Medical practitioners 1
Practitioners
In Britanin, doctors, also known as medical practitioners, must be qualified: have a university degree in medicine. They must also be registered – included in the Genreal Medical Council’s list, or register – in order to practise. A doctor who treats patients, as opposed to one who only does research, is called a clinician. A doctor who provides primary care for patients is known as general practitioner (GP), or family doctor. GPs usually work in group practice. Larger group practices work in a buiding called a health centre.
Note: In British English, the verb is spelt practise, and the noun is spelt practice.
Specialties
Specialist doctors, for example paediatricians, generally work in hospitals. However, those who work outside the NHS, providing private health care, may have consulting rooms outside a hospital – for example in the famous Harley Street in London.
The two main branches of medicine are surgery and internal medicine, and the doctors who practise these branches are called surgeons and physicians, respectively. In Britain, male surgeons are addressed as Mr and females as Ms – so Dr Smith is physician, and Ms Smith is a surgeon.
Notes: Names of specialties usually end in –ology; names of specialists usually end in –ologist. If the name of a specialty ends in –ics, the name of the specialist ends in –ician. There are some exceptions, e.g. anaesthetics and anaesthetist.
Choosing a specialty
Jill Mathews has just graduated from medical school and is talking about her future.
“I haven’t decided what to specialize in yet. I need more experience before I decide, but I’m quite attracted to the idea of paediatrics because I like working children. I’d certainly prefer to work with children than, say, elderly patients – so I don’t fancy geriatrics. I was never very interested in detailed anatomy, so the surgical specialties like neurosurgery don’t really appeal. You have to be good with your hands, which I don’t think is a problem for me – I’ve assisted at operations several times, and I’ve even done some minor ops by myself – but surgeons have to be able to do the same thing again and again without getting bored, like tying off cut arteries and so on. I don’t think that would be a problem for me, but they need to make decisions fast and I’m not too good at that. I like to have time to think, which means surgery’s probably not right for me.
Note: The collocation good with is followed by a noun – He’s good with children. The collocation good at is followed by the –ing form (gerund) of a verb, or by a noun – She’s good at explaining procedures. She’s good at explanations.
SOURCE: Professional English in Use – Medicine, Eric H. Glendinning & Ron Howard, CAMBRIDGE 2007.
Medical practitioners 2
Hospital staff
The people who work an any type of workplace, including hospitals, are called the staff. The medical staff in a British hospital belong to one of four main groups:
A pre-registration house officer (PRHO), or house officer, is a newly graduated doctor in the first year of postgraduate training. After a year, he or she becomes a registered medical practitioner. In the current system of training, the Foundation Programme, the name for these junior doctors is Foundation Year 1 doctor (FY1).
A senior house officer (SHO) is in the second year of postgraduate training. The title is now Foundation Year 2 doctor (FY2), but the old terms senior house officer and SHO are still used.
A specialist registrar (SpR) is a doctor who has completed the Foundation Programme, and is training in one of the medical specialties. There are also some non-training registrars-doctors who have completed their training but do not wish to specialize yet.
A consultant is a fully qualified specialist. There may also be some associate specialists – senior doctors who do not wish to become consultants. In addition, there is at least one medical (or clinical) director, who is responsible for all of the medical staff.
Medical teams
Consultant physicians and surgeons are responsible for a specific number of patients in the hospital. Each consultant has a team of junior doctors to help care for those patients. In many hospitals, there are multidisciplinary teams which consist not only of doctors but also of physiotherapists and other allied health professionals.
When patients enter – or are admitted to – hospital, they are usually seen first by one of the junior doctors on the ward where they will receive treatment and care. The junior doctor clerks them – takes their medical history – and examines them. Some time later, the registrar also sees the patients, and may order investigations or tests, for example X-rays or an ECG, make a provisional diagnosis, and begin treatment. The consultant usually sees the new admissions – people who have recently been admitted to the ward – for the first time on one of the regular ward rounds, when the management of the patients is discussed with the registrar. Consultants also decide when a patient is ready to be discharged (sent home). On the ward round, the consultant is accompanied by the team and nurse, and they visit all the patients in the consultant’s care.
Shifts
Junior doctors now normally work in shifts, which means they normally work for eight hours every day, for example 7 am to 3 am, and are then free until 7 am next day. After a week they change to a different shift, for example 3 pm to 11 pm or 11 pm to 7 am. The alternative system is to work from 9 am to 5 pm every day and to take turns to be on call – available to return to the hospital if necessary – from 5 pm to 9 am the next day. Days on call are set out in a rota, or list of names and times. Doctors on call carry a radio pager, or bleeper, a device which makes a nosie when someone is trying to contact them.
Nursing grades
Nurses working in a hospital have the following grades:
Student nurse a nurse who is still in training
Staff nurse a nurse who has completed the training course
Charge nurse a more experienced nurse who is in charge of, or responsible for, a ward or department
Nurse manager a nurse who is in charge of several wards
Support workers
The clinical support worker, who has done a short course and obtained basic qualifications, and the nursing auxiliary, who is usually unqualified, both assist nursing staff. There may also be ward clerks, whose duties include making sure patients’ notes and information are up to date, and answering the phone.
Specialization
Like doctors, nurses can specialize:
A midwife has specialized from the beginning by doing a course in midwifery, the management of pregnancy and childbirth.
District nurses visit patients in their homes.
Health visitors also work in the community, giving advice on the promotion of health and the prevention of illness.
The nurse’s role
The nurse’s role has changed considerably in recent years. In addition to general patient care, checking temperatures, pulse rates and blood pressures, changing dressings, giving injections and removing sutures, nurses now do some of the things previously reserved for doctors, such as prescribing drugs, and ordering laboratory tests. More responsibility for nurses is planned.
SOURCE: Professional English in Use – Medicine, Eric H. Glendinning & Ron Howard, CAMBRIDGE 2007.
Practitioners
In Britanin, doctors, also known as medical practitioners, must be qualified: have a university degree in medicine. They must also be registered – included in the Genreal Medical Council’s list, or register – in order to practise. A doctor who treats patients, as opposed to one who only does research, is called a clinician. A doctor who provides primary care for patients is known as general practitioner (GP), or family doctor. GPs usually work in group practice. Larger group practices work in a buiding called a health centre.
Note: In British English, the verb is spelt practise, and the noun is spelt practice.
Specialties
Specialist doctors, for example paediatricians, generally work in hospitals. However, those who work outside the NHS, providing private health care, may have consulting rooms outside a hospital – for example in the famous Harley Street in London.
The two main branches of medicine are surgery and internal medicine, and the doctors who practise these branches are called surgeons and physicians, respectively. In Britain, male surgeons are addressed as Mr and females as Ms – so Dr Smith is physician, and Ms Smith is a surgeon.
Notes: Names of specialties usually end in –ology; names of specialists usually end in –ologist. If the name of a specialty ends in –ics, the name of the specialist ends in –ician. There are some exceptions, e.g. anaesthetics and anaesthetist.
Choosing a specialty
Jill Mathews has just graduated from medical school and is talking about her future.
“I haven’t decided what to specialize in yet. I need more experience before I decide, but I’m quite attracted to the idea of paediatrics because I like working children. I’d certainly prefer to work with children than, say, elderly patients – so I don’t fancy geriatrics. I was never very interested in detailed anatomy, so the surgical specialties like neurosurgery don’t really appeal. You have to be good with your hands, which I don’t think is a problem for me – I’ve assisted at operations several times, and I’ve even done some minor ops by myself – but surgeons have to be able to do the same thing again and again without getting bored, like tying off cut arteries and so on. I don’t think that would be a problem for me, but they need to make decisions fast and I’m not too good at that. I like to have time to think, which means surgery’s probably not right for me.
Note: The collocation good with is followed by a noun – He’s good with children. The collocation good at is followed by the –ing form (gerund) of a verb, or by a noun – She’s good at explaining procedures. She’s good at explanations.
SOURCE: Professional English in Use – Medicine, Eric H. Glendinning & Ron Howard, CAMBRIDGE 2007.
Medical practitioners 2
Hospital staff
The people who work an any type of workplace, including hospitals, are called the staff. The medical staff in a British hospital belong to one of four main groups:
A pre-registration house officer (PRHO), or house officer, is a newly graduated doctor in the first year of postgraduate training. After a year, he or she becomes a registered medical practitioner. In the current system of training, the Foundation Programme, the name for these junior doctors is Foundation Year 1 doctor (FY1).
A senior house officer (SHO) is in the second year of postgraduate training. The title is now Foundation Year 2 doctor (FY2), but the old terms senior house officer and SHO are still used.
A specialist registrar (SpR) is a doctor who has completed the Foundation Programme, and is training in one of the medical specialties. There are also some non-training registrars-doctors who have completed their training but do not wish to specialize yet.
A consultant is a fully qualified specialist. There may also be some associate specialists – senior doctors who do not wish to become consultants. In addition, there is at least one medical (or clinical) director, who is responsible for all of the medical staff.
Medical teams
Consultant physicians and surgeons are responsible for a specific number of patients in the hospital. Each consultant has a team of junior doctors to help care for those patients. In many hospitals, there are multidisciplinary teams which consist not only of doctors but also of physiotherapists and other allied health professionals.
When patients enter – or are admitted to – hospital, they are usually seen first by one of the junior doctors on the ward where they will receive treatment and care. The junior doctor clerks them – takes their medical history – and examines them. Some time later, the registrar also sees the patients, and may order investigations or tests, for example X-rays or an ECG, make a provisional diagnosis, and begin treatment. The consultant usually sees the new admissions – people who have recently been admitted to the ward – for the first time on one of the regular ward rounds, when the management of the patients is discussed with the registrar. Consultants also decide when a patient is ready to be discharged (sent home). On the ward round, the consultant is accompanied by the team and nurse, and they visit all the patients in the consultant’s care.
Shifts
Junior doctors now normally work in shifts, which means they normally work for eight hours every day, for example 7 am to 3 am, and are then free until 7 am next day. After a week they change to a different shift, for example 3 pm to 11 pm or 11 pm to 7 am. The alternative system is to work from 9 am to 5 pm every day and to take turns to be on call – available to return to the hospital if necessary – from 5 pm to 9 am the next day. Days on call are set out in a rota, or list of names and times. Doctors on call carry a radio pager, or bleeper, a device which makes a nosie when someone is trying to contact them.
Nursing grades
Nurses working in a hospital have the following grades:
Student nurse a nurse who is still in training
Staff nurse a nurse who has completed the training course
Charge nurse a more experienced nurse who is in charge of, or responsible for, a ward or department
Nurse manager a nurse who is in charge of several wards
Support workers
The clinical support worker, who has done a short course and obtained basic qualifications, and the nursing auxiliary, who is usually unqualified, both assist nursing staff. There may also be ward clerks, whose duties include making sure patients’ notes and information are up to date, and answering the phone.
Specialization
Like doctors, nurses can specialize:
A midwife has specialized from the beginning by doing a course in midwifery, the management of pregnancy and childbirth.
District nurses visit patients in their homes.
Health visitors also work in the community, giving advice on the promotion of health and the prevention of illness.
The nurse’s role
The nurse’s role has changed considerably in recent years. In addition to general patient care, checking temperatures, pulse rates and blood pressures, changing dressings, giving injections and removing sutures, nurses now do some of the things previously reserved for doctors, such as prescribing drugs, and ordering laboratory tests. More responsibility for nurses is planned.
SOURCE: Professional English in Use – Medicine, Eric H. Glendinning & Ron Howard, CAMBRIDGE 2007.