Translations:Internal medicine/23/en
Doctors who have completed medical school spend two years in foundation training completing a basic postgraduate curriculum. After two years of Core Medical Training (CT1/CT2), or three years of Internal Medicine Training (IMT1/IMT2/IMT3) as of 2019, since and attaining the Membership of the Royal College of Physicians, physicians commit to one of the medical specialties:
- Acute internal medicine (with possible subspecialty in stroke medicine)
- Allergy
- Audio vestibular medicine
- Aviation and space medicine
- Cardiology (with possible subspecialty in stroke medicine)
- Clinical genetics
- Clinical neurophysiology
- Clinical oncology
- Clinical pharmacology and therapeutics (with possible subspecialty in stroke medicine)
- Dermatology
- Endocrinology and diabetes mellitus
- Gastroenterology (with possible subspecialty in hepatology)
- General (internal) medicine (with possible subspecialty in metabolic medicine or stroke medicine)
- Genito-urinary medicine
- Geriatric medicine (with possible subspecialty in stroke medicine)
- Haematology
- Immunology
- Infectious diseases
- Intensive care medicine
- Medical microbiology
- Medical oncology (clinical or radiation oncology falls under the Royal College of Radiologists, although entry is through CMT and MRCP is required)
- Medical ophthalmology
- Medical virology
- Neurology (with possible subspecialty in stroke medicine)
- Nuclear medicine
- Occupational medicine
- Paediatric cardiology (the only pediatric subspecialty not under the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health)
- Palliative medicine
- Rehabilitation medicine (with possible subspecialty in stroke medicine)
- Renal medicine
- Respiratory medicine
- Rheumatology
- Sport and exercise medicine
- Tropical medicine