Boards of Examiners.—There are three separate State boards of medical examiners of seven members each, representing respectively the Medical Society of the State, the Homœopathic Medical Society of the State, and the Eclectic Medical Society of the State.

The regents appoint examiners from lists of nominees furnished by the said societies. Each nominee before his appointment is required to furnish to the regents proof that he has received the degree of doctor of medicine from some registered medical school, and has legally practised medicine in this State for at least five years. If no nominees are legally before them, the regents may appoint from the members in good standing of such societies without restriction (ib., s. 141).

At any meeting of the boards of examiners a majority constitute a quorum, but questions prepared by the boards may be grouped and edited, or answer papers of candidates may be examined and marked, by committees duly authorized by the boards and by the regents (ib., s. 144).

Qualification.—The regents are required to admit to examination any candidate who pays a fee of $25, and submits satisfactory evidence, verified by oath, if required, that he—

(1) Is more than twenty-one years of age; (2) is of good moral character; (3) has the general education required in all cases after August 1st, 1895, preliminary to receiving the degree of bachelor or doctor of medicine in this State; (4) has studied medicine not less than three full years, including three satisfactory courses in three different academic years in a medical school registered as maintaining at the time a satisfactory standard; (5) has either received the degree of bachelor or doctor of medicine from some registered medical school or a diploma or license conferring the full right to practise medicine in some foreign country.

The degree of bachelor or doctor of medicine shall not be conferred in the State before the candidate has filed with the institution conferring it the certificates of the regents that three years before the date of his degree, or before or during his first year of medical studies in the State, he had either graduated from a registered college or satisfactorily completed not less than a three years’ academic course in a registered academy or high school; or had a preliminary education considered and accepted by the regents as fully equivalent; or had passed a regents’ examination in arithmetic, elementary English, geography, spelling, United States history, English composition, and physics. Students who had matriculated in a New York medical school before June 5th, 1890, are exempt from this preliminary education requirement provided that the degree be conferred before August 1st, 1895.

The regents may in their discretion accept as equivalent for any part of the third and fourth requirements evidence of five or more years’ reputable practice of medicine, provided such substitution be specified in the license (ib., s. 145).

Each board is required to submit to the regents as required lists of suitable questions for a thorough examination in anatomy, physiology, and hygiene, chemistry, surgery, obstetrics, pathology and diagnosis and therapeutics, including practice and materia medica. From these lists the regents are required to prepare question papers for all these subjects, which at any examination are required to be the same for all candidates, except that in therapeutics, practice, and materia medica all questions submitted to any candidate shall be chosen from those prepared by the board selected by that candidate, and shall be in harmony with the tenets of that school as determined by its State board of medical examiners (ib., s. 146).

Examinations for a license are required to be given in at least four convenient places in this State at least four times annually in accordance with the regents’ rules, and exclusively in writing and in English. Each examination is conducted by a regents’ examiner who shall not be one of the medical examiners. At the close of each examination the regents’ examiner in charge is required to deliver the question and answer papers to the board selected by each candidate, or its duly authorized committee, and such board, without unnecessary delay, is required to examine and mark the answers and transmit to the regents an official report stating the standing of each candidate in each branch, his general average, and whether the board recommends that a license be granted. Such report must include the questions and answers and is filed in the public records of the university. If the candidate fails on a first examination, he may, after not less than six months’ further study, have a second examination without fee. If the failure is from illness or other cause satisfactory to the regents they may waive the requirement of six months’ study (ib., s. 147).

On receiving from a State board an official report that the applicant has successfully passed the examinations and is recommended for license, the regents are required to issue to him, if in their judgment he is duly qualified therefor, a license to practise medicine. The contents and execution of the license are regulated in detail by the act.