Programmes: PRMEDISIN Cand.med.-degree programme - Autumn 2017




Language of Instruction

Norwegian

Required Learning Outcomes

Knowledge

After completing the programme, the candidates should be capable of:

 

Practical abilities/skills

After completing the programme, the candidates should be capable of:

 

General competence

After completing the programme, the candidates should be capable of:

Demonstrating the ability to reflect on their own behaviour and learning, and taking responsibility for their own further and continuing education in their professional careers.

Study period abroad

The Faculty of Medicine cooperates on student exchanges with many different educational institutions, most of them in Scandinavia and Germany. This cooperation takes place within the framework of permanent networks such as NORDPLUS and ERASMUS+. In the elective semester, you can choose to take the 30-credit course Global Health, which combines tuition in global health theory with a two-month placement in India or another low-income country. Applications for admission to the Global Health course are submitted in the second year of study. Grant schemes are available in connection with all the exchange agreements.

Teaching methods

During the first two years of the programme the main emphasis is on fundamental knowledge about the human body. The first year includes extensive joint tuition for students of medicine, nutrition, and dentistry in the subjects Chemistry, Biochemistry, Cellular biology, Cellular Physiology and Molecular Biology (Basics in Biomedicine). In addition, students study Medical Nomenclature (Latin) and Medical Statistics, attend a series of clinical seminars, study Medical Ethics and Philosophy of Science. The students take a course in Macro Anatomy during the last six weeks of their first year. The second year of the programme deals with the structures and functions of the body and includes courses in Neurobiology, Anatomy, Organ Biochemistry and Physiology.

 

Following completion of the first part of the programme the class of students is divided in two groups; one group continues straight to the clinical unit of the programme, and the second half takes an 'elective semester'.

During the elective semester, students can go on an exchange period abroad, study other subjects or take a break from studying.

 

In the second part of the programme, students learn practical medical work while also receiving theoretical tuition. Clinical instruction emphasises patient-centred teaching in small groups. In addition to Haukeland University Hospital and Haraldsplass Deaconess Hospital in Bergen, some of the clinical tuition will take place at the hospitals in Førde, Haugesund and Stavanger, and in their district psychiatric centres (DPS). During the last year of studies, students have a four-week placement with a GP. They must also write a special assignment by the end of the fifth year of studies. The purpose of this assignment is to give students an opportunity during the medical degree programme to demonstrate that they master scientific thinking and methods and that they can make use of data and literature searches in the medical field, as well as showing that they can express themselves in writing.

Employability

Before candidates can be granted authorisation as medical practitioners, they must complete a total of one and a half years of medical internships in hospitals and in the municipal health service after completing the medical degree programme. They can work as hospital doctors or as GPs in the primary health service. They can also become researchers or teachers.