Why are surgeons address as Mr. instead of Doctor?

(If your answer is going to be "they're addressed as Doctor here" or "if they're a woman...", please don't answer.)
Answers:
In the UK (where I assume we are talking about). The title Mr. be a privilege. So a surgeon would have the honour of having Mr. as their title and not doctor as regular Physician are referred to.

So basically a surgeon starts as Mr. (like most populace are addressed, for a man at least) then is doctor then is Mr. again. And human being mister is a privilege and a privilege the local GP does not have.

A bit odd I would say and other nation just say doctor. Source(s): I am a medical student with a specialist level (Hons. BSc) in Pharmacology. I have interned under two psychiatrists and one neurologist.
and I am
British and American Citizen living contained by Canada
Just to add my 2c to what the above authors mentioned, it's an antediluvian British convention which dates back to when surgeons were trained contained by butcher shops. Those who practiced surgery went through entirely different training many years ago, so there be a distinction between physicians and surgeons in the UK. This is something that still exists in the UK only despite the reality that now, all physicians undergo matching training until it's time for them to specialize.

Surgeons are addressed as "Doctor" in the US.

It's a purely historical convention which has stuck within the UK, but rest-assured, surgeons undergo the same undergraduate training that internists do. It's a convention that's peculiar and unique to the UK.

EDIT: Sorry I expected to say Barber Shops not "Butcher Shops" above, sorry about that.
In the US and Canada, they aren't. It's an old British tradition that dates from the time when medicine and surgery be distinctly different. Surgeons at one time were barbers on the side, and learnt their skills in apprenticeships a bit than medical study. The Hippocratic oath even proscribes physicians performing surgery. On our side of the Atlantic, it's viewed as a quaint and charming little custom, much like driving on the wrong side of the road.
A doctor can be a medical doctor (MD, or BM) or a doctor of philosophy (PhD). The latter is not a medical doctor (though some medical doctors also get PhDs). The medical profession very cleverly expropriated the academic title 'Dr' sometime within the 19C -- it did their social standing and self-image a power of good. Before this, they tended to be called 'physician' and used 'Mr' (read any Austen or Dickens).

A professor may or may not hold either of these qualifications, but usually will.

Yes, there are too frequent of all these designations about -- particularly contained by America, where every lecturer in a university is call 'professor' (this hasn't quite happened in the UK, on the other hand -- though I believe that at least one university is thinking about it). There are far more PhDs about presently than there were 10 or 20 years ago.

Yes, in the UK, surgeons call upon themselves 'Mr', because the medical profession is obsessed with status, and surgeons more than the rest of the profession -- so they have to distinguish themselves from widespread doctors by using 'Mr'.

Yes, the Americans tend to use the designations more than in the UK. If an American has a PhD, they seem to put it after their name at every opportunity. This is regarded as a rather vulgar thing to do within the UK.

One can be Professor Sir John Smith, but not Professor Dr John Smith.
The reason that Surgeons are addressed as Mr, Miss, Ms or Mrs is due to history.

Back surrounded by the 16th century Medicine was advancing, and the need for self able to cut open patients and perform operation was becoming more apparent.
Normal Doctors (those who graduated from the medical school of the time) did not always have the greatest technical prowess next to a blade as surgery was not taught in medical school at that time. So to remedy this, they turned to a profession that had great skill with a blade; Barbers.

At this time, Barbers still shaved people's faces using cut-throat sharp blades, and due to the fine cuts required to shave without cutting they had great prowess near a fine blade. They were called upon by doctors to perform surgeries using their ability with a blade, and so the first surgeons were born. The College of Surgeons was formed, which merged beside the College of Barbers to make the College of Barber-Surgeons.
However, as these Barber-Surgeons had not completed Medical School, they were deem not worthy by their medical peers to use the title of Doctor. They therefore retained their normal prefix, namely Mr.

The reason that surgeons revert backbone to their normal prefix is out of respect and tradition for their Barber Surgeon forefathers. Source(s): Medical Student
5 years of History at school

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