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Introduction Introduction
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Health service changes that had an impact on the public health workforce and the skills it needed Health service changes that had an impact on the public health workforce and the skills it needed
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The health improvement and community development agenda The health improvement and community development agenda
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Early changes within the Faculty of Public Health Medicine to create honorary members from backgrounds other than medicine Early changes within the Faculty of Public Health Medicine to create honorary members from backgrounds other than medicine
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The start of multidisciplinary Masters in Public Health courses in response to demand from those not medically qualified The start of multidisciplinary Masters in Public Health courses in response to demand from those not medically qualified
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Mapping and gathering together the multidisciplinary public health workforce Mapping and gathering together the multidisciplinary public health workforce
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The rise of the national Multidisciplinary Public Health Forum The rise of the national Multidisciplinary Public Health Forum
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The Faculty of Public Health Medicine votes not to extend membership to those from backgrounds other than medicine The Faculty of Public Health Medicine votes not to extend membership to those from backgrounds other than medicine
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A changing climate: the Tripartite Group leading the multidisciplinary public health initiative A changing climate: the Tripartite Group leading the multidisciplinary public health initiative
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New government, new initiatives New government, new initiatives
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The Faculty of Public Health Medicine votes for first-stage acceptance of non-medics The Faculty of Public Health Medicine votes for first-stage acceptance of non-medics
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Three the multidisciplinary public health movement of the 1990s
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Published:July 2014
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Abstract
This chapter charts the start of the quest for recognition of public health practitioners from backgrounds other than medicine. It sets out national processes leading to the establishment of the Tripartite Group and the progress made by lobbying groups such as the Multidisciplinary Public Health Forum in the context of changing government policies which started to favour a move to multidisciplinary public health at senior levels. It includes the initial reaction of the Faculty of Public Health Medicine including creating honorary membership for non-medics, but voting not to admit non-medics as full members through to the 1998 vote for first stage admittance of non-medics via sitting Part I of Faculty examinations. The 1990s also saw the formal start of development opportunities for senior practitioners working in non-medical public health such as opening up Masters in Public Health courses.
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