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This book is a good introduction to a very important subject, little known to most physicians. Written by a former Maryland assistant attorney general, it gives an overview of the history of physician discipline and state medical boards. The legal and political aspects are covered with brevity, clarity, and thoroughness. Medicine, as befits a profession, disciplined itself well into the 1960s, principally through licensing, credentialing, and the award of hospital privileges. As Ameringer points out, the American Medical Association, hardly a radical voice, noted in 1932 that seldom were individual physicians willing "to prosecute a breach of ethics that affects
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