CCFP = Certification in the College of Family Physicians or Certificant of the College of Family Practice of Canada
MB ChB = Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery
LMCC = Licentiate of the Medical Council of Canada
FRCGP = Fellow of the Royal College of General Practitioners
MScGP = unknown but I bet it is for a masters in general or family practice.
LMCC stands for Licentiate of the Medical Council of Canada (LMCC).
LMCC stands for "laude madhar chod chodade"....
LMCC is the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council. They help artists to empower themselves by providing them with support, networks and resources.
No, the LMCC (License Medical Council of Canada), is not a medical degree, nor is an indication of any specialty certification. It is a Canadian medical licensing exam that all Canadian medical school graduates must pass in order to get a license to practice Medicine in Canada. It is basically the same as the USMLE in the USA. You have to have a medical degree to sit this exam. Canadian medical degrees are usually one of the following - MD, MDCM. Some physicians, when trying to pad their qualifications, may place these initials after their name, but this is just fluff. Everyone has to pass this or a similar exam and it does not confer any degree status, just the indication that you have can sit and pass a very difficult exam.
Before you become a GP you first have to obtain a degree in medicine from a medical school whose primary medical qualifications are accepted by the GMC. Courses last five years normally (or four years for a graduate entry programme, see question five below) and involve basic medical sciences as well as clinical training on the wards. Following graduation, a trainee doctor enters the two-year Foundation Programmed. You will be provisionally registered with the GMC whilst completing the first year. Full registration is awarded upon completion of year one.