Content area

Abstract

The Royal Free and University College Medical School (RUMS) is one of the largest medical schools in the UK, with about 350 students per year. Most of the basic science teaching takes place at University College London (UCL), one of the component parts of the School. Student intake largely comprises school leavers, who may have taken a gap year, although an increasing proportion of students have taken a previous degree, or worked, in another discipline. The medical degree, the MBBS, comprises a 5-year course. However, most medical students in the UK take an additional year to study one subject in depth, in pursuit of a Bachelor of Science (BSc) degree, which is termed an intercalated BSc. RUMS, with several other UK schools, has adopted a universal 6-year course, for which all students are required to choose an intercalated BSc. The content and timing of this BSc year has traditionally been a basic science topic studied after the second year or preclinical part of the course. At UCL, anatomy, neurosciences, cell biology, and physiology are especially popular. But increasingly, perhaps because of students' anxieties about the restrictions of training after graduation, more unorthodox choices are being made. Thus, intercalated BScs in medical anthropology and history of medicine are becoming a common choice, and also attract students from other medical schools in the UK.

Details

Title
Introducing medical students to global health issues: A Bachelor of Science degree in international health
Author
Yudkin, John S; Bayley, Olivia; Elnour, Shaima; Willott, Chris; J Jaime Miranda
Pages
822-4
Section
Department of medical education
Publication year
2003
Publication date
Sep 6, 2003
Publisher
Elsevier Limited
ISSN
01406736
e-ISSN
1474547X
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
199024528
Copyright
Copyright Lancet Ltd. Sep 6, 2003