The degree of Doctor of Medicine (MD) is provided to encourage the development of advanced research skills in medical graduates and the medical profession. The primary purpose of MD-level research is to develop in the student the skills and competencies required to conduct effective research and to make a significant contribution to knowledge and understanding in the theory and/or practice of any area of medicine or medical science.
An MD degree is a research degree carried out over 6 trimesters (2 years) full-time or 12 trimesters (4 years) part-time. Students who do not complete the requirements for the MD degree within these timelines must apply for permission to continue.
The Clinical Research Degree Committee will assign each MD student:
Every MD student must:
Option: MD students, as required or recommended by the Principal Supervisor, may take taught modules relevant to their area of research or professional development, to a maximum 20 credits over the course of the programme of study.
MD students may apply to transfer to a PhD programme.
If you are successful, you will normally transfer to Stage 1 of the PhD programme.
The final examination is based on a description of your research in a thesis describing the context, nature, methodology and outcomes of the research. An MD thesis must contain material of a publishable/peer-reviewed standard.
Explore the PhD degree at UCD
Explore the Research Master's degree at UCD
Explore the Professional Doctorate degree at UCD
Explore key documents and policies relevant to all graduate research students