Skip to main content
British Medical Journal logoLink to British Medical Journal
. 1971 May 29;2(5760):516–519. doi: 10.1136/bmj.2.5760.516

The American General Practitioner in Hospital

A J M Cavenagh
PMCID: PMC1796003  PMID: 5579499

Abstract

In the U.S.A. and Canada full access of general practitioners to hospital beds and facilities is regarded as an essential privilege of their work. All hospital constitutions require a review of the credentials of staff applicants and continuing evaluation of their performance. Staff appointment carries administrative as well as clinical responsibilities and hospital work occupies a considerable proportion of the general practitioner's day. The disciplinary machinery for safeguarding standards is strict by comparison with British hospital practice.

This system produces an obvious excellence of clinical standards, postgraduate education, and communication between specialist and general practitioner and is attractive to the more able young British graduate. A pilot experiment of hospital staffing on North American lines in one of our new district general hospitals would be a worthwhile proposition.

Full text

PDF
516

Articles from British Medical Journal are provided here courtesy of BMJ Publishing Group

RESOURCES