University of Medicine 2, Yangon

University of Medicine 2, Yangon
ဆေးတက္ကသိုလ်၂ ရန်ကုန်
Mottoဥပဌာနံ အနုကမ္မာ ဒယာ
(Pali: upaṭhānaṃ, anukammā, dayā)
Motto in English
Service, Sympathy, Humanity
TypePublic
Established15 July 1963; 61 years ago (15 July 1963)
RectorAye Tun
Students3021 (2018)[1]
Location
16°54′9.36″N 96°9′17.82″E / 16.9026000°N 96.1549500°E / 16.9026000; 96.1549500
AffiliationsMinistry of Health and Sports (Myanmar)
Websitewww.um2ygn.edu.mm

The University of Medicine 2, Yangon (Burmese: ဆေးတက္ကသိုလ်(၂) ရန်ကုန် [sʰé tɛʔkəθò n̥ɪʔ (jàɰ̃ɡòʊɰ̃)]; formerly, Institute of Medicine 2) is a university of medicine, located in North Okkalapa, Yangon, Myanmar. The university offers M.B., B.S. degrees and graduate (diploma, master's and doctoral) degrees in medical science.[2] The university is one of the most selective in the country, and accepts approximately 300 students annually based solely on their University Entrance Examination scores.

University of Medicine 2, Yangon is one of five medical schools in Burma recognized by the Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates.[3]

History

The university was opened initially in Mingaladon in the outskirts of Yangon as Medical College 2, as an affiliated college of Yangon University on 15 July 1963. The college became Institute of Medicine 2, an independent university per the University Act of 1964. The Institutes of Medicine were transferred to the Ministry of Health from the Ministry of Education on 1 October 1973 and were supervised by the Department of Medical Education. The Department of Medical Education is now designated as the Department of Medical Sciences as the production of all categories of human resources for health come under its jurisdiction. The institute was moved to the present campus in North Okkalapa on 25 September 1996 and is now situated approximately 12 miles (19 km) from downtown Yangon.[4]

In 1963, the 1000-bed Defence Services General Hospital[5] was affiliated as the only teaching hospital of the institute. Affiliated hospitals include North Okkalapa General Hospital (since 1970), Insein General Hospital (since 1973), Thingangyun Model Hospital (since 1996), South Okkalapa Maternal and Child Hospital (since 1998), Mawlamyaing General Hospital in Mon State and Pathein General Hospital in Ayeyarwady Division (since 1997), among others.

In 1997, Field Training Centre for Community Medicine was established in Hlegu Township, which is about 13 miles from the campus and one of the townships of the Yangon Division.

As for the graduate medical training, although only 50 students were accepted each year initially number of uptakes has been increased gradually over the subsequent years. Since the end of the year 2000, the university has been accepting around 500 uptakes every year.

Postgraduate studies for master's degrees in Anatomy and Physiology started in 1973. Currently, the university has been conducting 6 Diploma courses, 19 Master's degree courses, 26 Doctor of Medical Science courses for clinical disciplines, and 8 Ph.D. courses in Basic Medical Science.

Leadership

University of Medicine 2, Yangon

Since 1963, UM-2 has been headed by an academic dean known as a rector. Past rectors include:[6]

  1. 1963–1967: Ko Ko Gyi
  2. 1967–1973: U E
  3. 1973–1982: Khin Maung Nyein
  4. 1982–1987: Tin Aung Swe
  5. 1987–1989: Myo Thwe
  6. 1989–1992: Ko Lay
  7. 1992–2004: Tha Hla Shwe
  8. 2004–2007: Than Nu Shwe
  9. 2008–2014: Tint Swe Latt
  10. 2014–2015: Zaw Wai Soe
  11. 2015–2017: Aye Aung
  12. 2017–2021: Aye Tun

Students' Union

University of Medicine - 2 Students' Union was founded in 2015 by twelve students. The main purpose of the Students' Union is to represent the students within the institution. The Students' Union takes part in the administrative affairs of the university, academic affairs, and student affairs as well as political movements.

University of Medicine - 2 Students' Union
PresidentOaggar Myat
SecretaryKaung Khant Oo
Founded2015
Slogansamaggānaṃ tapo sukho

Admissions

The University of Medicine 2, Yangon is one of the most selective schools in the nation as the medical schools continue to be the top choice amongst top students in Myanmar.The students who want the admission to this school must make sure that they are in top 0.02% of the total exam candidates in college entrance exam of the year. The school admits about 300 students per year based on their Basic Education High School (college entrance) exam scores and their regions.

Programs

The university is one of three civil universities and one medical academy in Myanmar that offers undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral degrees.[2]

Academic Years

Integrated curriculum

Year Duration
Foundation Year 1 year
Medical Year 1 (System modules) 1 year
Medical Year 2 (System modules) 1 year
Medical Year 3 (Junior clerkship) 1 year
Medical Year 4 (Speciality clerkship) 1 year
Medical Year 5 (Senior clerkship) 1 year
Total 6 years

Old curriculum

Year Duration
First M.B., B.S. 1 year
Second M.B., B.S. 1½year
Third M.B., B.S. 1 year
Final M.B., B.S. Part I 1 year
Final M.B., B.S. Part II 1½year
House Surgeon 1 year
Total 7 years

Undergraduate curriculum

Integrated curriculum

Foundation Year

  • 1st semester

Language 1 - Myanmar

Language 2 - English

Science 1 - Zoology and Botany

Science 2 - Mathematics & statistics and Physics

Science 3 - Chemistry

  • 2nd Semester

Structural Principle - Anatomy

Functional Principle - Physiology

Molecular Principle - Biochemistry

Principle of Disease Mechanism - Pathology

Principle of Medical Microbiology - Microbiology

Principle of Drug Therapy - Pharmacology

Pre-Clinical Years

Medical Year 1 (System Modules)

Horizontal Modules

Medical Year 2 (System Modules)

Horizontal Modules

Vertical Modules

Clinical Years

Medical Year 3 (Junior Clerkship)

Medical Year 4 (Speciality Clerkship)

Medical Year 5 (Senior Clerkship)

Traditional curriculum

First year M.B., B.S

Second year M.B., B.S

Third year M.B., B.S

Students are also posted for 18 weeks each to the medical and surgical wards for clinical training. Exam Marks from the clinical postings are not used in this year. They will be added to the final exam of the final year as “classwork”.

Final year (Part I)

  • Forensic Medicine (with two days a week morgue posting for teaching during post-mortem examination of real cases in North Okkalapa General Hospital)
  • Preventive and Social Medicine (with three weeks residential field training in the rural areas and one month of PSM posting which includes healthcare surveying of newly created urban areas and some community care units)
  • Systemic Pathology and Hematology

Students attend lectures & clinics in Medicine, Surgery, Child Health, Obstetrics & gynecology, and are posted to the various teaching hospitals, including Urban Health facilities as part of Preventive and Social Medicine teaching.

Final year (Part II)

Distinguished into 2 parts: Pre-bloc posting and bloc posting

In pre-bloc posting, students are posted to different specialities for overall 4 months in different hospitals. After each posting, students must take multiple choice questions of each subjects.

In Bloc- posting, students are trained intensively in major speciality through lectures, seminars, presentation, clinical and theory integration and with real patients. Each posting lasts for 3 months and at the end of each posting, students have to take completion tests which composed as written and bedside exam with real patients. Written exam has multiple choice questions and multiple short questions. Bedside exam has at least 3 patients and students have to take OSCE type exams.

Final Exam of the final year

Students have to take 2 parts of exam, written and bedside exam. There are about 3 weeks between these two parts. Written exam lasts for 8 days because each subject has 2 paper of questions as follows.

  • Medicine paper 1
  • Medicine paper 2
  • Surgery paper 1
  • Surgery paper 2
  • Paediatrics paper 1
  • Paediatrics paper 2
  • Obstetrics paper
  • Gynaecology paper

Bedside exam lasts for 4 days and students are differentiated into 4 groups and they have to take on different days of each subjects. Each table has two examiners, one from own university and another from other universities of medicine in Myanmar. The university use real patients from teaching hospitals. So, the students are banned from teaching hospitals at least one month before the exam to prevent foreknowledge of cases of the patients who are in potential situation to be placed in the exam.

  • Medicine bedside exam has

-Imaging section

-Clinical Case section

-OSCE table

-OSCE + history Table

-Communication Table

  • Surgery bedside exam has

-Imaging section

-Photo section

-History table

-Physical Examination table

  • Paediatrics bedside exam has

-Photo section

-Case section

-OSCE section 1

-OSCE section 2

-History section

  • Obstetrics and Gynaecology bedside exam has

-O1 table (History and physical examination of pregnant women or post-partum women)

-O2 table with simulators (Usage of obstetrics instruments such as forceps, Vacuum, And surgical instruments used in LSCS)

-G1 table (History and physical examination of women with gynaecological disease)

-G2 table with instruments used in gynaecology cases such as E&C vacuum or communication table.

The results are usually out in the evening of the final day of the exam. And the students can be addressed as "Doctors" if they pass the exam. So most of them are students who was taking the exam in the morning and became doctors in the evening.

Internship

All students, after successful completion of the Final Part II examination, are continued to train hands-on for a period of one year as house surgeons in the recognized Teaching Hospitals in Yangon. Training periods are:

Subject Duration
Pediatrics 2 ½ months
Community Medicine 2 weeks
Internal Medicine 2 months and 20 days
Emergency Medicine 10 days
Obstetrics & Gynaecology 2 ½ months
Anaesthesia 2 weeks
General Surgery 2 months
Orthopaedics 1 month

Only after completion of house-surgeonship M.B., B.S. Degree is offered to the students. Before 1997, the degree was conferred upon completion of the second part of the final year.

Heads of Departments

Department of Chemistry - Daw Ei Ei Khine

Department of Physics - Daw Khin Moh Moh Khaing

Department of Botany - Daw Khin May Myint

Department of Zoology - U Soe Naing

Department of English - Daw Tin Hnin Aung

Department of Burmese - Daw Nan Thaung

Department of Mathematics - Daw Aye Thandar Swe

Department of Anatomy - Prof. Thitsar Aye Maung Than

Department of Physiology - Prof. Mya Thandar Sein

Department of Biochemistry - Prof. Myat Mon Khine

Department of Microbiology - Prof. Aye Marlar Win

Department of Pathology - Prof. Nyo Me May Thyn

Department of Pharmacology - Prof. Myat Myat Soe

Department of Forensic Medicine- Prof. Chan Myae Thein

Department of Preventive & Social Medicine - Prof. Pa Pa Soe

Department of Medicine - Prof. Cho Mar Hlaing

Department of Surgery - Prof. Moe Myint

Department of OG - Prof. Aye Aye Tint

Department of Paediatrics - Prof. Tin Moe Phyu

Department of Orthopaedics & Traumatology - Prof. Myo Min Oo

Department of Anaesthesiology - Prof. Cho Cho Lwin

Department of Emergency Medicine - Prof. Aye Thiri Naing

Teaching Hospitals

  • North okkalapa General Hospital
  • Thingangyun Sanpya General Hospital
  • Insein General Hospital
  • Yankin Children Hospital
  • Ywarthargyi Psychiatric Hospital

Notable alumni

See also

References

  1. ^ "Home". um2ygn.edu.mm.
  2. ^ a b "Health Statistics" (PDF). Ministry of Health, Myanmar. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-11-08. Retrieved 2008-11-29.
  3. ^ https://imed.faimer.org/details.asp?country=209&school=&currpage=1&cname=MYANMAR&city=&region=AS&rname=Asia&mcode=209030&psize=25 [dead link]
  4. ^ "History of IM2". The IM-2 Alumni Association. Retrieved 2008-11-23.
  5. ^ Phyu Lin Wai (2007-03-05). "Australian docs provide medical care in Yangon". The Myanmar Times. Archived from the original on June 3, 2007.
  6. ^ "Rectors of the University". University of Medicine-2 Yangon. 2009. Retrieved 10 October 2012.