Unlike other Caribbean schools, UMHS moves students to Portland, Maine for their 5th semester. Students want to know what the Portland campus offers, how the transition works, and whether it genuinely bridges the gap between island basic sciences and US hospital rotations.
Hey all, so I have been researching UMHS pretty seriously and one thing that genuinely caught my attention is the Semester 5 campus in Portland, Maine. Most Caribbean schools just send you straight from the island into US clinical rotations and I have heard that transition can be rough. UMHS seems to be doing something different with this Portland setup. I want to know what it is actually like from people who have been through it. Like what do you do there, how long is it, does it actually help you feel more prepared for rotations, and is the city livable? Any current or former UMHS students please chime in because I cannot find much beyond what the school website says.
Hey lilyb441, I literally just finished Semester 5 in Portland a few months ago so this is fresh. Semester 5 is basically a full semester dedicated to clinical skills and Step prep before you set foot in a hospital for rotations. You are doing OSCE style practice, standardized patient encounters, physical exam skills, and a lot of integrated review. It is not just sitting in lectures, you are actually doing things with your hands. For me personally it was the semester where medicine started feeling real instead of just memorizing pathways. Portland itself is a really pleasant city, manageable size, good food scene, and people are friendly. Coming back to the US after St. Kitts also just felt like a mental reset.
4th year student here, done with rotations and preparing to apply for residency. I want to give you a real answer on whether Portland actually bridges the gap. Honestly yes, more than I expected. When I started my internal medicine rotation the attendings commented that I was comfortable with patient communication and physical exams in a way they did not expect from a Caribbean student. I think a lot of that came from what we drilled in Portland. The standardized patient sessions are no joke, they push you to present cases clearly, handle patient questions, and look competent on your feet. That said it is still one semester so it is not magic. You still have to grind during rotations but Portland gave me a foundation that I felt at AUC graduates sometimes did not have at the same stage.