I’ve been registered with the Medical Practitioners Board of Victoria since 1969. I can’t recall when I was first registered with the Medical Council of Tasmania, but I think it was in 1992. Each Australian state has its own medical registration body. So a doctor working in two or more states needs to register, and pay an annual re-registration fee, in each. A few years ago, some bureaucrat had a bright idea – that nationwide medical registration would be more efficient. Loads of people were seduced by this trumpeted efficiency. Thus a national registration scheme will start on 1 July 2010. But state medical boards will still exist, to handle complaints against doctors, among other functions. So the new regulatory machine will be bigger – and more cumbersome – than the status quo. To date, the promise has been that the annual re-registration fees won’t rise. But I’ll bet they will, because the total cost will be much higher, and governments won’t pay the extra if they can compel Muggins doctors to. In this world you get nothing for nothing, especially from bureaucrats and governments. Here their quid pro quo is the right to put their grasping fingers into the pie of medical undergraduate and specialist training, and continuing education – where their fingers don’t belong. This new juggernaut may hasten my retirement from active medical work. Time will tell.
2 days ago
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