A structured, observation-only shadowing experience in Buenos Aires — built around clinical insight, reflection and ethical boundaries.
LATIDOS is a structured, observation-only medical shadowing experience designed for international pre-med students seeking meaningful clinical exposure in a global context. Students observe physicians in real hospital environments in Buenos Aires, gaining insight into clinical reasoning, patient communication and healthcare systems — without participating in patient care.
Students gain exposure across a range of clinical and systemic dimensions. The focus is not on procedures, but on reasoning, communication, and context.
LATIDOS is designed to balance hospital observation, guided reflection and local immersion. The structure gives students enough clarity to plan ahead while keeping room for cohort-specific schedules and rotation availability.
Flexible short-term options designed to fit winter or summer academic schedules.
A balanced weekly rhythm combining clinical observation, learning time and city immersion.
Groups are limited to preserve meaningful supervision and coordination.
Each week combines hospital observation with guided reflection and cultural immersion. Students attend scheduled hospital observation sessions, shadow physicians during consultations and rounds, observe interdisciplinary collaboration, participate in structured reflection sessions and engage in cultural experiences within the city. Observation hours are part-time, allowing space for processing, academic reflection and personal exploration of Buenos Aires. Cohorts remain intentionally small to ensure meaningful learning and supervision.
This example shows one possible way to organize student groups across different hospital areas. Final rotations depend on hospital availability, cohort size and the confirmed program calendar.
| Rotation Slot | Group A | Group B | Group C | Group D |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rotation 1 | Physiatry | Diagnostics | Emergency | Neurology |
| Rotation 2 | Diagnostics | Emergency | Neurology | Physiatry |
| Rotation 3 | Emergency | Neurology | Physiatry | Diagnostics |
| Rotation 4 | Neurology | Physiatry | Diagnostics | Emergency |
The slots are shown as a reference and may not represent full weeks. Some areas may change day by day.
The areas shown are examples only. Additional observation areas may be available depending on hospital availability.
Students never enter operating. All rotations are observation-only, with no procedures or patient care.
The first and last program days are generally reserved for hospital induction, orientation, reflection and closing activities.
Program fees reflect institutional coordination, ethical supervision, structured academic framing, small cohort design, and local support and preparation. The focus is quality, clarity and responsibility.
LATIDOS follows a 4-week cohort model designed to give students a clear, supported and academically meaningful experience in Buenos Aires.
Group size is limited to preserve quality, supervision and local coordination.
Some personal and travel-related expenses are not included in the program fee. Students should plan separately for:
Transparency ensures students and families can plan confidently.
Enrollment is confirmed upon:
Once enrolled, students receive next steps, preparation materials and guidance from the LATIDOS team.
Detailed pricing and available dates are shared upon request to ensure personalized guidance.
Students may:
Optional Spanish classes are organized by LATIDOS for students who wish to enhance their immersion and communication skills. Cultural activities and local experiences are also coordinated to support integration into daily life.
Most U.S. students enter Argentina as tourists for short-term academic observation. LATIDOS provides:
Students are responsible for complying with entry regulations.
Share a few details and our team will follow up with pricing, dates and personalized guidance.
LATIDOS is built around one central principle: responsible clinical observation with ethical boundaries. The program is designed to provide meaningful clinical exposure while maintaining strict privacy standards, patient dignity, and academic integrity.
Participants maintain a non-participatory role within clinical settings. Students:
Their role is strictly observational, aligned with ethical standards and local regulations. Clear expectations are communicated before arrival and reinforced during hospital induction.
All students:
Respect for patient privacy and dignity is non-negotiable. LATIDOS emphasizes that clinical exposure is a privilege that requires maturity and responsibility.
Participants are required to obtain international health insurance coverage valid in Argentina. LATIDOS provides:
Students and families receive transparent information before enrollment.
From pre-departure preparation to 24/7 on-site coordination, students are never left without a point of contact:
The goal is to combine structured supervision with confident independence.
LATIDOS understands that sending a student abroad for a medical program requires trust. The program is designed to offer:
Safety, structure and integrity are foundational — not optional.
Argentina has a long-standing tradition of academic medicine, scientific research and public health leadership in Latin America.
For generations, physicians trained here have combined rigorous clinical reasoning with a strong humanistic approach to patient care.
Medicine in Argentina is not only technical — it is deeply relational and socially grounded.
Founded in 1821, UBA is recognized across Latin America for academic rigor and demanding clinical training. Its School of Medicine has shaped generations of physicians known for strong diagnostic reasoning and ethical grounding.
Argentina’s scientific legacy includes Nobel Prize winners such as:
This legacy reflects a culture that values critical thinking, scientific discipline and intellectual independence.
Argentina’s healthcare system offers a layered structure that allows students to observe medicine from multiple angles.
The country combines:
Students witness how physicians navigate complex clinical environments and diverse patient populations — developing a broader understanding of healthcare delivery.
Buenos Aires is one of the largest metropolitan areas in the Southern Hemisphere, with a dense network of public and private hospitals integrated into daily urban life. Here, medicine is not isolated from the city — it is embedded in it.
Students observe:
Clinical learning happens in real-world settings, not controlled environments.
LATIDOS is designed so students do not experience Argentina as tourists. They move through the city the way local students and physicians do — commuting to hospitals, engaging with neighborhoods, navigating daily life in Spanish.
Students are encouraged to:
The goal is not simply to visit Argentina. It is to understand how medicine is practiced within its social fabric. Feeling like a local fosters:
Medicine is shaped by culture, economics and history. Observing healthcare while living within a different society provides perspective that cannot be replicated in a classroom. Argentina offers academic seriousness, clinical depth and a human context that expands how students understand medicine.
This is not about travel. It is about perspective.
Everything you need to know about the LATIDOS experience.