2211 Generalist Medical Practitioners
Generalist medical practitioners (including family and primary care doctors) diagnose, treat and prevent illness, disease, injury and other physical and mental impairments and maintain general health in humans through application of the principles and procedures of modern medicine. They do not limit their practice to certain disease categories or methods of treatment, and may assume responsibility for the provision of continuing and comprehensive medical care to individuals, families and communities. Tasks include - (a) conducting physical examinations of patients and interviewing them and their families to determine their health status; (b) ordering laboratory tests, X-rays and other diagnostic procedures and analysing findings to determine the nature of disorders or illnesses; (c) providing continuing medical care for patients including prescribing, administering, counselling on and monitoring curative treatments and preventive measures; (d) performing surgery and other clinical procedures; (e) advising individuals, families and communities on health, nutrition and lifestyle which aid prevention or treatment of disease and disorders; (f) providing referrals to patients and families for specialized care in hospitals, rehabilitation centres or other types of health care centres; (g) identifying, managing and providing referrals for complications before, during and after childbirth; (h) recording patients’ medical information and history and exchanging information with specialist practitioners and other health workers as required for continuing medical care; (i) reporting births, deaths and notifiable diseases to government authorities to meet legal and professional requirements; (j) conducting research in human health and medical services and disseminating the findings such as through scientific reports; (k) planning and participating in programmes designed to prevent the occurrence and spread of common diseases. Examples of the occupations classified here: - District medical doctor-therapist - Family medical practitioner - General practitioner - Medical doctor (general) - Medical officer (general) - Physician (general) - Primary health care physician - Resident medical officer specializing in general practice Some related occupations classified elsewhere: - Psychiatrist - 2212 - Specialist physician - 212 - Surgeon - 2212 - Clinical officer (paramedical) - 2240 - Feldscher - 2240 Notes Occupations included in this unit group require completion of a university-level degree in basic medical education plus postgraduate clinical training or equivalent for competent performance. Medical interns or residents who have completed their university education in basic medical education and are undertaking postgraduate clinical training in general medicine without any area of specialization are included here. Although in some countries ‘general practice’ and 'family medicine' may be considered as medical specializations, these occupations should always be classified here.
Where 2211 sits in the ISCO-08 hierarchy
- >2 Professionals
- >>22 Health Professionals
- >>>221 Medical Doctors
- >>>>2211 Generalist Medical Practitioners
- >>>>2211 Generalist Medical Practitioners
2211 in other classification systems
Equivalent and related codes across 1 other system. Click any code to see its full definition, hierarchy, and crosswalks.
Other ISCO-08 codes under 2211 Generalist Medical Practitioners
Frequently asked questions
- What is ISCO-08 2211?
- ISCO-08 2211 is "Generalist Medical Practitioners". Generalist medical practitioners (including family and primary care doctors) diagnose, treat and prevent illness, disease, injury and other physical and mental impairments and maintain general health in humans through application of the principles and procedures of modern medicine. They do not limit their practice to certain disease categories or methods of treatment, and may assume responsibility for the provision of continuing and comprehensive medical care to individuals, families and communities. Tasks include - (a) conducting physical examinations of patients and interviewing them and their families to determine their health status; (b) ordering laboratory tests, X-rays and other diagnostic procedures and analysing findings to determine the nature of disorders or illnesses; (c) providing continuing medical care for patients including prescribing, administering, counselling on and monitoring curative treatments and preventive measures; (d) performing surgery and other clinical procedures; (e) advising individuals, families and communities on health, nutrition and lifestyle which aid prevention or treatment of disease and disorders; (f) providing referrals to patients and families for specialized care in hospitals, rehabilitation centres or other types of health care centres; (g) identifying, managing and providing referrals for complications before, during and after childbirth; (h) recording patients’ medical information and history and exchanging information with specialist practitioners and other health workers as required for continuing medical care; (i) reporting births, deaths and notifiable diseases to government authorities to meet legal and professional requirements; (j) conducting research in human health and medical services and disseminating the findings such as through scientific reports; (k) planning and participating in programmes designed to prevent the occurrence and spread of common diseases. Examples of the occupations classified here: - District medical doctor-therapist - Family medical practitioner - General practitioner - Medical doctor (general) - Medical officer (general) - Physician (general) - Primary health care physician - Resident medical officer specializing in general practice Some related occupations classified elsewhere: - Psychiatrist - 2212 - Specialist physician - 212 - Surgeon - 2212 - Clinical officer (paramedical) - 2240 - Feldscher - 2240 Notes Occupations included in this unit group require completion of a university-level degree in basic medical education plus postgraduate clinical training or equivalent for competent performance. Medical interns or residents who have completed their university education in basic medical education and are undertaking postgraduate clinical training in general medicine without any area of specialization are included here. Although in some countries ‘general practice’ and 'family medicine' may be considered as medical specializations, these occupations should always be classified here.
- How does ISCO-08 2211 map to other classification systems?
- 2211 Generalist Medical Practitioners has equivalents in ESCO Occupations (71f09c8b-a172-408c-b9e7-32e580e39ff6). These crosswalks let you translate this code between ISCO-08 and 1 other classification system.
- What is the parent category of 2211?
- 2211 Generalist Medical Practitioners sits under 2211 Generalist Medical Practitioners in the ISCO-08 hierarchy.
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