Navigating medical education abroad involves a unique set of licensing, qualification, and
immigration acronyms. This reference guide covers all the essential terms for Indian students.
- MBBS vs MD
- MBBS (Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery) is the primary medical degree in the UK, Commonwealth,
and Asia (5–6 years, undergraduate entry). MD in the USA and Canada is a postgraduate professional degree (4
years, requires prior bachelor's). In India: MBBS is the primary medical degree. In Europe: varies by country
(6-year integrated Staatsexamen/Medicina/Médecine).
- USMLE (USA)
- United States Medical Licensing Examination. Required for medical practice in the USA. Step 1: basic
sciences (taken during/after 2nd year of MD). Step 2 CK: clinical knowledge (4th year). Step 3: clinical
management (during residency). Indian MBBS graduates can give USMLE via ECFMG certification — the primary
route for Indian doctors wanting USA residency. IMG match rate: ~50%.
- PLAB (UK)
- Professional and Linguistic Assessments Board examination. Required for International Medical Graduates
(IMGs) to obtain GMC (General Medical Council) registration for UK practice. PLAB 1: written MCQ (4
sittings/year). PLAB 2: OSCE clinical assessment. Indian MBBS holders with MCI/NMC-recognised degrees can
appear for PLAB. Alternative: Specialist Registration via CESR route for experienced specialists.
- AMC (Australia)
- Australian Medical Council examination for overseas-trained doctors. AMC Part 1 (MCQ, computer-based). AMC
Part 2 (Clinical Examination, OSCE format). After passing, doctors can apply for Provisional Registration and
begin supervised practice in Australia. Monash Malaysia and NUS Singapore graduates can also apply via
competent authority pathway — bypassing AMC exams entirely.
- MCCQE (Canada)
- Medical Council of Canada Qualifying Examination. Part 1: computer-based multiple choice and short answer
(taken during or after medical school). Part 2: clinical decision-making OSCE. After passing, eligible for
Licentiate of the Medical Council of Canada (LMCC). Indian MBBS holders need NCA (National Assessment
Collaboration) assessment before MCCQE eligibility.
- NMC Screening Test (India)
- National Medical Commission Screening Test — required for Indian citizens who completed their MBBS from a
foreign university before registering to practice in India. Tests knowledge of clinical subjects. Pass rate
has historically been low (~25–30%). Applicants must hold MBBS from an NMC-approved foreign medical school.
Critical planning factor for students intending to return to India after foreign MBBS.
- ECFMG Certification (USA)
- Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates certification — required before an IMG (International
Medical Graduate) can enter USMLE Step 3 and apply for US residency programs via ERAS (Electronic Residency
Application Service). Requires passing USMLE Step 1 and Step 2 CK, plus medical school credential
verification. Essential step for any Indian doctor targeting US medical career.
- ERAS (USA)
- Electronic Residency Application Service — the centralised system for applying to US medical residency
programs. Applications include USMLE scores, MSPE (Dean's letter), letters of recommendation, personal
statement. NRMP (National Resident Matching Program) Match Day in March determines residency placements. Most
competitive specialties (dermatology, radiology, orthopaedics) are nearly impossible for IMGs. Family
medicine, internal medicine, psychiatry more accessible.
- GMC (UK)
- General Medical Council — UK's medical regulator. Provides provisional and full registration for medical
graduates. After UK Foundation Programme (2 years), doctors receive full GMC registration enabling independent
practice. GMC registration is widely recognised internationally — particularly in Commonwealth countries,
Middle East (DHA/HAAD), and across many Commonwealth nations including India (MCI equivalent recognition).
- DHA / DoH / MOH (UAE)
- Dubai Health Authority (DHA) — regulates Dubai. Department of Health Abu Dhabi (DoH, formerly HAAD) —
regulates Abu Dhabi. Ministry of Health and Prevention (MOHAP) — regulates Northern Emirates (Sharjah, Ajman,
etc.). Different licensing examinations for each authority. DHA licensing exam is the most competitive; DOH is
next. Indian MBBS + NMC registration generally qualifies for assessment. UAE is one of the most accessible
healthcare markets for Indian doctors globally.
- Residency / Specialty Training
- Post-graduation supervised clinical training required in virtually every country before independent
practice. Typically 3–5 years for general specialties; 5–7+ years for surgical specialties. Residency is paid
training. In the USA: PGY1 (Intern), PGY2+ (Resident). In UK: Foundation Years 1–2, then Core/Specialist
Training. In India: MD/MS is specialist training. In Australia: Prevocational → Vocational Training through
relevant college (RACP, RACS, RACGP).
- MPH (Master of Public Health)
- A 1–2 year postgraduate degree focused on population health, epidemiology, health policy, and global health.
Does NOT qualify as a clinical medical degree — graduates work in public health agencies, WHO, NGOs, research,
and healthcare management rather than clinical practice. Top MPH programs: Harvard SPH (USA), LSHTM (UK),
Karolinska (Sweden), Johns Hopkins Bloomberg (USA). MPH is an excellent option for Indian MBBS holders who
want global health careers without clinical practice abroad.
- Biomedical Sciences MSc
- A 1–2 year postgraduate science degree covering biochemistry, pharmacology, molecular biology, and
translational medicine. Does NOT qualify as a clinical degree. Graduates work in pharmaceutical industry,
medical research, clinical trials, and biotech. More accessible than MBBS for international students —
available in English at Karolinska, Leiden, Edinburgh, NUS, and other top institutions. Popular choice for
Indian students with BSc backgrounds entering healthcare industry rather than clinical practice.
- IMG (International Medical Graduate)
- A doctor who completed their primary medical degree outside the country where they are seeking to practise.
Indian MBBS = IMG in UK, USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand. IMGs face additional licensing requirements
(PLAB, USMLE, AMC, MCCQE) compared to domestic graduates. IMG matching rates in USA residency: ~50% overall,
with family medicine highest and surgery lowest. Planning the IMG pathway from the beginning of medical
studies significantly improves outcomes.
- F-1 Visa (USA)
- US student visa for full-time degree programs. MD students: 20 hrs/week campus work allowed. OPT
post-graduation: 12 months only (medicine is not STEM). Residency programs (J-1 or H-1B visa): provide visa
sponsorship. J-1 residency visa requires 2-year home country service obligation (waivable in underserved
areas). H-1B for residency avoids home country obligation.
- NEET (India)
- National Eligibility cum Entrance Test — India's centralised medical entrance examination for MBBS and BDS
admissions. ~1.8 million aspirants compete annually for ~100,000 MBBS seats. Government medical college seats
(AIIMS, JIPMER, GMC) require top ranks — fewer than 5% of applicants qualify. High competition drives many
Indian families to consider foreign MBBS — particularly when private Indian MBBS costs (₹60–125L total) now
rival China and Malaysia options.
- Approbation (Germany)
- German medical licence — the right to practice medicine in Germany. Issued by state health authorities after
passing all parts of the Staatsexamen and completing at least 12 months of supervised practice (Famulatur and
Praktisches Jahr). Requires German language proficiency documentation (C1 level). German Approbation is valid
across EU — enabling practice in any EU member state after recognition.