Interesting topic and can be talked about in great length. I am currently also a Canadian having studied in the UK medical school (5 years) straight out of high school when I was 18 as an undergrad, now working as a CT1 in the UK. Back then I decided to apply and study abroad in the UK because I knew I wanted to do medicine and at that time didn't want to spend 3-4 years of time and money on a pre-med undergraduate degree which I saw as jumping through unnecessary hoops. However what I recommend some people to realise and consider before studying abroad is what the plan is AFTER med school, specifically in regards to specialty training. What this video did not mention at all is that postgraduate training in the UK is extremely long compared to some other places such as North America. In the UK you compete and continuously relocate and go through multiple interviews for your training as a junior doctor- foundation programme (FPAS), core training, and higher specialty (registrar) training whereas in North America there is (generally speaking) only one postgraduate process (residency matching). Compared to my friends in Canada who went through med school and are also doctors now, they are actually enroute to becoming specialists faster than myself due to the fact that postgraduate training is so much straightforward compared to the UK. Another big point is not all international students are the same and why people decide to study abroad differ. Do you intend to study there with the intention to consider immigration? Or return to your country asap? If it's the former, things are easier. However if it's the latter, throughout medical school you need to begin preparing your way back to your home country (e.g shadowing/observerships, prepping for licensing exams , etc ) I may be generalising, but based on my own observation, undergrads like me tend to continue on specialty training in the UK as we feel we have more time and youth to go through the UK system whereas graduate entry students tend to leave the country afterward and return home for specialty training.
Thank you so much for this comment, it is very informative and I really hope my viewers read this! You're completely right about further training, that's something we didn't cover at all but I will keep this in mind and perhaps make a video in further detail in the future. Also thank you for sharing your story too, I hope your training is going well! :)
@Torvin After the completion of the 5 years how competitive was it to get into foundation year as an international student? I also heard that international students got all the 'leftover' specialties, the ones not picked up by UK/EU students. Is it true? Im 18 and got PR in Canada but I'm not sure if I should go there as I truly want to get into medicine. Uk is also one of my favorite choice, but the studies are quite expensive. After graduating from the 5 year program will I be able to practise in the Uk or eventually settle there? Thanks a lot for reading.☺
Hey Torvin Please help me I'm 16 years old right now in South Africa, and I want to be a doctor in the Uk I have no idea what to do Please give me a detailed guide I would really appreciate it
Hi! I noticed that learning in uk can be expensive especially as an international student EXSPECIALLY medical school, How do you get funding/scholarship? Thank you very much
I got so excited seeing that you posted haha! I've searched for summer internships and such in the UK a couple of times actually, but I always end up backing out from applying because the procedures seem too complicated or I just get in my own head somehow. I'll take applying more seriously now! Thanks for the great video! 👍😊💕
aw haha! I know the process may seem so daunting, but if you can, I would definitely give it a shot, you have nothing to lose and so much to gain! and I wish you all the best! :)
It was a really good interview thanks to you both for the time ans help 😊 . Can international students get any loans so that they can cover the cost of living and/or pay the university fee once they start to work in UK after they finished their studies?
I’m confused about the medical school in the UK, I’m British born and raised but moved to America when I was 16. And I want to move back home only recently I’ve been thinking about studying medicine but I noticed in order to study medicine it starts with an undergrad degree? Whereas in America you get your bachelors then you attend medical school. So that means I’d have to start all over again!? I’m confused
In the US, you get a bachelor’s degree first (undergrad premed) and then apply to medical schools for MD. That’s 4+4 years = 8 years. In the UK, most future doctors get into medical school after high school in the MBBS program which is around 5-6 years long and then become a doctor. However, the UK universities also have graduate medical programs for people who did their undergrad (bachelor’s) first and now want to pursue a career in medicine. Therefore, the time required is same in both countries but the UK has more options and is also cheaper than the US.
Thank you so much for your videos! they're amazing! I wanted to ask if you have any advice on how to prepare for interviews in order to be accepted to a master's program. I found your personal statement video super helpful and I feel like you will have some useful tips for the interview as well.
I have been considering this for years now. But, I've been reading articles about it and they keep advising against going to med school abroad. If I do decide to do this I would stay after graduation and work there. If I being honest I wouldn't go back to the U.S. to practice medicine.
Hello ma'am, according to websites, To appear in the plab exam, The university must be in the list of world Dictionary of medical school. how much is it true?? were your university in the list of dictionary of world medical school. my university is not in the list of world medical school. am i eligible??
Hey Atousa Im from Iran and im 16 years old and I want to immigrate to Uk to study medicine but i actually don’t know how Can u help me with some stuff? I mean did u immigrate from Iran? And if u did how ? Are you ok living in Uk ? and is it costs alot to live there ?
Salam, you should try study A levels preferrably in the UK, sit the medical exam you would like to sit according to your dream medical school and don't sit the Konkour
hey everyone, I hope this been helpful for you! :) I also have a for you to my art store in the description! have a great day xo
Best Medicine in UK ©➢
nutracbdoil.blogspot.com/
__________________________________________>
Lots of people have recovered from various diseases with these drugs.
Has been used in various hospitals in the UK
i know I'm quite randomly asking but does anyone know a good website to watch newly released movies online ?
@Emilio Alfonso Flixportal :)
@Anderson Finnegan thank you, signed up and it seems like they got a lot of movies there :) I appreciate it !!
@Emilio Alfonso glad I could help :D
Thanks for interviewing me Atousa! It was so much fun filming with you 😊
Ditto dude!
And now, he’s got nearly a Million. You’ve done good for yourself my guy.
Interesting topic and can be talked about in great length. I am currently also a Canadian having studied in the UK medical school (5 years) straight out of high school when I was 18 as an undergrad, now working as a CT1 in the UK. Back then I decided to apply and study abroad in the UK because I knew I wanted to do medicine and at that time didn't want to spend 3-4 years of time and money on a pre-med undergraduate degree which I saw as jumping through unnecessary hoops. However what I recommend some people to realise and consider before studying abroad is what the plan is AFTER med school, specifically in regards to specialty training. What this video did not mention at all is that postgraduate training in the UK is extremely long compared to some other places such as North America. In the UK you compete and continuously relocate and go through multiple interviews for your training as a junior doctor- foundation programme (FPAS), core training, and higher specialty (registrar) training whereas in North America there is (generally speaking) only one postgraduate process (residency matching). Compared to my friends in Canada who went through med school and are also doctors now, they are actually enroute to becoming specialists faster than myself due to the fact that postgraduate training is so much straightforward compared to the UK.
Another big point is not all international students are the same and why people decide to study abroad differ. Do you intend to study there with the intention to consider immigration? Or return to your country asap? If it's the former, things are easier. However if it's the latter, throughout medical school you need to begin preparing your way back to your home country (e.g shadowing/observerships, prepping for licensing exams , etc )
I may be generalising, but based on my own observation, undergrads like me tend to continue on specialty training in the UK as we feel we have more time and youth to go through the UK system whereas graduate entry students tend to leave the country afterward and return home for specialty training.
Thank you so much for this comment, it is very informative and I really hope my viewers read this! You're completely right about further training, that's something we didn't cover at all but I will keep this in mind and perhaps make a video in further detail in the future. Also thank you for sharing your story too, I hope your training is going well! :)
@Torvin
After the completion of the 5 years how competitive was it to get into foundation year as an international student?
I also heard that international students got all the 'leftover' specialties, the ones not picked up by UK/EU students.
Is it true?
Im 18 and got PR in Canada but I'm not sure if I should go there as I truly want to get into medicine.
Uk is also one of my favorite choice, but the studies are quite expensive.
After graduating from the 5 year program will I be able to practise in the Uk or eventually settle there?
Thanks a lot for reading.☺
Hey Torvin
Please help me
I'm 16 years old right now in South Africa, and I want to be a doctor in the Uk
I have no idea what to do
Please give me a detailed guide
I would really appreciate it
Hi! I noticed that learning in uk can be expensive especially as an international student EXSPECIALLY medical school, How do you get funding/scholarship? Thank you very much
It’s always cool seeing youtubers I follow collab! I appreciate Nas’s openness 👏
Adnan A 🙏🏻
This video was super relatable!! I applied to UK Medical schools as an international and it was such a daunting process.
Madhumitha Ayyappan it definitely can be but id still say it's with it!
Yay early squad 🎇🎉🎊. Thank you so much Atousa for this video. It's very useful for all international students out there.
This is such an informative video, thank you so much ❤🌻
I got so excited seeing that you posted haha! I've searched for summer internships and such in the UK a couple of times actually, but I always end up backing out from applying because the procedures seem too complicated or I just get in my own head somehow. I'll take applying more seriously now! Thanks for the great video! 👍😊💕
aw haha! I know the process may seem so daunting, but if you can, I would definitely give it a shot, you have nothing to lose and so much to gain! and I wish you all the best! :)
Emmachuu I couldn't have said that better ^ ☺️
I couldn't find the pdf, the link doesn't work. Please, give me a valid link 😔
It was a really good interview thanks to you both for the time ans help 😊 .
Can international students get any loans so that they can cover the cost of living and/or pay the university fee once they start to work in UK after they finished their studies?
I’m confused about the medical school in the UK, I’m British born and raised but moved to America when I was 16. And I want to move back home only recently I’ve been thinking about studying medicine but I noticed in order to study medicine it starts with an undergrad degree? Whereas in America you get your bachelors then you attend medical school. So that means I’d have to start all over again!? I’m confused
In the US, you get a bachelor’s degree first (undergrad premed) and then apply to medical schools for MD. That’s 4+4 years = 8 years. In the UK, most future doctors get into medical school after high school in the MBBS program which is around 5-6 years long and then become a doctor. However, the UK universities also have graduate medical programs for people who did their undergrad (bachelor’s) first and now want to pursue a career in medicine.
Therefore, the time required is same in both countries but the UK has more options and is also cheaper than the US.
That was so fun to see this. Thank u .I got a lot of info . I can't open that useful PDF ,could u please help me with that?
Foreigners have to pay non-subsidised tuition fees and it is very very expensive to study medicine in the UK or any Western country.
Yes very unfortunately this is the case /:
In USA its worster
Thank you so much for your videos! they're amazing! I wanted to ask if you have any advice on how to prepare for interviews in order to be accepted to a master's program. I found your personal statement video super helpful and I feel like you will have some useful tips for the interview as well.
Hi lovely, you are more than welcome :) and yes very good question, I will make a separate video about this soon :)
I have been considering this for years now. But, I've been reading articles about it and they keep advising against going to med school abroad. If I do decide to do this I would stay after graduation and work there. If I being honest I wouldn't go back to the U.S. to practice medicine.
im scared about the fees. Costs so much for me to go do med abroad
Dammb im been a subscribing to you for yearrrrrrrs!!! And im still here lol watching ya
haha yeah, I remember you! seriously long time indeed haha :)
I still don't get why did he do undergrad. It's like wasting 4 years. Can someone explain it to me?
I don't think he got any offers the first time around as explained in one of his videos.
Its not a waste at all! Education is never wasted!
Hello ma'am,
according to websites,
To appear in the plab exam, The university must be in the list of world Dictionary of medical school.
how much is it true??
were your university in the list of dictionary of world medical school.
my university is not in the list of world medical school.
am i eligible??
How does it cost to study medicine in Birmingham university as a international student
And i have a question again 🙄😂
How did u get the scholarship ?
And which university do you study in?
Hey Atousa
Im from Iran and im 16 years old and I want to immigrate to Uk to study medicine but i actually don’t know how
Can u help me with some stuff?
I mean did u immigrate from Iran? And if u did how ?
Are you ok living in Uk ?
and is it costs alot to live there ?
Salam, you should try study A levels preferrably in the UK, sit the medical exam you would like to sit according to your dream medical school and don't sit the Konkour
the pdf link is invalid is there another accessible link?
here ya go mate www.medschools.ac.uk/media/2701/msc-entry-requirements-for-uk-medical-schools-2021.pdf
@@thisisanotheraccount392 even this link does not work. is there a link that works
rename the video title to 'things i hate about london'