Medical Management for Medical Practitioners and Health Care Professionalsfull time

  • Master of Arts

    Master
    Degree

  • 4 semesters

    Standard period of study (amount)

  • Essen

    Location

  • expired (Germans and inhabitants)

    expired (EU), July 2024 (Non-EU)
    Please enquire

Overview and admission

Study Type

graduate

Admission semester

Summer and Winter Semester

Area of study

Health Management

Target group

Medical Practitioners and Healthcare Professionals

Annotation

A completed university degree is required\; Possibly further entrance requirements (see examination regulations, inquire at the faculty)

Admission modus

selection by the HEI

Admission requirements (Link)

Admission requirements

- Degree in human medicine, dentistry, health care or health science. - Degrees in suitable courses of study with a different range of subjects may on application also prove to be an acceptable admission requirement. In this case, you require at least 30 ECTS in the field of medicine. - Bachelor's degree with a minimum grade of 2.7. - No aptitude test required. For more information, please see our detailed degree course description.

Lecture period
  • 09.10.2023 - 02.02.2024
  • 08.04.2024 - 19.07.2024

Application deadlines

Winter semester (2023/2024)
  • Application deadline for Germans and inhabitants

    Expired

  • Deadlines for International Students from the European Union

    Expired

  • Enrollment deadline for Germans and foreign students

    Expired (Universitywide deadline)

    For exam credits from your previous studies, please note the following deadlines: Winter semester: 15.7. / Summer semester: 15:01. https://www.uni-due.de/studierendensekretariat/hoehere_fachsemester.shtml

  • Deadlines for international students from countries that are not members of the European Union

    01.05.2024 - 15.07.2024

Summer semester (2024)

Tuition fee

Languages of instruction

Main language

German

DAAD - Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst - German Academic Exchange Service