A podiatric physician, or podiatrist, (North American English), is a podiatric professional, a person devoted to the study and medical treatment of disorders of the foot, ankle and lower extremity by all systems and means.
In the United States and much of Canada, podiatrists have a Doctors of Podiatric Medicine and Surgery (D.P.M.) degree. To achieve this degree, podiatrists have four years of undergraduate university training with an emphasis in the basic sciences, followed by four years of medical training in a school of podiatric medicine. Hosptial rotations in a wide variety of disciplines are conducted in the 2nd through 4th years. In the United States and much of Canada, additional residency training is required for state and provincial licensing. Residency programs are typically two or three years. Some podiatrists also pursue additional fellowship training in a subspecialty.
A chiropodist (British English) is a term for an individual trained in the British system or in the British tradition. Training varies by country, but is most commonly a bachelor degree. In some jurisdictions, individuals with this training may be called "podiatrists" even though the training level differs from that in the U.S. system.
=Canada=
In Canada the situation is a mixture of the U.S. and British sytems. For instance, in some provinces like British Columbia and Alberta, the standards is the same Doctor of Podiatric Medicine (D.P.M.) level as in the United States. Quebec, too, has recently changed to the D.P.M. level of training. In the prairie provinces, the standard has been based on the British model of chiropody, (though practitioners there are called "podiatrists". In the province of Ontario, chiropodists and podiatrists are distinct occupational designations. Ontario chiropodists have a narrower scope of permitted practice than Ontario podiatrists (i.e., limitations on surgical practice). Both occupations are governed by the College of Chiropodists of Ontario. Persons newly licensed in or after July 1993 in Ontario can only be licensed as a chiropodist and cannot be licensed as a podiatrist, regardless of their training. [http://www.ontla.on.ca/hansard/committee_debates/36_parl/session2/justice/j019.htm#P149_33243
In the United States the terms chiropodiat and podiatrist were used interchangeably until the mid-twentieth century when medical training and scope of practice were significantly expanded.
The four year Podiatric Medical School is followed by a residency, which is the hands-on post-doctoral training. This training has varied extensively in the past; however, there are now two standard residencies named Podiatric Medicine and Surgery 2 or 3. These represent the two or three year residency training. Podiatric residents rotate through all main areas of medicine such as Emergency, Pediatric, Internal Medicine, Orthopedic and General Surgery and of course Podiatry -both clinic and surgery. During these rotations, attending physicians train the resident physicians in medicine and surgery. The surgical training varies from forefoot surgery to more complex foot, ankle and leg reconstruction and salvage as well as trauma.
Podiatric physicians may independently diagnose, treat and prescribe medicine and perform surgery for disorders of the foot and in most states the ankle and leg. There are three Board Certification possibilities for Podiatric physicians. First is the Board of Primary Care and Orthopedics which is the nonsurgical Board Certification. The surgical Board Certification is divided into foot surgery and rearfoot/ankle reconstruction surgery. The rearfoot and ankle Board Certification requires at least a three year residency to qualify. All of the Surgical Board Certifications require applicants to submit their surgical cases to the Board committee who heavily scrutinize them. The applicants then take written and oral exams prior to becoming Board Certified. The exams are rigorous and the pass rate reflects the difficulty.
The second use for board certifications is so that organizations such as a hospital medical staff, surgicenter, or HMO can make decisions about the skills of the applicant.
To allow doctors of podiatric medicine (D.P.M.) time to qualify to become diplomates of a board, there is a holding status, board qualified which permits those doctors to practice while waiting to complete the boards. Doctors who have passed their boards may say they are diplomates of the board, are board certified or are certified by a certain board. Those who are awaiting may only call themselves board qualified.
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It uses material from the
"Podiatrist".
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