completion of training in order to
confer "Board Certification" in that specialty.
- Fellowship: Certain highly specialized fields require formal training beyond residency. Examples of these are cardiology, endocrinology,
oncology after internal
medicine; cardiothoracic surgery, pediatric surgery, surgical oncology after general surgery to
name just a few. There are many others for each field of study. The training programs for these fields are known as
fellowships and their participants are "Fellows" to denote that they already have completed a residency and are
"Board Eligible" or "Board Certified" in their basic specialty. Fellowships range in length from one to three years and are
granted by application to the individual program or sub-specialty organizing board.
- Attendings: The physician or surgeon who has completed her or his residency and possibly fellowship training and is in
the practice of their specialty is known as an Attending. These are the physicians who may independently care for patients
and are the final arbiters of care. They are responsible for all care decisions and may bill for their services.
However, medicine is an extremely diverse profession with many options available. Some doctors work in pharmaceutical research,
occupational medicine (within a company), public health medicine (working for the general health of a population in an area), or
join the armed forces.
France
In France, a doctor's training is performed in public university hospital, called
Centre hospitalier universitaire or CHU; it consists in:
- First cycle
- the first year is common with the dentists and the midwives; the rank at the final examination determines in which branch the
student can go on; it is called "PCEM1" (premier cycle des études médicales, first cycle of medical studies) or "P1";
- the second year is called "PCEM2" and is dedicated to the fundamental sciences (or propédeutique, propaedeutics):
anatomy, human physiology, biochemistry, bacteriology,
statistics...
- Second cycle
- The first year is called "DCEM1" (deuxième cycle des études médicales, second cycle of medical studies), and is also
dédicated to the study of propaedeutics
- The second, third and fourth years (DCEM2-4) are called externat, and are dedicated to the study of clinical medicine; they end with
a classifying examination, the rank determines in which speciality (the general medicine is one of them) the student can make an
internat: the first graduate can choose speciality, and at the rank n, the graduate must choose amongst the places
left; the graduate also gets a Certificat de synthèse clinique et thérapeutique (certificate of clinical and therapeutical
synthesis).
- The internat is two years and a half (general medicine) or four years (specialist) of initial professional experience
under the responsibility of a senior; the interne can prescribe, replacements of liberal phsicians can be made, and
usually the student works in an hospital.
This ends with a doctorate, a research work which most of times consist in a
statistical study of cases to propose a care strategy of a specific affection (in an epidemiological, diagnostical, or
therapeutical point of view). A specialist also gets a DES (diplôme d'études spécialisées, diploma for specialised
studies). The initial training thus consist in eight years and a half for a general practitioner, and ten years for a specialist
(including a surgeon).
Regulation
In most jurisdictions, physicians need government permission to practise. This is known as licensing in the United States, as colegiation in Spain, as ishi
menkyo in Japan, as approbation in Germany, and as registration
in Australia and the United
Kingdom. In France, civilian physicians must be a member of the Order of physicians to practice medicine. In some countries, including the United Kingdom,
the profession regulates itself, with the government affirming the regulating body's authority (in the UK the General Medical Council [GMC]).
Regulating authorities will revoke permission to practice in cases of malpractice or serious misconduct.
After graduating from medical school, American physicians usually take a standardized exam which enables them to obtain a
certificate to practice from the appropriate state agency. All American states have an agency which is usually called the
"Medical Board," although there are alternate names such as "Board of Medicine," "Board of Medical Examiners," "Board of Medical
Licensure," "Board of Healing Arts," etc. Australian states usually have a "Medical Board," while Canadian provinces usually have
a "College of Physicians and Surgeons."
In the United States, as a result of the war on drugs, pharmaceuticals
are strictly regulated at the federal level by the Food and Drug Administration and the Drug Enforcement Administration. All practicing American physicians who intend to prescribe
controlled substances must obtain a number from the DEA, and that DEA number must appear on all their prescriptions. Use of the
DEA number enables dispensing pharmacists or the DEA to ensure that a physician is not dispensing potentially addictive or
harmful drugs, such as opiates or stimulants, in contravention to accepted standards of care.
External links
|