Page 101 - My FlipBook
P. 101
DENTAL LAWS CONDENSE D. : 95 :
The cxainiiiation is coiuluctcd by tlic General Board of the Sanitary
Service, under the supervision of a Council composed as follows
For dentists, of two members being surgeons of the Superior Sani-
tary Council, and one dentist named by tlie Sanitary Board. Candi-
dates for examination nuist pay the fees pertaining thereto. Doctors
of medicine, veterinary surgeons, and pharmacists must pay three
lumdred lei (francs), equal to about $47.90 U. S. currency. A
special regulation will determine the matter of holding such exam-
ination, and the payment of fees.'
Article 83 provides : "Dentistry, as is the case with any other
specialty of medical practice, cannot be practised by persons other
than doctors of medicine, having obtained such right according to
the terms of this law, and having a diploma or certificate which
confers the right to practise dentistry in this country. Dentists
without the degree of doctor of medicine, but who have studied
their specialty in a school of dentistry, and who have been engaged
in the practice of dentistry four years prior to the time of the pro-
nnilgation of this law, shall continue to have such right to practise.
All those who have obtained the right to practise under previous
legislation shall continue to enjoy the right to practise. Persons
without academic degrees, and designated as "dental mechanics"
will only be allowed to work in connection with doctors and dentists
who practise according to the terms of this law."
In regard to Secret Partnerships, Article 83 provides: "The
formation of a partnership by which such a person (dental
mechanic) places himself under the protection of a doctor of medi-
cine who does not practise dentistry, for the purpose of thus prac-
tising in an illegal manner this specialty of medicine, is considered
as a violation of the law, and the offender will be prosecuted. A
doctor who is proven to have conveyed to another by such a secret
understanding, a right which according to the law is absolutely
personal, shall be subjected to a fine of from two hundred to two
thousand lei (francs), and the person who has profited by such a
right, which the law does not recognize as belonging to him, shall be
considered as practising medicine illegally, and shall be prosecuted
according to the terms of Art. 88."
"St. Petersburg, Russia, February 19th, 1912.
"All persons wishing to practise den-
Russia, tistry in Russia are required to produce a
certificate showing that they have grad-
uated from at least six classes of a high school (g}-mnasium), and
must pass their examinations, conducted in the Russian language.
These examinations are held in an Imperial Military Medical Acad-
emy or an Imperial Russian University, and are as follows
"Theoretical: i.—General pathology and pathological anat-
omy. 2.—Phamacology and medical prescription as appHed in the