Skip to main content

Hampshire and Dorset teens look to future NHS careers by taking part in medical summer school

Teenagers from across the South have experienced life as doctors on the hospital frontlines as part of a medical summer school at the University of Southampton.

Medical student teaching attendees clinical skillsMore than 40 pupils from 25 schools in Hampshire and Dorset took part in the programme, organised by the University’s LifeLab, to encourage a new generation of healthcare professionals.

The two-day school was held at University Hospital Southampton, where pupils took part in clinical skills sessions, including venesection, cannulation, suturing, blood pressure and urine testing.

They experienced anatomy teaching in labs to understand how to treat patients and had a tour of the Acute Medical Unit and the NIHR Southampton Clinical Research Facility at Southampton General Hospital. The students also quizzed current medical students about what it’s like to study medicine and heard from Dr Laura Croucher, Paediatric Registrar in Dorset about working in the NHS.


Kate Bartlett, Developing Talent Lead for LifeLab, said: “We were delighted to see so many pupils from variety of schools across the area take part in our medical summer school. There is a shortage of clinical staff across our country, so it is vital to give young people valuable experience of what a role in healthcare could be like.”

 

After the course, parent Leona Birchenough, said the course had helped her daughter Paige decide on a career in medicine adding: “[there was] so much good information for her. It’s a brilliant course.”