News_

First students commence four-year medical degree in Dubbo

27 January 2022
Twenty-four students begin the new Doctor of Medicine - Dubbo stream
The University of Sydney this week welcomed the first cohort of students studying the new full four-year Doctor of Medicine (MD) beginning to end program in Dubbo.

Students in the Dubbo MD stream will study the same world-class University of Sydney MD with the added benefits of living and studying in a regional location while gaining hands-on experience in rural and remote medical practice.

All the students in the first cohort have lived in rural Australia including multiple students who grew up in the Central West and Western NSW regions.

Professor Cheryl Jones, Head of School and Dean of Sydney Medical School, said the University was thrilled to see such high demand for the program.

“We are really encouraged by the interest and are very pleased to welcome our first full cohort of 24 students. These students are in addition to the 234 new students who commenced the program in metropolitan Sydney. The Dubbo Stream students will be a valuable addition to our strong commitment to training rurally committed doctors and other health professionals.

“We know from our previous third and fourth-year placements that many students who study out West develop a love of rural medicine and end up staying – I look forward to seeing the impact this four-year program has on rural healthcare in the region.”

Among the students are Dubbo locals William Anderson and Shray Sinha who were both born and raised in Dubbo and Emily Turnbull who grew up on a farm near Quambone NSW. 

William, Emily and Shray

“I’m looking forward to being able to stay in Dubbo while I complete my medical degree. This is my hometown, I have family, mates, work and my footy club here and it’s great to have the support of all those people while I study,” said William.

“I got to work with cardiologists during my placement as an undergrad in biomedical engineering and always felt they had the resources to help people directly. I knew from there I had to do medicine. I wish to see more doctors working in country areas, and so studying medicine in my hometown will be an exciting journey,” said Shray.  

Emily Turnbull was particularly attracted to the rural focus of the program.

“I’m really excited to be studying in Dubbo, being born and raised on a farm, I’m thrilled with the opportunity to study a program that has a focus on rural medicine. I love living in the country and I’m hoping that when I finish my studies, I’ll be able to come back to my community as a doctor,” said Emily.

The Dubbo stream has been developed under the Australian Government’s Murray-Darling Medical Schools Network (MDMSN).

Professor Mark Arnold, Head of the University’s Rural Clinical School in Dubbo said: “It is really rewarding to see how the efforts of the Sydney Medical School over the past decade have been supported by the Commonwealth with the result that we have welcomed 24 students this week.”

As part of the new program, the School of Rural Health in Dubbo has undergone a $7m expansion with new buildings and state-of-the-art facilities which are nearing completion. The new students will be using the latest in medical education technology including 3D modelling and virtual and augmented reality.

This is the first time students will be able to complete their entire medical degree in Dubbo and builds on the School of Rural Health’s long history of delivering medical education in the Central West. For almost 20 years, nearly 1000 medical students from the University of Sydney have completed the third or fourth year of their degree at the School of Rural Health in Dubbo/Orange.

Related articles