Wanting to join this bandwagon! About to graduate US medical school and looking into how to potentially do training in CH. I am fluent in German and quite good in Swiss german so language should be ok (though I probably need to take an official exam). However, it's clear as mud to me how to start searching for training positions with a US degree, and if it's even possible to do before graduation. Any advice would be welcome! I'm interested in infectious diseases, so first probably internal medicine or pediatrics with specialization after that. Does anyone know of any US trained doctors who have managed to work in CH and how they went about it?
From the Swiss perspective, it doesn't really matter whether the qualification is from India (as Drremobond's is) or from the USA (as yours is).
The important distinction, here, is "EU" or "non-EU".
In Drremobond's thread: https://www.englishforum.ch/permits-...s-citizen.html from post 41 onwards , he/she sets out the process for a doctor to find work in Switzerland very clearly and distinguishes consistently between "EU" and "non-EU".
It's a lot to work through, but in that most excellent thread it's really all delivered to one on a silver platter. Good luck. And it's great that you already speak German - super!
Thanks! I noticed he mentioned a possible faster path for people who've taken USMLE step 1 and step 2. I imagine that's too good to be true, but if anyone out there has heard anything more about this, I'd love to know. I will also contact MEBEKO directly but their responses are often a bit obtuse.
hello , I hope you're doing good . please , i would love to know if you made it to switzerland ? did you get your license to work there ? i'm interested in working as a doctor in switzerland . otherwise , is australia a good option too ? thanks
To get a really good understanding of the process, it's well worth the effort to work through drremobond's mega-thread, in which he covers many, if not all, aspects of what one has to do, as an EU or a non-EU person.
I heartily recommend it. It really is an excellent piece of work that he has made available, setting out not only how he himself got work as a doctor in Switzerland, but how many others could, too. Bonne chance!