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Abstract of the Law Relating to Colonial Practitioners
of Medicine.
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The Medical Register contains separate lists of colonial and
foreign practitioners. His Majesty in Council is empowered from time to time to define the colonies to which the law is to apply, but any order in respect thereto may be at any time revoked or renewed. Only such colonies will be included as afford to register- -ed practitioners of the United Kingdom such privileges of practising as may seem just. A person who desires to be registered as a colonial practitioner must prove to the Registrar of the General Council that he holds a recomised colonial diploma grant- -ed in such a British possession and that he is of good character and entitled to practise medicine, surgery, and midwifery in such
possession, and also that the diploma was not granted while he was domiciled in the United Kingdom, or was granted in course of a period of not less than five years during which he was resident
out of the Kingdom. He will then, on payment of a fee not exceed-
-ing £5, be entitled to be registered without further examination.
A"recognised" colonial medical diploma is one which is recognised
for the time being by the General Council as furnishing a suffici-
-ent guarantee of the possession of the requisite knowledge and
skill for efficient practice, but the Privy Council have power,
after communication with the General Council to order the General
Council to recognise a diplome which they have refused to recog-
-nise. There is an appeal to the Privy Council from the refusal of
the registrar to register any person as a colonial practitioner. A person registered as a colonial practitioner, who obtains any recognised colonial medical diploma, may cause a description of
the same to be added to his name in the register.