

MBChB Medicine
About this course
Medicine is among the most demanding and most rewarding professions available to a graduate, combining scientific depth with direct and sustained engagement with human suffering and recovery. A medical degree is not simply an academic qualification; it is the beginning of a professional formation that will continue throughout a career. It requires you to master an enormous body of scientific knowledge, to develop precise clinical skills, and to cultivate the judgement and human qualities that effective doctoring demands. Ethics, communication, and the ability to work in complex teams are as central to the curriculum as anatomy and pharmacology. At the University of Edinburgh, this six-year full-time programme includes a year abroad, which is an unusual and valuable feature that exposes you to healthcare systems, clinical presentations, and medical cultures different from those of the UK. Edinburgh's medical school is one of the oldest and most distinguished in the world, and you will be learning in a city with a rich medical heritage and in a university with strong research links across the clinical sciences. The six-year duration reflects the depth of preparation required, with the early years building scientific foundations in subjects including molecular biology, physiology, biochemistry, and anatomy before you move progressively into clinical attachments and patient contact. As the degree progresses, you will rotate through the major clinical specialties, including medicine, surgery, obstetrics, paediatrics, psychiatry, and general practice, developing a broad clinical foundation on which specialisation after graduation can build. The year abroad enriches this formation by placing you in a different healthcare context, testing your adaptability and deepening your understanding of global health. Graduation leads to provisional registration with the General Medical Council and entry into the Foundation Programme, the first two years of postgraduate medical training. From there, doctors progress through specialty or general practice training pathways, a process that typically takes several years and leads to consultant or GP status. Research careers, academic medicine, and roles in public health, global health, and medical education are further destinations for those who wish to contribute to the science as well as the practice of medicine.
Syllabus & Modules
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