Ok, so I have a provisional position in medicine at UQ doing the BSc/MBBS dual program. Someone mentioned in passing the other day about not getting a criminal conviction and I wondered if anyone else knew anything about this.
He was saying if you are doing medicine or law you can't have a conviction, and if you're med, particularly not sexually-based or drug-related. Is that correct? Is it that you can study med but some places might not take you over people with a clean record? Or is it that if you have a conviction you won't be able to study medicine at all?
Also does that apply for the whole med career. Like if its malpractice fair enough but if its an unrelated drug offense for example how would that go down?
I had a look on the net but it all seems to be specific to unis/hospitals like UNSW do checks apparently. I understand that it might jeopardise your chances of jobs but is it laid out or just kinda a given? Apparently UQ do some sort of checks about the time you get a bluecards but im not sure if that's related.
Is anyone here able to explain how it works? I'm not worried or anything but me and especially a few other kids were slightly concerned and keen to get informed/become more careful in the future.
thanks heaps
He was saying if you are doing medicine or law you can't have a conviction, and if you're med, particularly not sexually-based or drug-related. Is that correct? Is it that you can study med but some places might not take you over people with a clean record? Or is it that if you have a conviction you won't be able to study medicine at all?
Also does that apply for the whole med career. Like if its malpractice fair enough but if its an unrelated drug offense for example how would that go down?
I had a look on the net but it all seems to be specific to unis/hospitals like UNSW do checks apparently. I understand that it might jeopardise your chances of jobs but is it laid out or just kinda a given? Apparently UQ do some sort of checks about the time you get a bluecards but im not sure if that's related.
Is anyone here able to explain how it works? I'm not worried or anything but me and especially a few other kids were slightly concerned and keen to get informed/become more careful in the future.
thanks heaps