Beautiful but cheapish medical schools in EU/UK, that teach in English?

2015-12-08 1:21 pm
Currently a high school student in Australia. Love it here, but would like to live in Europe/UK in the future, and I heard it's easier to simply become qualified in the country rather than get qualified then move. Is that true?

I'm looking to pay fairly cheap fees, but I'm also really keen on being in a beautiful sort of city, also fairly lively. My dream would be Scandinavian countries (Norway and Iceland in particular) and England/Ireland. Like, I'd avoid fees that are Oxford overseas applicant level, but I don't want to compromise too much to study for less in a "dodgy" city.

I've heard of Zurichs and Karolinska Institutet, but would like more info on them, too.

Thanks so much!

btw, I follow the ATAR course... I'm unsure if universities would accept such qualifications, but I figured I could always email some enquiries... is that too unrealistic?

回答 (4)

2016-05-31 7:40 am
1
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2015-12-08 1:34 pm
Cheapish is a relative term, you need to say what you can afford. All countries train their doctors in their own language except for a few cowboy colleges in Eastern Europe that offer the MBBS in English to foreign students almost all of whom are from India. You can Google for the list but this is going to be a waste of your time and money as you will not be able to complete your training. Think about it; how would you talk to patients or other doctors without the language? You would need to go back to Australia for your residency and they will absolutely not accept your degree as valid.

UK and Ireland offer a high quality medical training in English but it is not cheap for an international student as it costs a lot to train a doctor. Also very tough to get in. You will find that the further you get from London the cheaper they are. The cheapest of all is to study and qualify in Australia. Once you are a fully qualified doctor in Australia, you will be able to get a work permit in the UK as we have reciprocal training recongnition.
2015-12-08 3:02 pm
English speaking countries teach medicine in English.

The UK and Ireland are not cheap; and by studying in either country, you cannot actually stay, but would be returning to Australia on graduation.
2015-12-08 2:49 pm
IF you are Australian citizen, earn your MD (not mbbs) in Australia! MD is the better degree, Australia is upgrading qualifications, and other countries are bound to upgrade requirements as this is an international trend underway.

1. You will NOT remain to practice medicine in the country where you go to school. You need to return to your own country to do your practical post-degree training. Medicine is no longer a way to immigrate anywhere - unless you want to serve an impoverished population in a seriously less-developed country where they desperately need your skills.
2. You must be fluent in the language of the country where you go to school. Not conversational fluency, but very high academic-technical level fluency! How did you expect to communicate with doctors, staff, patients when doing hospital rotations as a med student?
3. The only English-language med schools (outside UK) in Europe are the cheap-o diploma mill schools in Ukraine, etc, with an almost exclusively Indian & South Asian student body. But graduates cannot even pass India's medical exams to practice in India. Not accredited elsewhere, so total waste of your time & money.


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