Intended for healthcare professionals

Student A Day in the Life of a Medical Student

A day in the life of a medical student in China

BMJ 2022; 379 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.o2830 (Published 25 November 2022) Cite this as: BMJ 2022;379:o2830
  1. Kun Huang, final year MD candidate
  1. Beijing Children’s Hospital, Capital Medical University, 100045 Beijing, China
  1. aerohit{at}163.com @TimKunHuang

In our series that takes you into the lives of medical students across the globe without leaving your chair, BMJ Student spoke to a medical student in China, who writes about medical education and the impact that the covid-19 pandemic continues to have

Due to the large population, thousands of students in China enrol to study medicine every year.1 Yet their paths through medicine will not all be the same. Each school offers several programmes ranging in length from five years (bachelor’s degree) to seven (master’s degree) or eight years (doctoral degree). There are also postgraduate courses to obtain a master’s or doctorate after a bachelor’s degree.

Just as I have, most students will complete five years of training and obtain a bachelor’s degree before applying for senior degrees. Bachelor degrees involve four years of basic clinical courses followed by a final year of hospital based practice. After that, several years of clinical rotations and research posts are required to obtain a senior degree.

Medical school life

During my first five years, we took basic courses in the classroom and carried out experiments in labs. Some were accompanied by practical exercises, such as anatomical dissection. Because of limited resources, some students …

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