Clinical training is a central pillar of the Doctor of Medicine (MD) programme at New Anglia University (NAU). Our approach to clinical clerkships is designed to provide students with structured, supervised, and progressive hands-on experience across a range of healthcare systems in the United States and the United Kingdom, while maintaining strong academic oversight and patient-safety standards.
This article explains how clinical rotations are organised, supervised, and quality-assured, and what students can expect as they progress through the programme.
What Do We Mean by “Clinical Clerkships”, “Rotations”, or “Placements”?
At New Anglia University, we use the term Clinical Clerkship, consistent with long-established U.S. medical education terminology. For clarity:
- Clinical clerkship, clinical rotation, and clinical placement all refer to the same structured period of supervised clinical training.
- These terms are used interchangeably in international medical education and are defined clearly within NAU’s affiliation agreements and academic documentation.
No policy distinction is made between these terms — they describe the same core clinical training experience within the MD programme.
Institutional Oversight: How Placements Are Approved and Managed
All clinical clerkships undertaken by NAU students are:
- Approved, arranged, and overseen by the University
- Delivered only at pre-approved clinical sites
- Governed through formal, written institution-to-institution agreements
Students are not permitted to arrange placements independently, and all clinical activity remains under NAU’s academic oversight. This structure ensures consistency, accountability, and alignment with the University’s curriculum and learning outcomes.

Progressive Clinical Exposure as Students Advance
Clinical clerkships at NAU are designed to be progressive. As students move through the programme, there is a planned increase in:
- The continuity and depth of clinical exposure
- In-person patient interaction
- Graduated clinical responsibility, always under appropriate supervision and within the limits of competence and patient safety
Hands-On Clinical Learning (Not Observerships)
NAU clinical clerkships are hands-on, supervised learning experiences, not observerships.
Students participate in appropriate aspects of patient care under supervision, with opportunities to:
- Practise clinical skills and procedures appropriate to their stage of training
- Clerk patients, present cases, and contribute to ward-based care
- Develop professional behaviours and clinical judgement in real healthcare environments
Clinical learning takes place within multidisciplinary teams, allowing students to work alongside nurses, allied health professionals, and other members of the healthcare workforce.
Learning Objectives, Assessment, and Quality Assurance
The University maintains oversight of all clinical clerkships through a combination of:
- Clearly defined learning objectives and outcomes for each clerkship
- Weekly clinical logbooks documenting all patient cases examined
- Structured formative assessment throughout the placement
- End-of-placement supervisor sign-off
- Ongoing monitoring of placement quality through student feedback and regular liaison with clinical partners
Clerkships are structured to provide sufficient continuity and duration for supervising clinicians to make informed and reliable judgements about students’ progress, professionalism, and clinical development.
Who Arranges Clinical Placements?
All clinical placements are arranged institution-to-institution by New Anglia University in coordination with approved placement providers.
Students do not:
- Source their own placements
- Negotiate terms directly with hospitals
- Pay placement providers directly
This ensures consistent standards, clear supervision arrangements, and robust governance across all sites.

Clinical Sites and Specialty Exposure
NAU maintains an approved list of clinical placement sites and specialty areas across partner hospitals.
Clinical clerkships include exposure to:
- Medicine and surgery as core components
- Additional core specialties such as paediatrics, obstetrics & gynaecology, psychiatry, family medicine, and approved electives
This provides students with exposure to a broad range of patients and clinical presentations consistent with undergraduate medical training.
Supervision and Teaching Structure
Students are supervised by appropriately qualified doctors at placement sites, including:
- Consultants/Attending Physicians and registrars/senior residents providing clinical supervision and educational oversight
- Designated educational leads coordinating teaching and supervision
Junior doctors may contribute to informal peer teaching but do not hold responsibility for formal supervision or assessment.
Clinical Clerkships as Part of the MD Programme
Clinical clerkships are a mandatory and integral component of the MD programme. Each clerkship has:
- Defined timing and duration
- Clear learning outcomes and required clinical experiences
- A direct contribution to progression and completion of the degree
U.S. and UK Clinical Governance and Student Safeguards
Where clinical clerkships are undertaken within U.S. and UK partner organisations, students train within established American and British healthcare governance environments.
NAU’s agreements require:
- Appropriate induction at each site
- Clear patient-safety safeguards
- Defined processes for raising and addressing concerns
- Ongoing quality review
Before commencing any clinical placement, the University ensures that students hold:
- A valid Enhanced DBS clearance / Criminal Background Check
- Appropriate professional indemnity insurance /medical malpractice insurance
- Up-to-date occupational health and vaccination clearance
Documentary evidence is provided in advance, and no student is permitted to undertake patient-facing activity unless these requirements are satisfied.
A Structured, Supported Clinical Education Pathway
New Anglia University’s clinical clerkship model is designed to ensure that students receive structured, supervised, and progressive clinical education across multiple healthcare settings, while maintaining strong academic oversight, clear governance, and a focus on patient safety.
This approach supports students in developing the knowledge, skills, and professional behaviours required of future doctors, within a transparent and well-governed educational framework.



