MEDI3000 Medicine 3
Later Year Course
| Offered By | ANU Medical School | ||||||||||||
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| Academic Career | Undergraduate | ||||||||||||
| Course Subject | Medicine | ||||||||||||
| Offered in | First Semester, 2013, Second Semester, 2013, First Semester, 2014, and Second Semester, 2014 | ||||||||||||
| Unit Value | 24 units | ||||||||||||
| Course Description |
MEDI3000 is delivered in two parts over the course of the third year of the MBBS program. Both parts consist of 24 units, and both need to be satisfactorily completed in order to pass. The end of year summative assessment is an integrated examination covering all material presented in the course of third year, building on the first two years of the program. Rotation: Integrated Child and Community Health (ICCH) Rotation: Foundations of Internal Medicine and Surgery (FIMS) The Year 3 terms are designed to immerse students in a clinical environment and to introduce them to the practice of Medicine, Surgery, Community Medicine and Child Health. It builds upon the biomedical foundations of these disciplines and the clinical skills developed in the first two years of the course. The emphasis throughout each term is on self-directed, experiential learning and deep involvement in the day-to-day care of their patients. Students will have clear requirements for attendance, patient clerking and unit involvement. Prior to commencing Year 3, students will be expected to be proficient in the basic skills of history taking and clinical examination. The prolonged attachments will allow them practise in the synthesis of information and the development of concise management plans for their patients. Elements of Population Health, Professionalism and Leadership, Evidence Based Practice and Clinical Skills will be integrated into all parts of each term.
Rural stream Students will have a total of 39 weeks of clinical attachment in a single rural location to allow them to build relationships with the medical, nursing and allied health staff, as well as the wider community to which they are allocated. The rural placement for the year is an opportunity to observe and participate in the provision of health through general practice, specialist care, hospital car and community care. The focus of the curriculum is on general practice, medical and surgical care, paediatric, geriatric, sexual health and Indigenous health. Students will have the opportunity to follow patients with multiple health needs and this experience and learning will contribute to meeting the curriculum requirements of both the Integrated Community and Child Health (ICCH) and Foundations of Internal Medicine and Surgery (FIMS) terms. Throughout Year 3, rural students are required to attend a number of compulsory formal teaching blocks, and will not be expected to attend clinical activities during these periods. The terms in Year 3 are designated as follows:
Elements of the vertical themes of Population Health, Professionalism and Leadership, Sciences and Clinical Skills are integral to each term and complemented by additional material from each theme in an overarching program through the year. |
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| Learning Outcomes |
On completion of Integrated Child and Community Health students should: On completion of Foundations of Medicine and Surgery students should:
Additionally, at the end of Year 3 students should be able to:
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| Workload |
The general expectation in Year 3 is a minimum of 6 clinical sessions (4 hour sessions) per week in addition to the structured teaching commitments eg. all day Wednesday. Sometimes attendance of 7-8 sessions a week may be required, in addition to formal teaching. Clinical learning and teaching is different to your more structured experiences in Years 1 and 2. The clinicians you are attached to expect you to be there when they are seeing patients - this may be at an 8 am teaching ward round, or it may be attendance with your rural GP when they are on call at the local hospital. Rural rotations include 7-8 sessions per week in addition to the Wednesday teaching. The rural placement is an immersion in rural practice and where the General Practitioners (GP's) have hospital and after hours commitments. Students will be expected to do after hours work. During Northern Territory placements, students are expected to be involved full-time. |
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| Areas of Interest | Medicine | ||||||||||||
| Eligibility |
Only students offered a place in the ANU Medical School are eligible to enrol. |
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Assumed Knowledge and Required Skills |
All previous courses MEDI1001-1002, MEDI2001-2003.
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The information published on the Study at ANU 2013 website applies to the 2013 academic year only. All information provided on this website replaces the information contained in the Study at ANU 2012 website.




