4.3 Article

Venereology at the Polyclinic: Postgraduate Medical Education Among General Practitioners in England, 1899-1914

Journal

MEDICAL HISTORY
Volume 59, Issue 2, Pages 199-221

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/mdh.2015.3

Keywords

Medical Graduates' College; Postgraduate medicine; Medical specialism; General practitioners; Tabes dorsalis; Syphilis

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In 1899 the British Medical Journal enthusiastically announced that a new postgraduate teaching college was to open in London. The aim of the Medical Graduates' College and Polyclinic (MGC) was to provide continuing education to general practitioners. It drew upon emerging specialisms and in so doing built upon the generalist training received at an undergraduate level. Courses were intended to refresh knowledge and to introduce general practitioners to new knowledge claims and clinical practices. The establishment of postgraduate institutions such as the MGC marked an important stage in the development of medical education in England. Yet these institutions, and the emergence of postgraduate medical education more broadly, have been largely overlooked by historians. Moreover the history of venereological training among medical undergraduates and postgraduates alike has been overlooked. The study of such special subjects characterised postgraduate study. This article examines the dissemination of venereological knowledge among subscribers to MGC as an important case study for the development of institutionalised postgraduate medical education in England at the turn of the twentieth century.

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