Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
3.1 Hong Kong. 3.2 India. 3.3 Sri Lanka. 4 Africa. ... Seychelles Medical and Dental Council; Europe ... Contact Wikipedia; Code of Conduct; Developers;
Dental Council may refer to: Dental Council of India, a 1948 establishment; General Dental Council, a United Kingdom organisation which regulates all dental professionals in the country; Orthodontic Technicians Association Council, the governing body of the Orthodontic Technicians Association; Pakistan Medical and Dental Council, a Pakistan ...
Under the Pharmacy and Poisons Ordinance (Chapter 138), the Department of Health's Drug Office is responsible for drug registration in Hong Kong. All drugs sold in Hong Kong are required to be registered with a number, which consists of the prefix 'HK' followed by five digits (e.g. HK-05628).
The district has the second highest population in Hong Kong, after Sha Tin District, while the income is below average. [4] Kwun Tong District borders Sai Kung District to the east, Wong Tai Sin District to the north, and Kowloon City District to the west. To the south is Victoria Harbour, and the Eastern District directly across on Hong Kong ...
Hong Kong is administratively divided into 18 districts. Each district has a district council . District councils was formerly called district boards, for which the boards were established in 1982, [ 1 ] when Hong Kong was under British rule .
The Prince Philip Dental Hospital (PPDH) (Chinese: 菲臘牙科醫院) is a dental teaching hospital in Sai Ying Pun, Hong Kong. It houses the Faculty of Dentistry of the University of Hong Kong and is governed by the Prince Philip Dental Hospital Ordinance.
Under the Community Involvement Plan, launched in the early 1970s, Hong Kong and Kowloon were divided into 74 areas, each of around 45,000 people. For each, an ' area committee ' of twenty members was then appointed by the city district officers, and was comprised, for the first time, of members from all sectors of the local community, led by ...
The HKMLE is occasionally referred to by its official name the Licensing Examination of the Medical Council of Hong Kong. Candidates for the HKMLE are supported by an independent, non-profit professional body, known as the Licentiate Society. Graduates of local medical schools in Hong Kong, i.e., HKU and CUHK, are currently exempt from the HKMLE.