The board must hold meetings for examination at the capital on the second Thursday of January, April, July, and October of each year and at such other times as they deem expedient; they shall keep a register of all applicants for examination, showing the name, age, and last place of residence of each candidate, the time he has spent in medical study in or out of a medical school, the names and locations of all medical schools which have granted the said applicant any degree or certificate of attendance upon lectures in medicine, and whether the applicant has been rejected or licensed, and it shall be prima facie evidence of all matters contained therein (ib., s. 2).
Qualification.—All persons commencing the practice of medicine or surgery in any of its branches must apply to the board for a license. Applicants are divided into three classes:
1. Persons graduated from a legally chartered medical school not less than five years before the application.
2. All other persons graduated from legally chartered medical schools.
3. Medical students taking a regular course of medical instruction.
Applicants of the first class are examined in materia medica, therapeutics, obstetrics, gynæcology, practice of medicine, surgery, and surgical anatomy; those of the second and third classes are examined in anatomy, physiology, chemistry, materia medica, therapeutics, histology, pathology, hygiene, practice of medicine, surgery, obstetrics, gynæcology, diseases of the eye and ear, medical jurisprudence, and such other branches as the board may deem advisable; questions for applicants of the first and second classes are the same in the branches common to both. The board after January 1st, 1892, cannot license applicants of the second or third classes without satisfactory proof that the applicant has studied medicine and surgery three years, is of good moral character, and over twenty-one years of age; applicants of the third class, after they shall have studied medicine and surgery at least two years, can be examined in anatomy, physiology, chemistry, histology, pathology, materia medica, and therapeutics; if the examination is satisfactory to all the members of the board, it may issue a certificate that the applicant has passed a final examination in these branches, and such certificate, if presented by the applicant when he shall make application for a license to practise, shall be accepted by the said board in lieu of examination in those branches. All examinations shall be both scientific and practical, but of sufficient severity to test the candidate’s fitness to practise medicine and surgery (ib., s. 3).
All examinations shall be in writing; the questions and answers, except in materia medica and therapeutics, must be such as can be answered in common by all schools of practice, and if the applicant intends to practise homœopathy or eclecticism, the member or members of the said board of those schools shall examine the said applicant in materia medica and therapeutics; if the examination is satisfactory, the board shall issue a license entitling the applicant to practise medicine. A license shall not be issued unless the applicant passes an examination satisfactory to all members of the board; the examination papers kept on file by the secretary of the board are prima facie evidence of all matters therein contained; on refusal of the board to issue a license for failure on examination, the applicant may appeal to the governor, who may appoint a medical commission of review of three members, one from each school of medicine, who shall examine the examination papers of the applicant and from them determine whether a license should be issued, and their decision shall be final; if the said committee by unanimous vote reverse the determination of the board, the board shall issue a license; the expenses of the appeal are borne by the applicant (ib., s. 4).
The board may, by unanimous vote, refuse or revoke a license for chronic and permanent inebriety, the practice of criminal abortion, conviction of a crime involving moral turpitude, or for publicly advertising special ability to treat or cure disease which, in the opinion of the said board, it is impossible to cure.
In complaints for violating this section, the accused shall be furnished with a copy of the complaint and given a hearing before the said board in person or by attorney (ib., s. 5).