Undergrads and medicine

<p>Do undergrads get the chance to start doing things related directly to med at JHU (for example, cutting open a body to observe organs)? If so, how soon and in what classes or under what majors?</p>

<p>Johns Hopkins University is a research institution!!! Actually, the nation’s first research institution and the most funded research institution as well. Undergraduates have ample opportunities to conduct research and can even start in their freshman year. Those interested in the medical sciences will have access to the East Baltimore campus of Hopkins where the Hosptial, Medical School, School of Nursing, and School of Public Health are all located. There will be limitations placed on undergraduates in the amount of access you have at the Medical campus (for instance you are going to be taking Medical School classes), but the amount of access is still impressive for research positions, internships, and even work study programs.</p>

<p>A lot more about research experiences for undergraduates can be found:</p>

<p>Here: [Hopkins</a> Forums -> Research Questions](<a href=“Hentai 44 - Hentai porn”>Hentai 44 - Hentai porn)
or Here: [The</a> Johns Hopkins University: Research](<a href=“Home | Johns Hopkins University”>Home | Johns Hopkins University)</p>

<p>oh ok thank you! I was hoping you’d be the one to answer</p>

<p>There’s pretty much no situtation that you’ll be allowed to cut open a live human body at any institution in the country - you’re not a physician and you’re not legally allowed to do so. That said, there are tons of research opportunities (that AdmissionsDaniel mentioned) and there are other opportunities to get involved on the clinical side including [Medical</a> Tutorials](<a href=“Pre-Professional Advising | Student Affairs”>Pre-Professional Advising | Student Affairs) where you observe/accompany a physician, the Baltimore Rescue Mission where you work with patients in a free clinic, and [the</a> Hopkins Emergency Response Unit](<a href=“http://heru.jhu.edu/]the”>http://heru.jhu.edu/), a student run EMS unit (that I’m a member of) that provides 24/7 emergency medical care on and near campus.</p>

<p>Well, in my country, (I’m not doing med here because unfortunately I really don’t have an option in the migration thing…complicated), you start doing that before even your second year in university, because u don’t have to do undergrad first, its straight me, and many actual dead bodies available, so I was hoping for something. The EMS thing sounds pretty good though.</p>