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ARTICLE |

Medical Licensure in 1968

JAMA. 1969;208(11):2153. doi:10.1001/jama.1969.03160110125020.
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ABSTRACT

The Council on Medical Education presents its annual compilation of data on medical licensure in this issue of The Journal (p 2083). The report summarizes the experience of physicians seeking medical licensure in 1968 from 55 examining boards in as many official jurisdictions. Comparative figures from previous years are also given. Up-to-date policies of the several medical examining boards, their rules and regulations for issuing licenses to medical graduates and osteopathic physicians are similarly included. The most significant change in policy has been the repeal by four state legislatures of their basic-science laws within the past year.

Of the 9,766 physicians newly added to the licensed medical profession during 1968, graduates of medical schools in the United States and Canada accounted for 7.581; the remaining 2.185 were graduates of foreign medical schools throughout the world. The latter figure is 28 more than it was last year, and represents a 50%

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