Rising cancer incidence is placing increasing pressure on healthcare systems worldwide, including the Middle East, where demand for specialized and well-trained physicians continues to accelerate. In the United Arab Emirates, the latest National Cancer Registry data for 2023 reported 7,487 new cancer cases, with cancer ranking among the country’s leading causes of mortality. Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia’s cancer incidence is projected to more than double over the next two decades, driven by population growth, aging demographics, and lifestyle-related risk factors. These trends underscore a growing need for physicians equipped with strong clinical, diagnostic, and multidisciplinary care skills to support cancer prevention, early detection, and long-term patient management across rapidly evolving healthcare systems. Recognizing the importance of addressing workforce shortage in the GCC, St. George’s University (SGU) School of Medicine in Grenada, West Indies, highlights how its medical education approach supports the development of clinical competencies relevant to cancer care across healthcare settings. These challenges reflect broader global trends, where cancer care increasingly depends on multi-disciplinary teams rather than specialty expansion alone. SGU’s curriculum is designed to build a strong foundation in clinical diagnosis, patient communication and multidisciplinary care, which are essential skills for effective oncology and cancer-related care. Through anatomy labs, simulation-based learning, and integrated digital tools, students develop foundational clinical skills in structured, supervised environments designed to reflect real-world medical practice. The curriculum also integrates traditional cadaveric dissection with modern 3D anatomical modeling. This blend helps students visualize the human body in a holistic way while reinforcing knowledge through their hands-on interaction. SGU’s simulation lab also enables medical students to have their first direct interaction with ill patients in a safe, simulated learning environment. On top of core medical training, SGU offers early exposure to prevention, diagnosis and patient-centered care to prepare graduates to tackle complex health issues. SGU has developed long-standing relationships with more than 75 established hospitals and clinical centers in the US and UK. These clinical placements provide exposure to diverse patient populations and care environments, including settings where cancer diagnosis and management are part of routine clinical practice. As global cancer incidence continues to rise, strengthening healthcare capacity will depend not only on increasing specialist numbers, but on preparing physicians with adaptable clinical skills applicable across the cancer care continuum. Medical education plays a critical role in equipping future doctors to navigate complex diagnoses, coordinate multidisciplinary care, and respond to evolving patient needs within diverse health systems. On World Cancer Day 2026, the growing focus on cancer care highlights the importance of long-term investment in physician training. Through its global medical education model, SGU supports the development of broadly trained physicians who are prepared to contribute to healthcare systems in the GCC and beyond.
|