Moritz Meyer and the Medical Board: Preventing Refugee Doctors from Practising Medicine in Victoria, Australia, 1937-1958
http://sites.thomsonreuters.com.au/journals/2018/10/08/journal-of-law-and-medicine-update-vol-26-pt-1/
Posted: 25 Sep 2019
Date Written: October 16, 2018
Abstract
In 1937, the Medical Board of Victoria (the Board) declined to register Moritz Meyer to practise medicine in Victoria, Australia. Meyer was a Jewish doctor who had completed his medical degree in Germany and obtained postgraduate qualifications in Scotland. Meyer successfully challenged the Board’s decision in the Supreme Court of Victoria and the Board’s appeal against that decision to the High Court of Australia was dismissed. In response to Meyer’s victory, the Board, under the influence and together with the British Medical Association, successfully lobbied the Victorian Parliament to prevent doctors from practising medicine in Victoria unless they had completed their studies in Victoria or in a country in which Victorian doctors, by virtue of their registration in Victoria, were entitled to practise medicine. Meyer’s case received substantial press coverage, but historians have referred to it only in passing. This article fills a notable gap in the historiography about this period by illuminating the significance of Meyer’s matter. It analyses the decisions in this case and considers their impact on European doctors who sought refuge in Victoria immediately before, during and after World War II, and on the medical profession and lay community. It then seeks to explain these reactions to Meyer’s matter.
Keywords: history of the regulation of the medical profession; registration to practise medicine; refugee doctors; Medical Board of Victoria
JEL Classification: I,J,K,
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation