Or what is the highest position (title) of a doctor?
The title of a doctor in a hospital is this: healer.
General technical secondary school graduates, internship for one year. The following year, I became a formal therapist. From now on, every five years, I will pass the exam instead of the assessment to be promoted to the next level. After 16, you can be promoted to deputy chief physician, but you can't be promoted to chief physician.
By analogy, after one year of graduation practice, the undergraduate will be automatically transferred to the title of doctor, and will be promoted to the next level by passing the examination instead of evaluation every five years. Until he was promoted to chief physician. The problem is that not everyone can be promoted to a higher level every five years, and every promotion requires exams and papers. Those who fail the exam or whose papers do not meet the requirements will not be promoted. Therefore, at retirement age, there are generally not many people who are promoted to chief physicians.
Postgraduates will be automatically transferred to the title of chief physician after one year of internship, and doctoral students will be automatically transferred to the title of deputy chief physician after one year of internship. It can be seen that the higher the education, the greater the possibility of being promoted to the highest title before retirement.
In addition to the professional title, the position of department director is the highest, but the department director is also held by the person with the highest undergraduate title.