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A delayed inheritance: The Medical Board of Victoria's 75-year wait to find doctors guilty of "infamous conduct in a professional respect"

journal contribution
posted on 2015-03-01, 00:00 authored by Gabrielle WolfGabrielle Wolf
The Medical Board of Victoria (Board) was created in 1844 to register “legally qualified medical practitioners”. It was not until 1933, however, that the Board attained the power to remove from its register a doctor who had engaged in “infamous conduct in a professional respect” (the power), even though the General Council of Medical Education and Registration of the United Kingdom on which the Board was modelled had been granted the power 75 years earlier. This article argues that the delay in the Board’s inheritance was attributable to successive Victorian Parliaments’ distrust of the Board and that this attitude was unwarranted, at least from early in the 20th century. The article maintains that the granting of the power to the Board was a crucial event in the history of the regulation of the Victorian medical profession. This is illustrated both by the difficulty encountered by the medical profession in dealing with doctors’ unethical conduct before 1933, and the Board’s concern to use its new authority responsibly and appropriately to protect the public and the profession in the three years after it attained the power.

History

Journal

Journal of law and medicine

Volume

22

Issue

3

Pagination

568 - 587

Publisher

Thomson Reuters

Location

North Ryde, N.S.W.

ISSN

1320-159X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2015, Thomson Reuters

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