- United Examining Board
The United Examining Board was formed in 1993 to administer non-university qualifying examinations in medicine and surgery. The diplomas offered by the United Examining Board were registerable with the
General Medical Council in order to register as a medical practitioner in theUnited Kingdom , and an individual who had passed the examination could become aPre-registration house officer .The qualifications offered by the United Examining Board were either the
*English Triple
Conjoint ( [Licence of theRoyal College of Physicians of London , Licence of theRoyal College of Surgeons of England , Licence in Medicine and Surgery of theSociety of Apothecaries )::abbreviated as LRCP, LRCS, LMSSAor the
*Scottish Triple Conjoint (Licence of the
Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh , Licence of theRoyal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh , Licence of theRoyal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow ).::abbreviated as LRCP, LRCS, LRCPS or LRCPE, LRCSE, LRCPSGThese examinations were usually taken either by partly-trained refugee doctors, or by doctors who had been trained at an overseas medical school not recognised by the
World Health Organization , or by other overseas graduates who wished to transfer more easily from limited to full registration with theGeneral Medical Council . They were also occasionally taken by students who had attended a UK medical school but who had failed to obtain theBachelors of Medicine and Surgery . Some UK students were allowed to sit these exams, or their precursors, before they were able to take the degrees of their own universities.
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