M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P.
The conjoint was a basic medical qualification in the United Kingdom
administered by the United Examining Board. It is now no longer awarded.
Medical education at the London Teaching
Hospitals began some centuries before there was a university in London to award medical degrees. Those who had taken B.A.s
at Oxford or Cambridge, or occasionally started their
pre-clinical education at universities further afield, could return there to take medical examinations, but it was open to most
to take the examinations of the London medical corporations.
As the early 19th century law restricting medical employment in the British military to those who had qualifications in both
medicine and surgery was taken to require diplomas from different organisations, it became customary to take both the Licence of
the Society of Apothecaries or L.S.A.
and the Membership of the Royal College of Surgeons of England or
M.R.C.S.
These corporations diverged: the Society of Apothecaries added
surgery to their examination, to grant a Licence in Medicine and Surgery (L.M.S.S.A.) as a
complete qualification. The surgeons then teamed up with the Royal College of
Physicians of London who paired their Licentiate diploma (L.R.C.P.) with the M.R.C.S. to
create the English Conjoint Diploma. The L.R.C.P. had previously been a means for foreign medical graduates (including M.D.s from
Scotland) to practise in London.
The nomenclature of the diplomas may have contributed to the nearly-obsolete practice of general practitioners styling
themselves as "Physician and Surgeon": previously they were mostly regarded as Apothecaries.
(There were also Scottish and Irish conjoint qualifications: the former became known as the Triple
Qualification.}
In the 19th century the new London University Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor
of Surgery degrees were regarded as being more academic than the Royal Colleges' diplomas, so many people qualified and started
practice with the Conjoint before taking the M.B. and B.S. a year or two later. This paralleled the practice in some European
countries of taking a state medical examination separately from or instead of a university degree. In the English provincial
cities, some medical schools developed separately from the new Redbrick
universities, so the Conjoint diplomas were at first usually taken.
Armed forces officer cadets would be
promoted from second lieutenant to lieutenant on
qualifying, which included the conjoint qualification. The difference in pay between the times of the two exams would more than
pay for the entry fee, and also seniority in the officer corps would be enhanced by those few months.
The conjoint diploma of the London Royal Colleges (Royal College of
Surgeons of England and Royal College of Physicians of London) was
more reputable in its day, but after World War II it was regarded as a practice exam before university finals. It provided a safety net, in that medical students
unsure whether they would pass or fail would have two chances if they took both.
By far the greatest use of the Conjoint and similar qualifications in recent years was as a means for foreign medical
graduates to obtain British qualifications, which eased their problems of obtaining registration and employment in the U.K., and
also made it easier to go on to work in third countries.
The scheme of examinations included a notional full set of pre-clinical subjects (anatomy, physiology, pharmacology,
pathology, etc) from which those who had university passes or another final medical qualification would be exempted: but fees
might still have to be paid.
The closure of this portal, along with the recent recategorisation of junior doctors from student to worker status for
immigration purposes, may hasten the changeover of the National Health Service's
dependence from Third World medical graduates to European
Union doctors, who may not be asked to submit to further examination.
These subtleties of the British system of medical qualifications were rarely known to patients, who may have been more
impressed to see "M.B. B.S. M.R.C.S. L.R.C.P." on a brass plate than "M.D. F.R.C.P."
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