Patient-Centered Education
Students learn to see the patient as a person, combining diagnosis, communication, empathy and ethical responsibility in every clinical decision.
A comprehensive six-year medical program preparing future physicians through biomedical sciences, simulation, hospital-based clinical practice, research thinking and ethical patient care.
The Faculty of General Medicine is the core clinical faculty of TSMU Chirchik Branch. It connects foundational biomedical sciences with practical training, simulation learning, hospital rotations and student research.
Students develop clinical reasoning, patient communication, ethical decision-making and professional responsibility through a structured academic pathway.
The General Medicine faculty is designed to develop doctors who understand the science of the human body, the realities of patient care, and the responsibilities of modern healthcare systems.
Students learn to see the patient as a person, combining diagnosis, communication, empathy and ethical responsibility in every clinical decision.
Anatomy, physiology, biochemistry, pathology, pharmacology and clinical disciplines are connected through cases and practical learning.
Students practice history taking, physical examination, differential diagnosis, investigation planning and evidence-based treatment thinking.
The program emphasizes confidentiality, respect, academic integrity, teamwork, patient safety and responsibility to society.
By graduation, students should be ready to continue clinical training and contribute to healthcare teams with confidence and professionalism.
Understand normal structure and function, disease mechanisms, diagnostics, treatment principles and prevention.
Perform patient interviews, physical examinations, basic procedures, emergency response and documentation under supervision.
Communicate clearly with patients, families, peers and healthcare teams in professional and culturally sensitive ways.
Read scientific literature, understand research methods, interpret data and participate in student scientific projects.
Recognize prevention, epidemiology, health promotion, community medicine and healthcare system responsibilities.
Develop habits of continuous learning, reflection, self-assessment and professional improvement.
Dean, Faculty of General Medicine
Responsible for academic quality, clinical partnerships, faculty development, student advising and research culture.
Contact Dean OfficeThe faculty mission is to educate future physicians who combine strong scientific knowledge, clinical competence, empathy, professionalism and commitment to community health.
To become a respected clinical faculty in Central Asia known for quality medical education and healthcare leadership.
Graduates are prepared for clinical practice, internship, residency pathways, research and public health roles.
The faculty combines classical medical education with active, practical and technology-supported methods.
Core concepts are introduced through structured lectures and deepened through small-group seminars.
Clinical cases help students connect scientific theory with real patient problems.
Skills are practiced safely before students move into clinical settings.
Senior students learn through supervised patient interaction and clinical discussion.
Students build practical understanding in anatomy, histology, biochemistry, microbiology and pathology labs.
Digital resources, presentations and online materials support independent learning.
Students present clinical cases to develop reasoning, communication and evidence-based thinking.
Faculty members and clinical mentors guide students through regular feedback and advising.
Each year builds medical knowledge, professional behavior and practical competence.
Anatomy, histology, biology, medical chemistry, Latin and communication basics.
Physiology, biochemistry, microbiology, immunology and early clinical orientation.
Pathology, pharmacology, diagnostics, propedeutics and simulation practice.
Internal medicine, surgery, pediatrics, obstetrics and clinical case learning.
Advanced clinical rotations, emergency care, public health and elective modules.
Internship-style clinical practice, graduation assessment and career preparation.
The curriculum gradually increases clinical responsibility while reinforcing medical science and professional skills.
| Stage | Main Learning Areas | Practical Focus | Expected Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Preclinical Foundation | Anatomy, histology, biology, chemistry, physiology and biochemistry. | Laboratory safety, microscopy, anatomy models and academic study skills. | Understand normal body structure, function and scientific foundations. |
| Pathology and Diagnostics | Pathology, microbiology, pharmacology, diagnostics and propedeutics. | Case analysis, diagnostic logic, simulation and first patient communication skills. | Explain disease mechanisms and begin structured clinical thinking. |
| Core Clinical Training | Internal medicine, surgery, pediatrics, obstetrics, emergency care and public health. | Hospital rounds, patient history, examination, case presentation and clinical documentation. | Apply medical knowledge to patient care under supervision. |
| Advanced Clinical Practice | Specialty rotations, electives, emergency medicine, community health and graduation preparation. | Clinical decision-making, teamwork, OSCE, logbooks and final assessments. | Prepare for internship, residency and professional clinical development. |
| # | Department | Academic Activity |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Anatomy and Histology | Gross anatomy, morphology, histology, microscopy and anatomical museum practice. |
| 2 | Biochemistry and Molecular Medicine | Metabolism, molecular pathways, laboratory diagnostics and practical lab work. |
| 3 | Physiology and Pathophysiology | Human body systems, mechanisms of disease and case-based learning. |
| 4 | Internal Medicine | Diagnostics, therapy, bedside teaching, clinical reasoning and patient care. |
| 5 | Surgery and Emergency Medicine | Surgical principles, trauma response, emergency care and simulation training. |
| 6 | Public Health and Epidemiology | Prevention, community medicine, biostatistics and healthcare management. |
Students progress from skills labs to supervised clinical rotations in partner hospitals and community health settings.
Supervised bedside learning and real clinical exposure.
Patient examination, procedures, communication and documentation.
Structured clinical examinations and practical skills assessment.
Clinical mentors guide students through professional growth.
Clinical rotations are designed to expose students to common diseases, emergency situations, prevention, teamwork and patient-centered communication.
Cardiology, pulmonology, gastroenterology, endocrinology and chronic disease management.
Preoperative assessment, surgical principles, wound care, asepsis and emergency surgical conditions.
Child health, growth, vaccination, common pediatric diseases and family communication.
Maternal health, reproductive medicine, antenatal care and women’s health basics.
Initial assessment, triage, CPR, trauma response and urgent clinical decision-making.
Community medicine, prevention, epidemiology, screening and health education.
Assessment is designed to measure knowledge, practical skills, professional behavior and readiness for supervised clinical responsibilities.
Graduates can continue into internship and residency pathways, hospital practice, postgraduate study, public health, research, academic medicine, healthcare administration and international licensing preparation depending on destination requirements.
Internal medicine, surgery, pediatrics, emergency care, family medicine and other specialties.
Medical research, teaching assistantships, postgraduate programs and scientific projects.
Research circles, clinical case discussions and poster presentations.
Student research conferences, faculty seminars and innovation days.
Abstracts, case reports, literature reviews and supervised research papers.
Common questions about duration, clinical practice, research and admissions.
The General Medicine pathway is designed as a six-year medical education program.
Yes. Students complete supervised clinical learning and rotations in partner hospitals.
Yes. Laboratory practice, simulation rooms and OSCE-style skills training support practical learning.
Yes. International applicants can apply through the online application portal and receive International Office support.
Medical education is challenging, so the faculty supports students academically, professionally and personally.
Students receive guidance on academic progress, study planning and remediation.
Hospital mentors help students understand patient care and professional behavior.
Faculty members guide students in scientific clubs, abstracts and research projects.
Students receive information about postgraduate pathways, licensing preparation and professional development.
Join a modern medical faculty focused on academic excellence, clinical responsibility and global healthcare impact.