The students began their academic block at the University on Monday (19 January) before joining clinical teams at Cameron Hospital the following day, marking another milestone in the expanding partnership between NHS Fife and the University of St Andrews.
Ahead of the students’ arrival, Ward 7 at Cameron Hospital has undergone a full refurbishment by NHS Fife’s Medical Education Department, transforming it into a modern, fully equipped education hub. It now has a number of large teaching classrooms, a clinical skills area and a simulated house. This new facility provides students with the opportunity to build practical skills in a safe, realistic environment that mirrors the types of care delivered in community settings.
The MBChB programme, jointly developed by NHS Fife and the University of St Andrews, allows students to complete their full medical degree, including all clinical placements, within Fife for the first time. Previously, students were required to leave the region after their pre‑clinical studies to complete their training elsewhere.
The partnership, formalised in a Memorandum of Understanding signed in 2024, is already delivering significant benefits, including enhanced teaching capacity, expanded research collaboration and increased community involvement in shaping medical education. It also supports NHS Fife’s ambition to continue growing as a teaching and research‑active health board, attracting clinicians, academics and future healthcare professionals to the region.
The first cohort of students on the new MBChB pathway are expected to graduate as fully qualified doctors in 2028. Their training across Fife’s hospitals, GP practices and community settings will play an important role in strengthening the future medical workforce both locally and nationally.