Continuing education in general practice in England and Wales.
- 1 September 1974
- journal article
- Vol. 24 (146) , 643-7
Abstract
In 1970, a random sample of 9.5 per cent of general-practitioner principals in England and Wales were asked about continuing education; 53 per cent of them replied. Respondents preferred long intensive courses, thought that dissemination of information about national courses was defective, and the 32 per cent who required a locum before they could attend a course had difficulty in obtaining one. Local educational activity is enhanced by the presence of a postgraduate medical centre.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Study of General Practice In MassachusettsJAMA, 1971
- Postgraduate Education for General Practitioners in the Manchester RegionMedical Education, 1969