Medical law for medical men : their legal relations shortly and popularly explained with chapters concerning dentists, chemists, and midwives / by Percy Clarke and Charles Meymott Tidy.
- Clarke, Percy
- Date:
- 1890
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Medical law for medical men : their legal relations shortly and popularly explained with chapters concerning dentists, chemists, and midwives / by Percy Clarke and Charles Meymott Tidy. Source: Wellcome Collection.
20/170 (page 16)
![6. Fellow or licentiate^ of the Faculty of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow. 7. Fellow or licentiate of the Royal College of Surgeons, Ireland. ^ 8. Licentiate 3 of the Society of Apothecaries, London. 9. Licentiate of Apothecaries' Hall, Dublin.^ 10. Doctor, bachelor, or a licentiate of medicine, or master, licentiate, or bachelor of surgery, or master of obstetrics of any University of the United Kingdom,-'^ legally authorized to grant such diplomas respectively.<^ 11. Doctor of Medicine by grant of Archbishop of Canterbury before 31st July, 1858 [Lambeth degree]. ^ This title is no longer conferred. ^ The College has since 1784 had power to grant licenses in midwifery to its own licentiates in surgery, and since 1885 to all registered practitioners. This, therefore, would not, like the license of the English College, have entitled to original registra- tion, but would be an additional title. See below, p. 17, ^ A member of the Society of Apothecaries, though not capable of registering as a qualified medical practitioner, might before 30th June, 1887, if certificated as an apothecary by one of the societies (English or Irish), properly practise and recover his charges. ^ A L. A.H. Dublin may be registered as, and have all the rights of, a Pharmaceutical Chemist of Ireland. See part ii., chap. ii. ^ A doctor or bachelor of medicine, registered for the first time since 30th June, 1887, may now not only prescribe, but, like a physician, compound or supply medicines, and ex hypothesi treat a surgical case and practise midwifery. If registered for first time before the Act, he could not supply medicines nor treat surgical cases, nor practise midwifery except as subservient to a medical case. A bachelor or master of surgery has, and had, full powers of practising as a 'surgeon.' ^ The degrees of M.D. and M.B. of the University and King's College, Aberdeen, and the Marischal College and University of Aberdeen, and M.D. and M.S. of Queen's University, Ireland, are no longer granted.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b20392199_0020.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)