UK Primary Care Observership
Four weeks inside NHS general practice
Structured clinical observership placements with UK GP teaching surgeries — for international medical schools, their senior students, and international medical graduates. Curriculum-mapped, NHS-conformant, and delivered within the GMC framework for clinical observation.
Reviewed and kept current
Last editorial review: 7 June 2026 · Next scheduled refresh: 1 September 2026.
Each route has its own pathway, documents and scope
For students
Year 5 / Year 6 international medical students — what to expect, week by week, and how to apply through your school.
🏛For medical schools
Commission a cohort under a Memorandum of Understanding; ECTS positioning; fee mechanics.
🏥For GP teaching surgeries
Host students in Hertfordshire or Essex; supervisor role, induction and payment flow.
📋The curriculum
Competency domains, learning outcomes, the logbook, and the Monday seminar in full.
Academic Mondays, clinical Tuesday to Friday
One full-day academic seminar plus four clinical days, each week, for four weeks — twenty learning days in total.
| Week | Monday · all-day seminar | Tuesday–Friday · clinical observation |
|---|---|---|
| Week 1 | UK training pathways & IMG routes | Induction (Tue) · 12–14 sessions + audit + self-directed learning |
| Week 2 | Orientation to the UKMLA Applied Knowledge Test format | Chronic-disease clinics · QOF-aligned reviews · audit progress |
| Week 3 | Orientation to the UKMLA Clinical & Professional Skills (CPSA) format + simulation | Referral processes · MDT exposure · first audit cycle closes |
| Week 4 | Public-health essentials | Synthesis · audit presentation at a practice meeting · end of placement |
Mondays 09:00–17:00 · Tuesday–Friday 09:00–12:00 and 14:00–17:00. The Hertfordshire cohort is led in person by Prof Rajesh Varma; the Essex cohort by the Essex Medical Society academic team. The Monday seminar gives orientation to the UKMLA AKT and CPSA format; MD Acumen does not formally offer PLAB 1 or PLAB 2 training courses. For individualised consultation-skills feedback and a refresher of UK clinical-management scenarios, see the Clinical Consultation Day (22 August 2026).
Two cohorts · 48 seats each
UK GP surgeries operate year-round; partner universities needing a non-standard cohort window are welcome to discuss alternative scheduling.
Documented, portable outputs
Certificate of Completion
Issued by MD Acumen Ltd, signed by Prof Rajesh Varma and the Essex Clinical Lead — recording the four-week placement, host surgery, dates and satisfactory completion. Available to every student.
Certificate of QI Activity (optional)
Where you complete a closed-loop audit and present it at a practice meeting, the host surgery signs a separate Certificate of QI Activity — an accepted portfolio artefact for UK specialty training. See Acumen Ascent →
A standardised logbook records every session — supervisor signature with GMC/NMC pin, a satisfactory/unsatisfactory rating, and your reflection — aligned to GMC and Medical Schools Council UK standards. ECTS (indicatively 4–6) is decided and awarded by your home medical school, the sole examining authority; we are the teaching authority.
Applications go through your home medical school
Direct individual applications aren't accepted — the MOU framework requires your university to confirm your suitability and the fee before placement allocation.
Confirm your school is a partner
Ask your international office whether your school holds (or will seek) an MOU with MD Acumen.
Apply through your university
Your school manages eligibility, any shortlisting, and the offer, set against the July or November windows.
Pay the fee to your university
The ~£2,800 fee is paid to your home university, then forwarded to the host surgery under the MOU.
Complete four pre-arrival items
Valid UK visa, occupational-health clearance, observership-grade indemnity, and a signed confidentiality undertaking.
Placement allocation & arrival
You receive your host surgery, lead supervisor and induction details. Day 1 is the host-surgery induction.
The observership boundary. You observe consultations, procedures and diagnostics, attend MDT and audit meetings, shadow the team, and undertake a supervised audit. You do not take histories or examine independently, perform procedures, prescribe, or document under your own credentials — the boundary protects you, your indemnity and the host clinician.
Status & next steps
The programme is in active delivery with pilot cohorts through 2026–27. Programme-level questions receive a personal response from Prof Rajesh Varma.
© 2026 MD Acumen Ltd · Acumen Institute of Primary Care · An MD Acumen school · Registered in England and Wales · 16538952For students · For medical schools · For host surgeries · Curriculum · Legal & Regulatory · enquiry@mdacumen.com
