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Whom Should We Really Call A “Doctor?”
These days many health professionals use the title “doctor.” Indeed, the Canadian Press Stylebook now decrees that the title of doctor is reserved only for physicians. Physicians, surgeons, dentists, chiropodists, university professors, and in some countries pharmacists…etc. describe themselves as “doctors.” This begs the question: are they? In order to answer this question, one has to examine that title from both linguistic and historical standpoints.
The word doctor is derived from the Latin verb “docere,” meaning to teach, or a scholar. Only by special arrangement do any of the preceding professionals teach. Only university professors with a doctoral degree normally teach at a university. Historically speaking, the title “Doctor” was invented in the middle ages to describe eminent scholars. These doctorates date back to the 1300s. Such people were accorded a lot of respect and prestige.
The Ph.D., or Doctor of Philosophy, is the highest graduate degree awarded by our universities.
Health professionals receive undergraduate degrees in medicine. It is a professional degree, and not really a doctorate. The M.D. degree is not a part of Graduate faculties at North American universities.
It has now become fashionable to award so-called “Doctor of Law” degrees to undergraduate law school graduates in the form of a Juris Doctor or J.D. degree, including at the University of Windsor. These too are merely undergraduate degrees.
Because of the respect and prestige, medical schools particularly in Scotland started to address their graduates as “Doctors” in the 17th Century. The argument was that graduates of such schools obtain a bachelor’s degree before joining medical school. There are problems with such logic; namely, a degree past a bachelor’s degree could potentially be a master’s degree, but not a doctoral degree.
A doctoral degree (Ph.D.) is a degree that one earns after a Master’s degree. A Ph.D. entitles a person to use the title “Doctor.” These are the social and physical scientists who conduct and evaluate published research. A Ph.D. degree is normally obtained after 6 to 8 years of hard work past the bachelor’s degree.
Because of such a confusion, when we are asked in a physician’s or a dentist’s office what kind of doctor we are, we respond: “the real one.” We are the ones who teach the others.
I hope that this contribution helps in clearing up the confusion in the community about the title “Doctor.”
The Canadian Press (CP) should change its policy and stylebook to reflect these facts and this history.
This contribution should not be construed as an attack on any professional or any group of professionals. The main purpose here is to educate the public.
Dr. Abdul-Fattah A. Asfour, Professor Dr. James P. Winter, Professor
Environmental Engineering Communication Media & Film
University of Windsor. University of Windsor.