IELTS for studying abroad
Medicine is one of the most English-demanding fields you can study abroad: lectures, clinical placements, patient communication, and research all depend on precise, nuanced language. Admissions offices and visa authorities both scrutinise your IELTS result, and medical programmes frequently require higher thresholds than most other degrees, particularly in individual skill components like Speaking and Listening. Focus on academic vocabulary in health sciences, understanding complex spoken instructions, and writing clearly structured arguments — skills you will use from day one in lectures and on the wards.
Each Guinea-Bissau university — often each course — sets its own IELTS minimum. Find your exact target on the course's official admissions page.
IELTS requirements change and vary by route, employer, and institution — always confirm the current figure with the official body before you rely on it.
South Africa is the primary destination with English-medium medical schools following a British-influenced curriculum; other sub-Saharan countries have emerging programmes, but recognition and visa requirements vary significantly by country — verify that any programme is recognised by the relevant national medical council before focusing on its language threshold.
Prioritise the Listening module, because medical education relies heavily on fast-paced lectures, clinical briefings, and multi-speaker seminars where missing a single term — a dosage, a procedure name, a contraindication — can affect your comprehension of the entire topic.
Going abroad to work instead? See IELTS for professions in Guinea-Bissau.