Medical schools have come more and more to accept the responsibility for the continued education of their graduates through postgraduate programs. Such post-graduate programs have been generally helpful. They can, however, be considerably more helpful; they can, in fact, serve as a major factor in the solution of the great problems involved in the distribution of good medical care, problems which are at present under urgent discussion. Essentially the total medical problem consists of (1) the maintenance of high standards of undergraduate medical education, (2) the satisfactory distribution of medical care and (3) the purchasability of this medical care by the public. The problem of the maintenance of high standards of undergraduate medical education in this country is being attacked in an impressive manner by the medical schools. The second problem, that of distribution, is a complex one. It involves (a) the continued education of the practicing physician, (b) the