The study of medicine varies greatly around the world: In the United States, medicine is taught in graduate school after completing a degree not directly related to medicine.
Elsewhere, such as in the UK, students can enroll in undergraduate courses.
But wherever you study medicine, clinical degrees span nearly a fair number of years, more than non-clinical courses.
So it’s best to make sure you make a wise decision when you’re engaging in a long course of study.
The Universities of Oxford and Cambridge are at the top of the ranking drawn up by “Times higher education”, reviewed by Al Arabiya.net, which results as follows:
University of Oxford in the UK, where medicine is in this university, a traditional course divided into pre-clinical stages and clinical stages.
Approximately 150 undergraduate-level students are accepted each year, and a further 30 students are admitted to the postgraduate course, which intensifies medical studies in just 4 years.
For the first few years, students are taught theoretically with little patient contact.
In the final years of the study, they transition into the clinical stage and spend significantly more time at John Radcliffe Hospital.
As for second place, Cambridge University in the United Kingdom also came, followed by Harvard in the United States, then Imperial College in the United Kingdom, and then the Chinese University of Chenghua, so that the American Stanford University finished in sixth place.
The Canadian University of Toronto came in seventh place, then UCL University in the United Kingdom came in eighth place, followed by the American Yale University and Kings College London University in tenth place.
While the best Arab university to study medicine was King Abdulaziz University in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, which ranked 94th in the world, followed by Imam Muhammad bin Saud University in the Arab world, which ranked 101st in the world.