What Is a Medical Specialist? — Training Path, Board Examination, and How It Differs from a General Practitioner
What Is a Medical Specialist? — Training Path, Board Examination, and How It Differs from a General Practitioner
When visiting a hospital, patients often encounter terms such as specialist, general practitioner, resident, or fellow.
But what exactly is a medical specialist, and how is it different from a general practitioner?
This article explains the specialist training process, board examination system, and the key distinctions between specialists and general physicians in Korea.
1️⃣ What Is a Medical Specialist?
A medical specialist is a physician who:
- has obtained a medical license,
- completed an accredited residency training program in a specific department, and
- passed the national specialist board examination (written + oral/clinical).
Once certified, the physician gains official recognition of advanced expertise and can independently provide specialized medical care—for example, Internal Medicine Specialist, General Surgery Specialist, Dermatology Specialist, etc.
2️⃣ The Training Path to Becoming a Specialist
Becoming a specialist requires multiple stages, each building the physician’s clinical skills and knowledge.
(1) Medical School → National Licensing Examination
All future physicians must:
- graduate from a Medical School (MD) or Graduate Medical School (EOM),
- pass the Korean Medical Licensing Examination (written + clinical sections).
Once successful, the physician receives a medical license and becomes a licensed doctor (MD).
(2) Internship and Residency Training
After obtaining a license, physicians enter postgraduate clinical training, known as internship and residency.
🔹 Internship (1 year)
- Rotations through major clinical departments
- Exposure to broad clinical experiences
🔹 Residency (3–4 years)
- Specialized training in a chosen field
- Length differs by specialty
- 3-year programs: Internal Medicine, Pediatrics, Family Medicine
- 4-year programs: Surgery, Radiology, Anesthesiology, etc.
During residency, trainees are called residents or house staff, and they undergo intense supervised clinical training.
(3) Specialist Board Examination
After completing residency, candidates can apply for the specialist exam.
🔹 First Exam (Written)
- Objective, short-answer, or essay-type questions
- Evaluates fundamental knowledge and clinical guidelines
🔹 Second Exam (Oral / Practical / Image Interpretation)
- Case-based oral examination
- Evaluation of radiology & pathology image interpretation
- Assessment of clinical judgment and procedural skills
- Some specialties use OSCE-style practical assessment
Passing both exams leads to official certification.
(4) Specialist Certificate & Registration
Successful candidates receive:
- Specialist Certification from the Ministry of Health and Welfare
- Registration as a board-certified specialist within the corresponding academic society
Specialists can then work in tertiary hospitals, general hospitals, specialized centers, or open private clinics.
3️⃣ Who Is a General Practitioner (GP)?
A general practitioner (GP) is a physician who:
- has completed medical school and passed the national licensing exam
- has not completed residency training or
- has completed residency but has not yet passed the specialist board exam
Characteristics of a General Practitioner
- Performs basic medical examinations, vaccinations, and general outpatient care
- Provides primary healthcare services
- Does not perform highly specialized diagnostics, complex procedures, or advanced specialty treatments
Some experienced GPs may be highly skilled clinically, but they do not hold official specialty certification.
4️⃣ Specialist vs General Practitioner — Key Differences
| Category | General Practitioner (GP) | Specialist |
|---|---|---|
| Qualification | Medical license only | Medical license + specialist certificate |
| Training | Residency not required | Internship + 3–4 years residency |
| Board Exam | Not applicable | Mandatory (written + practical/oral) |
| Scope of Care | Basic primary care | Advanced specialty-specific care |
| Hospital Role | Community clinics, primary care | Tertiary/secondary hospitals, specialized clinics |
Specialists represent a higher level of accredited expertise, particularly for complex or high-risk medical conditions.
5️⃣ How Patients Can Identify Their Doctor’s Role
Hospitals often label physicians by title:
- Professor / Attending / Specialist → Board-certified specialist
- Fellow → Specialist receiving additional subspecialty training
- Resident / Intern → Doctors in training, not yet specialists
Understanding these distinctions helps patients better navigate the healthcare system.
✨ Summary
- A specialist is a physician who completes official residency training and passes Korea’s national specialist board exam.
- A general practitioner is a licensed doctor without specialist certification.
- Specialists provide advanced, high-complexity care; GPs focus on primary care.
- The specialist system enhances safety, quality, and reliability in medical practice.
📚 References
- Ministry of Health and Welfare. Regulations on Specialist Qualification Approval.
- Korean Academy of Medical Sciences. Specialist System Guidelines.
- Korean Hospital Association. Resident Training Rules.
- Korean Medical Association. Specialist Certification Pathway.
- ACGME. Accreditation Requirements for Graduate Medical Education.
