Former names
|
Bute Medical School |
---|---|
Type | Medical school |
Established | 1413 |
Parent institution
|
University of St Andrews |
Dean | David Crossman |
Administrative staff
|
54 |
Students | 464 |
Location | St Andrews, Fife, Scotland |
Colours | |
Website | medicine.st-andrews.ac.uk |
Coordinates: 56°20′17″N 2°47′38″W / 56.338°N 2.794°W
The University of St Andrews School of Medicine (formerly the Bute Medical School) is the school of medicine at the University of St Andrews in St Andrews, Fife, Scotland and the oldest medical school in Scotland.
The School of Medicine was ranked 8th in the UK by the Times Good University Guide Subject Tables 2013, 2014 and 2015. Admission is very competitive, with an acceptance rate of 17.2% in 2012-13. The yield rate, also known as the matriculation rate is 68% for the 2012-13 admissions year. According to the Guardian University Guide 2013, St Andrews requires the 6th highest entry grades in the UK. The medical school teaches pre-clinical medicine with students completing clinical teaching at different medical schools in the UK.
The school is associated with 1 Nobel Prize and 2 Victoria Cross winners. Famous alumni include small pox vaccine pioneer Edward Jenner and inventor of beta blockers and H2 receptor antagonists, Nobel Prize in Medicine winner Sir James Black.