You might want to try a few courses that go through the clinical utility of NGS and bioinformatics (although bioinformatics doesn't stop at NGS it is curently one of the main uses)
Genomic Medicine University of Exeter
https://www.futurelearn.com/courses/diabetes-genomic-medicine
The Genomics Era: the Future of Genetics in Medicine
https://www.futurelearn.com/courses/the-genomics-era
Clinical Bioinformatics: Unlocking Genomics in Healthcare
https://www.futurelearn.com/courses/bioinformatics
Cancer in the 21st Century: the Genomic Revolution
https://www.futurelearn.com/courses/cancer-and-the-genomic-revolution
They only mention bioinformatics briefly, but they do put Genomic technologies and the analysis in the context of what is useful for the clinician.
Probably the next step is to look at variant interpretation and guidelines - which useful if you're heading down the the route of a Clinical Geneticist specialisation (course is not free - although I think it might be distance learning based).
Post Graduate Certificate in The Interpretation and Clinical Application of Genomic Data (PGCertICAG)
Also most of the content of the courses seems to be currently aimed at either Rare Disease or Cancer genetics and the other major strand - Microbiology / Virology genomics isn't as well covered.
Bioinformatics courses:
For pure bioinformatics courses not necessarily geared towards clinical areas (mainly Coursera ones as mentioned by previous post):
Bioinformatics Specialization
https://www.coursera.org/specializations/bioinformatics
Bioinformatic Methods I & II
https://www.coursera.org/learn/bioinformatics-methods-1
https://www.coursera.org/learn/bioinformatics-methods-2
Genomic Data Science Specialization
https://www.coursera.org/learn/python-genomics
Also check out courses on Python (or another easy to learn scripting language such as Ruby), R (or another Stats language), possibly SQL and algorithm development.
Nice work putting that list together.
Thank you so much for this.