School of Clinical Medicine, University of Cambridge
Medical school of the University of Cambridge From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Medical school of the University of Cambridge From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The School of Clinical Medicine is the medical school of the University of Cambridge in England. The medical school is considered as being one of the most prestigious in the world, ranking as 1st in The Complete University Guide,[1] followed by Oxford University Medical School, Harvard Medical School, and Stanford School of Medicine and 2nd in the world in the 2023 Times Higher Education Ranking.[2] The Cambridge Graduate Course in Medicine (A101) is the most competitive course offered by the University and in the UK, and is among the most competitive medical programs for entry in the world.[3] The school is located alongside Addenbrooke's Hospital and other institutions in multiple buildings across the Cambridge Biomedical Campus.[4]
Type | Medical school |
---|---|
Established | 1540, re-established in 1976 |
Parent institution | University of Cambridge |
Dean | Paul Wilkinson |
Students | ~270 per year (A100); ~40 per year (A101) |
Location | , 52.176°N 0.142°E |
Website | www |
The Clinical School offers the A100 six-year standard course (accepting approximately 280 students each year) or the A101 accelerated graduate course (accepting approximately 40 students each year). Admission is extremely competitive, with the offered courses having among the lowest acceptance rates in the university. Around 10% of applicants were accepted to the A100 standard course for 2022 entry, with 22 places for overseas fee-status applicants.[5] Around 3% of applicants were accepted to the A101 graduate course in 2023.[3]
On the standard A100 course, students typically enter the clinical school on completion of three years of pre-clinical training.[6] Approximately half of clinical training in Cambridge takes place at the Cambridge Biomedical Campus, with the other half located in regional hospitals and general practices across the east of England.[6]
The accelerated A101 Graduate Entry Course leads to the award of MB BChir (Doctor of Medicine and Doctor of Surgery) in 4 years, with approximately 40 students in each cohort. This course is designed for those who already hold bachelor's degrees. This course has an intensive 2–year component with a mix of pre-clinical and clinical teaching, students attend the same lectures and practicals as 1st and 2nd year A100 students during the 8 week terms. They complete the Year 4 placements in the holidays and sit both the A100 2nd year and 4th year exams in the second year of their course. Then the cohort integrates with A100 students in their 5th year for the final two years of the course.
The Clinical School was established in 1976 while construction of the new building at its present site was underway.[7] The clinical course was restructured in 2005 with the addition of a new final year, as the clinical course had previously been less than three years in length.[citation needed] Before 2017, approximately half of medical students left Cambridge after the pre-clinical course as there were not enough places on the clinical course for them all; common destinations included medical schools based in Oxford, London and Manchester. From 2017, all medical students continue to study in Cambridge for the full six years provided they pass the pre-clinical component of the course.[8][9]
Students enter the clinical course at Cambridge following satisfactory progression during the pre-clinical component of the combined medical course[10] or as part of the graduate course.[3]
The Herchel Smith Laboratory for Medicinal Chemistry is a laboratory under the aegis of the Regius Professor of Physic in the School of Clinical Medicine.
The teaching of medicine at the University of Cambridge dates back to 1540 when Henry VIII endowed the University’s first Professorship of Physic, Dr John Blyth.[11] In 1842, George Paget, the famous physician, into his third year at Addenbrooke’s Hospital, pioneered bedside examinations.[12]
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