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N.B. Candidates who passed the First Examination before January, 1910, are permitted to produce, instead of Certificate 9 (Attendance on Labours), a Certificate in the following form:

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* A recognized Medical School.

has attended

Lying-in Hospital.

+ In a recognized Lying-in Hospital at which 20 cases are required by the Board.

Or (b) 30 cases of Labour

(1) in the §

or (2) under my supervision ‡

Lying-in Hospital.

And that in each case he was present at the time of the birth of the child.

Signature: Name

Qualification

Address

Official Position
Date

§ In a recognized Lying-in Hospital at which 30 cases are required by the Board. A duly recognized practitioner.

TIME-TABLE OF THE EXAMINATIONS FOR THE

DEGREES OF B.M. AND B.CH., 1913-14.

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IO A.M.

IO A.M.

IO A.M.

IO A.M.

Saturday, December 6, 1913; June 20, 1914.
DEPARTMENT OF CHEMISTRY, MUSEUM.

Practical Examination in Organic Chemistry, and viva voce.

Monday, December 8, 1913, June 22, 1914.
DEPARTMENT OF PHYSIOLOGY, MUSEUM.

Practical Examination in Physiology and Histology.

Tuesday, December 9, 1913; June 23, 1914.
DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN ANATOMY, MUSEUM.
Practical Examination in Human Anatomy, and viva voce.

DEPARTMENT OF PHYSIOLOGY, MUSEUM.

Viva voce Examination in Physiology.

2 P.M.

SECOND EXAMINATION.

Wednesday, December 3, 1913; June 17, 1914.
EXAMINATION SCHOOLS.

Materia Medica and Pharmacology.

Thursday, December 4, 1913; June 18, 1914.
EXAMINATION SCHOOLS.

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9.30 A.M.

2 P.M.

MEDICAL DEPARTMENT, MUSEUM.

Monday, December 8, 1913; June 22, 1914.

MEDICAL DEPARTMENT, MUSEUM.

Viva voce in Pathology, in Materia Medica and Pharmacology,
and in Forensic Medicine and Hygiene.

Practical Examination in Chemical and Microscopic methods of
Medical Diagnosis.

Tuesday, December 9, 1913; June 23, 1914.

RADCLIFFE INFIRMARY.

10 A.M. (Clinical Examination) Written Reports of cases, and viva voce

2 P.M.

in Medicine.

at bedside.

Thursday, December 11, 1913; June 25, 1914.

RADCLIFFE INFIRMARY.

10 A.M. (Clinical Examination) Written Reports of cases, and viva voce

2 P.M.

9.30 A.M.

2 P.M.

in Surgery.

at bedside.

Friday, December 12, 1913; June 26, 1914.

MEDICAL DEPARTMENT, MUSEUM.

Examination in Surgical Anatomy, the methods of operations and instruments.

MEDICAL DEPARTMENT, MUSEUM.

Viva voce in Medicine, Surgery, and Midwifery.

DIPLOMA IN PUBLIC HEALTH.

[For Dates of Examinations see p. 239.]

VIII.

(i) Statute.

OF HOLDING AN EXAMINATION IN

PREVENTIVE MEDICINE.

[Statt. Tit. VI. Sect. VIII.]

1. There shall be holden twice in every year, in Michaelmas Term and in Easter or Trinity Term, an Examination in subjects bearing on Preventive Medicine and Public Health, for the purpose of granting Certificates of proficiency therein. The Certificates so granted shall be styled Diplomas in Public Health.

2. There shall be four Examiners, viz. the Regius Professor of Medicine, who shall be Chairman of the Examiners, and three other persons, nominated, subject to the approval of Convocation, to serve for three years; provided that in case of the absence of the Regius Professor the Vice-Chancellor may appoint some other Professor in the Faculty to act as his deputy. One of the Examiners shall always be a Medical Officer of Health or an Inspector under the Local Government Board.

3. The Examiners other than the Regius Professor of Medicine shall be nominated by the Committee appointed for the nomination of Examiners in the Examinations for the Degree of Bachelor of Medicine.

4. The subjects of examination shall be

General Hygiene ;

General Pathology, with special relation to Infectious
Diseases;

Laws relating to Public Health;

Sanitary Engineering;

Vital Statistics.

The Examination shall consist of two parts. The Board of the Faculty of Medicine shall determine, from time to time, what branches of the subjects above named shall be included in each part, and shall fix the time at which the examination in each part shall be held.

5. It shall be lawful for the Board of the Faculty of Medicine to make regulations respecting the conditions under which Candidates shall be admitted. Subject to such regulations the Examination shall be open to all Registered Medical Practitioners.

6. The form of the Diploma in Public Health shall be as follows:

'We the undersigned Examiners in the University of Oxford hereby certify that we have duly examined A. B. in subjects bearing upon Preventive Medicine and Public Health, according to the Statute made by the University in that behalf, and that he has shown a competent knowledge of the same.

'Witness our hands this year of our Lord

day of

in the

C. D., Regius Professor of Medicine.

E. F.

G. H.

I. J.'

7. At the close of each part of the Examination a list of the Candidates who have satisfied the Examiners in that part shall be made in a book kept for that purpose, and shall be certified by the signatures of the Examiners. The book shall, except when required for the purposes of the Examination, remain in the custody of the Assistant Registrar, who shall be required to ascertain that Candidates who offer themselves for the second part of the Examination have already satisfied the Examiners in the first part thereof.

8. The Examination shall be under the supervision of the Board of the Faculty of Medicine, which shall have power to make such further regulations as it shall deem necessary for carrying out the provisions of this Statute.

(ii) Regulations.

1. The Examination shall consist of two parts. The first part shall comprise the application of Chemistry and Physics to General Hygiene; the second shall comprise the following subjects:-General Hygiene; General Pathology, with special relation to Infectious Diseases; the Laws relating to Public Health; Sanitary Engineering; Vital Statistics.

The Examination shall be conducted partly in writing, partly viva voce, and shall in each subject be partly practical.

2. Both parts may be taken together at the same Examination, or they may be taken at separate Examinations; but no one shall be deemed to have satisfied the Examiners in Part II unless he has satisfied the Examiners in the subjects of Part I.

3. The fee for admission to each part of the Examination is £5. In the event of a Candidate entering his name for both parts of the Examination and failing to pass in Part I, the fee for Part II shall be returned to him by the Assistant Registrar.

4. A Diploma shall be issued to every Candidate who has passed in both parts of the Examination, but no Diploma or Certificate shall be given under any other circumstances.

5. The Examination shall be held in Michaelmas Term and in Trinity Term, and shall commence on the Tuesday in the sixth week of full Term. The Assistant Registrar shall give not less than one month's notice of the time and place of each Examination.

6. The names of Candidates shall be received by the Assistant Registrar. They must be sent in, on forms provided by him for the purpose and to be obtained at his office, so as to reach him in Michaelmas Term or in Easter or Trinity Term as the case may be on or before the Tuesday in the third week of full Term. The statutable fee must be paid at the time of entering the name.

Candidates must have their names on the Medical Register of the United Kingdom, and must send Certificates showing that they have satisfied all the Rules of the General Medical Council of the United Kingdom relating to the admission of Candidates for Diplomas in Public Health which are in force at the time.

*These Rules are as follows:

Rule 1. The curriculum for a Diploma in Sanitary Science, Public Health, or State Medicine shall extend over a period of not less than nine calendar months. Rule 2. Every Candidate for a Diploma in Sanitary Science, Public Health, or State Medicine shall have produced satisfactory evidence that, after obtaining a registrable Qualification, which should be registered before admission to examination for the Diploma, he has received practical instruction in a Laboratory or Laboratories, British or Foreign, approved by the Licensing Body granting the Diploma, in which Chemistry, Bacteriology, and the Pathology of the Diseases of Animals transmissible to Man are taught.

Note.-The Laboratory instruction shall cover a period of not less than four calendar months, and the Candidate shall produce evidence that he has worked in the Laboratory for at least 240 hours, of which not more than one-half shall be devoted to Practical Chemistry. The Laboratory course should be so arranged as to lay special stress on work which bears most directly on the duties of a Medical Officer of Health.

Rule 3. Every Candidate shall have produced satisfactory evidenceEither (1) that, after obtaining a registrable Qualification, he has during six months been diligently engaged in acquiring a practical knowledge of the duties, routine and special, of Public Health Administration, under the personal super

vision of

(a) In England and Wales, the Medical Officer of Health of a County or of a single or combined Sanitary District having a population of not less than 50,000, or a Medical Officer of Health devoting his whole time to Public Health work; or(b) In Scotland, a Medical Officer of Health of a County or Counties, or of one or more Districts having a population of not less than 30,000; or—

(c) In Ireland, a Medical Superintendent Officer of Health of a District or Districts having a population of not less than 30,000; or—

(d) In the British Dominions outside the United Kingdom, a Medical Officer of

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