MBChB Medicine and Surgery
The five-year MBChB equips you with the knowledge, skills and values required for modern medical practice and your future clinical career.
Medicine and Surgery with a Gateway Year
Our Medicine and Surgery with a Gateway Year course offers an accessible entryway into studying Medicine for those with potential to become excellent doctors but who cannot apply for the MBChB programme. If you come from a widening participation background, our course is here to help you achieve your dream of becoming a doctor.
Medicine and Surgery with a Gateway YearOur intake
This is the number of places we have on our Medicine courses for 2025 entry.
Hospital placements
Lancaster Medical School, in conjunction with our partner NHS hospitals, provides you with the opportunity to complete a variety of clinical attachments in local hospitals, including the Royal Lancaster Infirmary (RLI), Furness General Hospital (FGH) in Barrow, Royal Blackburn Hospital, Blackpool Victoria Hospital and Lancashire Care NHS Foundation Trust.
As future doctors, placements provide you with the opportunity to put your academic learning into practice within a clinical environment where there is an emphasis on the importance of understanding your patients’ perspectives and effective patient communication skills.
After your course
The completion of your studies will mark the beginning of your medical career. You will need to apply for a Foundation Year training post in order to achieve a Certificate of Experience, which then enables full registration, and your transformation into a fully-fledged doctor.
At the end of the undergraduate course you will receive your MBChB (or equivalent) degree, which is a primary medical qualification (PMQ). Holding a PMQ entitles you to provisional registration with the General Medical Council, subject only to its acceptance that there are no Fitness to Practise concerns that need consideration. Provisional registration is time limited to a maximum of three years and 30 days (1125 days in total). After this time period your provisional registration will normally expire.
Provisionally registered doctors can only practise in approved Foundation Year 1 posts: the law does not allow provisionally registered doctors to undertake any other type of work. To obtain a Foundation Year 1 post you will need to apply during the final year of your undergraduate course through the UK Foundation Programme Office selection scheme, which allocates these posts to graduates. So far, all suitably qualified UK graduates have found a place on the Foundation Year 1 programme, but this cannot be guaranteed, for instance if there were to be an increased number of competitive applications from non-UK graduates.
Successful completion of the Foundation Year 1 programme is normally achieved within 12 months and is marked by the award of a Certificate of Experience. You will then be eligible to apply for full registration with the General Medical Council. You need full registration with a licence to practise for unsupervised medical practice in the NHS or private practice in the UK.
There is some discussion about whether to remove provisional registration for newly qualified doctors. If this happens then UK graduates will receive full registration as soon as they have successfully completed an MBChB (or equivalent) degree. It should be noted that it is very likely that UK graduates will still need to apply for a training programme similar to the current Foundation Programme and that places on this programme may not be guaranteed for every UK graduate.
The GMC is introducing a Medical Licensing Assessment – the MLA. The MLA will demonstrate that anyone obtaining registration with a licence to practise medicine in the UK has met a common threshold for safe practice. To obtain a PMQ, graduates from 2024 onwards will need to have a degree that includes a pass in both parts of the MLA. One part will be a test of applied knowledge (the AKT), set by the Medical Schools Council working on behalf of all UK medical schools and held at your medical school. The GMC will quality assure the AKT and all medical schools will be asked to meet requirements around the design and delivery of the AKT. The other will be an assessment of your clinical and professional skills delivered by your medical school (the CPSA). Each school’s CPSA must meet GMC set quality assurance requirements. The MLA will test what doctors are likely to encounter in early practice and what’s essential for safe practice. It intentionally will not cover the whole of a medical school curriculum. So, you will also need to meet your university’s degree requirements. You can find out more about the MLA for UK students at www.gmc-uk.org/mla.
Although this information is currently correct, students need to be aware that regulations in this area may change from time to time.