What is the difference ?
In an Haushartz studio I go the husband is Dr. blabla, the wife is Frau blabla. Why she is not Dr. Blabla.
Surfing across website of other Praxis I see this mix of Dr. and not Dr.
Hausarzt: some of them have "dr." in front of the name, some not
Re: Hausarzt: some of them have "dr." in front of the name, some not
A Dr. has written a thesis and has gained the qualification 'Doctor'
It could be maths or English or whatever. Or in your case a medical Doctor.
Passing the exams to be allowed to practice medicine in Germany is enough.
Aside:
In the UK I was treated by Dr. Smith. But the consultant surgeon was Mr. Jones.
It could be maths or English or whatever. Or in your case a medical Doctor.
Passing the exams to be allowed to practice medicine in Germany is enough.
Aside:
In the UK I was treated by Dr. Smith. But the consultant surgeon was Mr. Jones.
- Fraufruit
- Posts: 569
- Joined: Sun Feb 18, 2024 9:48 am
- Location: Munich
- Has thanked: 821 times
- Been thanked: 614 times
Re: Hausarzt: some of them have "dr." in front of the name, some not
My Hausarzt is not a doctor. She practices with one, though. No problems. She is great.
In the U.S., one rarely gets seen by a dr. Usually a physician's assistant or some special nurse.
In the U.S., one rarely gets seen by a dr. Usually a physician's assistant or some special nurse.
- pappnase
- Posts: 56
- Joined: Sun Apr 14, 2024 6:34 am
- Location: Bremen
- Has thanked: 39 times
- Been thanked: 84 times
Re: Hausarzt: some of them have "dr." in front of the name, some not
A Hausartz is someone with a license to practice medicine and open a pratice, a "Doctor" is someone with a Doctorate.
They are separate qualifications.
A Hausartz with a doctorate in medicine can call themselves Doctor.
They are separate qualifications.
A Hausartz with a doctorate in medicine can call themselves Doctor.
- Franklan
- Posts: 565
- Joined: Sat Feb 17, 2024 3:37 pm
- Location: Munich
- Has thanked: 528 times
- Been thanked: 763 times
Re: Hausarzt: some of them have "dr." in front of the name, some not
Yes, that's the point. "Dr." is the German equivalence to "PhD" in English.
Somebody has studied medicine to become your "General practitioner" or "Hausarzt". Good. He/she/it might also have done the "PhD" or "Doktor der Medizin", also good; At the end of the day, you decide who's good enough to pull the rusty nail out of your son's foot...
-
- Posts: 106
- Joined: Sun Feb 18, 2024 3:20 pm
- Location: Where Bad Girls live
- Has thanked: 27 times
- Been thanked: 103 times
Re: Hausarzt: some of them have "dr." in front of the name, some not
I’m a retired doctor and it’s true - the German Dr.med. is a purely academic title and not relevant to the practitioner’s qualification to treat you.
The title used to be very important in Germany, but it no longer is a thing.
The title used to be very important in Germany, but it no longer is a thing.
Re: Hausarzt: some of them have "dr." in front of the name, some not
I guess all the confusion for me came from the fact that in Italy, where I come from, you just need to complete your university studies in medicine to be called "Doctor". In the last year actually in order to practice as an Hausartz a degree in medicine is not enough and you have to do an additional 3 years kind-of specialization.
For all the other degrees, you need to complete a PhD in order to use this Dr. title.
For all the other degrees, you need to complete a PhD in order to use this Dr. title.
- pappnase
- Posts: 56
- Joined: Sun Apr 14, 2024 6:34 am
- Location: Bremen
- Has thanked: 39 times
- Been thanked: 84 times
Re: Hausarzt: some of them have "dr." in front of the name, some not
In one direction that is true, no-one cares really if you have a Doctorate but don't use it.
On the other hand using a title you don't have is a criminal offence under § 132a StGB . ( English version *).
*Note the English version is a convenience only and has no legal force.