No certificate required by any act from any physician or surgeon licentiate in medicine and surgery, or other medical practitioner, is valid unless the signer be registered under this act (ib., s. 37, as amended 23 and 24 Vict., c. 7, s. 3).

Penalty.—Wilfully procuring or attempting to procure one’s self to be registered by making or producing or causing to be made or produced any false or fraudulent representation or declaration, or aiding or abetting therein, is a misdemeanor in England and Ireland, and in Scotland a crime or offence, punishable by fine or imprisonment. The imprisonment cannot exceed twelve months (ib., s. 39).

Wilfully and falsely pretending to be or taking or using the name or title of physician, doctor of medicine, licentiate in medicine and surgery, bachelor of medicine, surgeon, general practitioner, or apothecary, or any name, title, addition, or description implying registration under this act, or recognition by law as a physician or surgeon or licentiate in medicine and surgery, or practitioner in medicine, or apothecary, is punishable on summary conviction by a penalty not exceeding £20 (ib., s. 40, 41).

Deceased Physicians.—Every registrar of deaths in the United Kingdom, on receiving notice of the death of any medical practitioner, is required to transmit to the registrar of the general council and the registrar of the branch council a certificate of such death with the time and place, and on the receipt of such certificate the medical registrar is required to erase the name of the deceased from the register (ib., s. 45).

Exceptions.—The general council was by the act empowered by special order to dispense with such provisions of this act or such part of any regulations made by its authority as to them should seem fit, in favor of persons at the time of its passage practising medicine or surgery in any part of Her Majesty’s dominions other than Great Britain and Ireland by virtue of any of the qualifications in Schedule A, and in favor of persons practising medicine or surgery within the United Kingdom on foreign or colonial diplomas or degrees before the passage of this act, and in favor of any persons who had held appointments as surgeons or assistant surgeons in the army, navy, or militia, or in the service of the East India Company, or who were acting as surgeons in the public service, or in the service of any charitable institution, and in favor of medical students who commenced their professional studies before its passage (ib., s. 46).

The qualifications specified in Schedule A are as follows:

1. Fellow, member (inserted 22 Vict., c. 21, s. 4), licentiate, or extra licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians of London (this is declared by 23 and 24 Vict., c. 66, s. 1, to denote the corporation of “The President and College or Commonalty of the Faculty of Physics in London”). (The act makes provision for a new charter with change of name to “The Royal College of Physicians of England,” or retention of old name: ib., s. 47, as amended 23 and 24 Vict., c. 66, s. 2.)

2. Fellow, member (inserted 22 Vict., c. 21, s. 4), or licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh. (The act makes provision for the granting of a new charter to the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh, whereby its name is to be changed to “The Royal College of Physicians of Scotland,” or its old name may be retained: ib., s. 49, as amended 23 and 24 Vict., c. 66, s. 2.)

3. Fellow or licentiate of the King’s and Queen’s College of Physicians of Ireland. (The act makes provision for the granting of a new charter to this college, whereby its name is to be changed to “The Royal College of Physicians of Ireland,” or its old name may be retained: ib., s. 51, as amended 23 and 24 Vict., c. 66, s. 2.)