Medical education
In modern times, regulation of the medical profession includes legal licensure to practice medicine in most countries. Part of being able to qualify for such a license involves meeting certain achievement standards in medical education. Usually those standards are met by having some sort of "medical degree" that is obtained in an accredited professional school. Those degrees, and the requirements for obtaining them, are different depending on region.
Often, again depending on region, there is more to having a license to practice medicine than simply having met the educational standard. Besides a degree or certificate granted after a course of formal study, licensure also requires completion of some sort of clinical "apprenticeship", as well as passing grades on one or more national tests- in most areas of the developed world. In some countries, there are still additional requirements in order to practice specialties within medicine. In some countries, there is more than one type of medical degree, depending on the type and extent of medical education.
This article summarizes the medical education required to obtain a degree or certificate sufficient to meet the educational requirements for licensure -according to major region. Regions in which most of the world's physicians are educated, and in which medical education has taken a global leadership role, are emphasized.
Africa
Australia
Asia
Europe
North America
Canada
Most medical schools in Canada require at least three years of postsecondary education towards a bachelor's degree prior to admission although the majority of entrants hold at least a bachelor's degree, usually in the sciences. The most notable exception to this is at McGill University, where a subset of the entering class are accepted directly after completion of CEGEP.
Schools typically admit applicants based on their undergraduate record (GPA), personal statement, MCAT score, non-academic (extracurricular) score, and interview.
Medical school in Canada is usually four years in length although McMaster University and the University of Calgary offer accelerated programs which run three years in total. Students in the first two years cover basic sciences such as anatomy, physiology, immunology and pharmacology and are given preliminary clinical exposure. Education is delivered through traditional lectures and small group learning, including problem-based learning. Years 3 and 4 are known as the clinical years or the clerkship, in which students learn in a hospital-based setting through clinical rotations in such fields as Internal Medicine, Emergency Medicine, Surgery and Pediatrics.
At the end of Year 4, students enter the Canadian Resident Matching Service (CaRMS) and are matched to a speciality and location depending on their particular preferences. Students typically graduate with the title Doctor of Medicine (MD).
Postgraduate training, or residency, varies in length from two years (such as in Family Medicine) to six years (such as in General Surgery). Most residency programs last about five years.
To receive full certification, physicians must be certified as a Licentiate of the Medical Council of Canada (LMCC) by completing the Medical Council of Canada Qualifying Exam (MCCQE) Part I at the end of Year 4 and the MCCQE Part II at the end of PGY-1. Furthermore, they must receive certification from an appropriate certifying body: The College of Family Physicians of Canada (CFPC) for family physicians and the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada (RCPSC) for specialists.
Finally, physicians must register with the appropriate regulating body to be eligible to practise in a particular province. For example, physicians wishing to practise in British Columbia must register with the College of Physicians and Surgeons of British Columbia (CPSBC).