Volume 4
Report ... with minutes of evidence, and appendix ... 1834.
- Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons. Select Committee on Medical Education.
- Date:
- [1834]
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Report ... with minutes of evidence, and appendix ... 1834. Source: Wellcome Collection.
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No text description is available for this image![Macmichae/, William, m.d. (Analysis of his Evidence)—continued. to the examination, is inoperative, 580-Witness never heard of exclusion from the fel¬ lowship on religious grounds, 586-Scotch universities are in advance of Oxford and Cambridge as schools for medical education, 589-“Term trotting”, a university phrase, not an ordinary practice of physicians, 595-Examination of persons at the College of Physicians for degree of licentiate, in reference to college residence, 608-Before a person is admitted to the College of Physicians, he is required to renounce the College of Surgeons, 629-Profession of physician and surgeon better separated, 629- College of Surgeons have no power; any one may practise surgery, 631. No person can be a surgeon to the army or navy without belonging to the College of Surgeons, 633--An inceptor candidate might practise midwifery, but would not be elected a fellow, 636-Case of refusal to admit Dr. Hooper to the fellowship on the ground of having practised pharmacy, 644-Case of Dr. Pearson, who was desirous of being admitted to the fellowship at the age of eighty years, 648-Salary of the registrar, 655-Nomination of the first cholera board, 656-Present members of the pharmacopeia committee of the college, 669--Changes in the constitution of the Col¬ lege of Physicians which witness thinks desirable, 674-College should have the power of granting doctor’s degrees, 675-A system of education should be pointed out better than that now practised, 677-Admission to the fellowship should be in the breast of the fellows, 678--Objects to which the attention of the reform committee of the college has been directed, 686. Time taken up in the examination of candidates, 697-Witness never heard a licen¬ tiate examined in Greek, 703-Visitation of druggists and apothecaries shops by the College of Physicians, 708-Petition been presented to the King in Council by the college for power to grant degrees, 735-Examination of witness at Oxford for a degree in medicine, 75]-Edinburgh a better school for medicine than Oxford, 773. Nature of examination of persons who solicit a licence as extra licentiates, 780-An extra licentiate cannot practise in London, or within seven miles, 787-Alteration of a statute of the college to admit a person with a Lambeth degree, 798-Dr. Baillie left his museum to the College of Physicians, 801-Conditions upon which the licentiates are admitted to the library and museum, 802-Examination concerning Dr. Stanger’s case, 814-Reason why Dr. Stanger might not be informed of the law as to the mode of admission of a licentiate to the college by the proposal of a fellow, 815-819-Dissenters not excluded ; can become fellows on the nomination of the president, 828-Opinions expressed by Lord Mansfield as to the limitation of the number of fellows, 833-Opinions expressed by Lord Kenyon, on the application of Dr. Stanger, 837-Degree obtained at Edinburgh is not a certificate of moral charac¬ ter, but of medical competence, 843-English physicians abroad are not treated on the footing of gentlemen, 845 --Titular distinctions obtained by foreign physicians, 846 -The more distinct the different branches of the medical profession are the better, 854 --Probability that Dr. Pearson would have been elected a fellow had he lived, 857-It would be much better if apothecaries were remunerated for attendance as well as medi¬ cine, 871'-Witness never saw druggists prescribe across the counter, 877-Use of the college in showing the country who are licensed and who are not; the public must then choose at their peril, 879. [Second Examination.]—Explanation of certain points in witness’s former examination relative to persons ceasing to become fellows when they became clergymen, and also relative to the bye-law under which Sir Charles Clark was admitted to be examined as a licentiate, 4650-4657-Examination as to the proceedings of the College of Physi¬ cians during the last ten years, 4658-4669-Evening meetings instituted at the col¬ lege, 4660, 4661-Many of the papers in the college transactions contributed by licentiates, 4663-No unwillingness evinced by the licentiates to contribute to the transactions published by the college, 4664--President of the college has a vote in the distribution of the Tattered scholarships, and in whose favour lately exercised, 4665- 4667-Whether a fellow refusing the application of a licentiate for the loan of a book is according to the spirit of the regulations of the college, 4670-4672-College of Physicians has done everything to promote science and encourage knowledge, 4673- Statistical questions proposed by them, and circulated for that purpose, 4674. Madhouses. The College of Physicians had the inspection of madhouses, Seymour 1239 -How removed from its jurisdiction, Seymour 1240. Magdalen College. Amount of fees payable to, on taking medical degrees, Haviland 4076. Mansfield, Lord. Statute restricting the number of fellows declared illegal by him, Halford 48, Macmichael 538-Opinion of Lord Mansfield in the cause Rex v. Askew, 1767, as the right of the College of Physicians to have an order of licentiates, Macmichael 452. 540, 541-Advice of, in the case of Dr. Archer, Macmichael 542-Opinion of, relative to the charter and Act of Parliament establishing the College of Physicians, and effect of that opinion, Birkbeck 3574. 3580-See also Archer, Dr. Mead, Dr. A most distinguished physician, and fellow of the College of Physicians, Mac¬ michael 474-Was a Dissenter, and the son of a Dissenting minister, Macmichael 475. Medical Appointments. See Concours. Physicians, College of. 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