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If you have some other agenda, you may want to start another thread, clearly listing your objectives, conditions and your paricular question. We are now in a thread about working conditions in Germany, but this discussion goes in a completely different direction.
So I begin a new thread.
Goal: to attend a medical school in Europe and, eventually, work in Europe as a medical doctor and to earn European citizenship. I’m not dead set on any particular country. I’m not inclined to work or live in the U.S. for various reasons (lack of preventative care, giving drugs for every ailment, the power of the insurance companies, little regulation on GMO foods, etc).
I have done previous research on various countries and their medical education systems:
Ireland: Americans can use Atlantic Bridge to streamline the application process. The requirements are a decent GPA and MCAT. The med school costs rival that of American schools. There are no or few residency/training positions for non-Irish.
UK: Americans take the BMAT. The costs of medical school rival that of American schools. Unknown status of available residency spots for non-EU medical students. The medical system is underfunded and the waiting time for patients is long.
France: Students are required to be proficient in French. The entrance for the first year of medical school is easy, but continuing the studies requires the students to score in the highest 10% of the class. A second big test determines the specialty (surgeon, family practitioner, dentist, etc) The government heavily subsidizes the medical school costs. Mostly favorable news of the medical system. Unknown training availability for non-EU students.
Czech Republic There are Czech-programs and English programs. The English programs fund the universities, and foreign students are given preferential treatment. The Czech students live in a hostile environment. Students in the English program don’t speak Czech, and jeopardize the patients. Has a poor medical system that devalues medical professionals. Unknown costs to foreign students. Unknown training availability for non-EU students.
Germany: Medical school costs heavily subsidized by the government. Knowledge of German is obligatory. Entrance is easier than most. Advanced medical system, but doctors do not get good recompensation and poor working conditions. Students easily enter residency of choice and get training.
Italy: Has recently opened programs for English speakers. Since it is a Catholic country, no access to cadavers for learning. Medical school costs are reasonable. Entrance with visas and paperwork is difficult. Poor job market in general. Unknown status of medical system. Non-Italian students jeopardize patients. Unknown training availability for non-EU students.
Sweden: Knowledge of Swedish is obligatory. Unknown costs of medical school or difficulty of entrance requirements. Unknown availability of training spots for non-EU students.
Norway Knowledge of Norwegian obligatory. Unknown costs of medical school or difficulty of entrance requirements. Unknown availability of training spots for non-EU students.
Belgium: In French Belgium, medical school requirements are similar to that of France. In Flanders, requires knowledge of Dutch and scoring top 10-15% of all students on entrance exam. Unknown costs of medical school or difficulty of entrance requirements. Unknown availability of training spots for non-EU students.
Switzerland: No acceptance of non-EU students into medical school.
Spain: Recent developments in the medical system have decreased the quality for both the medical professional and the patient.
So, in summary, I’m interested in:
1. medical schools that accept non-EU students
2. Give the student the ability to train and work in said country.
3. Allows the student to eventually gain citizenship
4. Is a country that treats its doctors well
5. Has a high standard of living.
I’m open to learning other languages. I’m currently learning French.
Thank you for your feedback!