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#1 |
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Senior Member
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Last edited by mac_kin; 10-04-2011 at 07:43 PM. |
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#2 |
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Senior Member
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2
Last edited by mac_kin; 01-15-2012 at 03:11 PM. |
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#3 | |
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t.roll.ed for Banning
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#4 |
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Senior Member
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t
Last edited by mac_kin; 01-15-2012 at 03:11 PM. |
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#5 |
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Ph.D in Clinical Meconium
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I've never heard the word "fair" used in reference to the real world.
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#6 |
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1K Member
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Are there really that many people who come here just for residency? I always thought nearly everyone wanted to practice here afterwards as well. Truth is, though, that I don't really think it's fair either way; although, to be fair, most residency programs do not accept fmgs on par w/ students from this country.
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#7 | |
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Ph.D in Clinical Meconium
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#8 |
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Senior Member
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8
Last edited by mac_kin; 01-15-2012 at 03:11 PM. |
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#9 | |
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Space Cowboy
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2. it would be a minority that don't plan to stay after residency. 3. Since when is life "fair"? |
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#10 |
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Senior Member
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Love it or hate it..foreign grads do help fill the spots in primary care..
And the truth is for an FMG to get into a super competitive specialty, they have to be even better than anybody else stats and resume-wise, which, in my opinion is more than paying your dues. |
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#11 |
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Member
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If you get denied a residency spot because a FMG took it from you, you're doing it wrong.
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#12 |
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nom nom nom
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The group I think it is the most *unfair* to to allow FMGs to come train/practice here is the people of their original country. Many FMGs get to go to medical school for free, and then they leave the country after getting their socially-funded education.
Not that this problem affects me/citizens here directly, but if I were a citizen of the country which the doctor got his/her free education and left I'd be pretty pissed. I'm surprised they don't have laws to prevent this from happening. |
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#13 |
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Senior Member
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By and large, American residencies are taking highly qualified FMGs. The competition for them is so steep that the middling candidates don't really have much of a shot. So we're pretty much getting the cream of the crop. I think America absolutely benefits from attracting many of the best doctors, scientists, artists, businessmen, etc from around the world to our country. I don't even really see where fair comes into it. It's not like there's any appreciable number of American medical graduates who can't match into any residency program.
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#14 | |
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Not really lazy
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#15 | |
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Not really lazy
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Also, how you are on paper does not correlate with how good you are as a physician. Not to forget, ALL FMG's spend months to years preparing for step exams. We spend weeks only. |
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#16 | |
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Senior Member
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Quote:
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#17 |
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SGU MS-2
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Are you guys talking about me
__________________
You must learn from the mistakes of others. You can't possibly live long enough to make them all yourself. |
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#18 |
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3K Member
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No, you'll be an IMG... I'm assuming you are american.
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#19 |
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Member
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they're talking about me
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#20 | |
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Member
Join Date: Jul 2004
Posts: 460
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Quote:
http://www.ama-assn.org/resources/do...fairs-imgs.pdf |
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#21 | |
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Senior Member
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And btw, they don't spend years preparing for the steps.. -_-; |
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#22 |
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Banned
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#23 |
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Divalent
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I think a proper definition or differentiation needs to be made between FMG/IMG (although suppose to be the same).
Does a person who goes to any Carribean university (still in 6 figures of debt), deserve to be shunned? They are equally in debt (was one of the criteria according to a few guys above), write the same exams, train in American hospitals. The only bitterness factor is the fact they might have had mediocre MCAT scores and such. In terms of the other Non-Carrib grads: No debt, No US Clinical experience (I would like to make note that IMG's consider Observership / Externships as clinical experience -- basically paying for volunteering / LoR), NO MCAT (not required). Does that suffice? Which rules will apply to whom? Also you have to note, many IMG's have permanent residence status, so that ''filtering'' method doesn't work.
__________________
Need to stop coming on SDN when I am inebriated. |
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#24 | |
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Senior Member
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#25 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 273
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nm
Last edited by Rothbard; 10-31-2011 at 03:27 PM. |
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#26 |
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5K+ Member
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They took our jobs!
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#27 |
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Member
Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 49
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Why not? If I were a patient, I'd sure as hell want the best doctors in the world working on me. It's not a foreign resident's problem that someone else can't out compete them.
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#28 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Between Stan Getz and Jimmy Giuffre
Posts: 420
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The following is taken from the MSU Kalamazoo website concerning the admissions process for residencies.
"The MSU/KCMS Med-Peds Program strives for excellence. We are seeking applicants with the qualities that make an excellent physician. We seek candidates that have outstanding interpersonal, communication, leadership and teaching skills, and are dedicated, compassionate, altruistic, self-motivated and take the initiative in the care of their patients. Applicants should have a passion for medicine and caring for adults and children and should plan on a career that involves both age groups. While academic performance in school is important, for a variety of reasons we feel that USMLE and COMLEX scores do not reliably predict residency performance. For applicants who have taken and passed the USMLE and COMLEX examinations while in medical school, we review each applicant carefully regardless of the score to identify those with the qualities we seek and invite them for an interview. Osteopathic applicants can submit either exam and do not require USMLE, however, many allopathic residency programs require USMLE even of the DO candidates and you should clarify this requirement with the programs for which you are applying. We receive a very large number of applications from cadidates who took the examinations after completion of school. Regretfully, we can not review each of these in detail. Because these candidates have had one year or more to study for the examinations, we use a minimum score of 95 on both USMLE steps I and II to identify applicants for a more thorough review. Only after a thorough review applicants with the qualities we seek will be invited for an interview." |
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#29 |
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3K Member
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I don't know why this same topic pops up on SDN so often.. The people who post these questions are slacker AMGs that are afraid of not getting a residency.. Truth is if your an average or even slightly below average AMG you should have no problem finding a solid residency in most fields(besides the uber competitive fields and even there you will only very rarely find an IMG/FMG)..
If you re afraid of anyone "stealing" your spot then you probably didn't have a good shot to start with.. Even uber competitive IMG applicants (when it comes to the steps,research..etc) have trouble landing mid-tier programs.. Most ended up in spots AMGs refuse to go into in the first place..
__________________
M.D. 2012--> residency?!?! M.S. 2007 Rosalind Franklin University, B.A. 2005 Cal Berkeley |
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#30 |
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New Member
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Many FMGs end up in programs that AMGs don't want anyway, so I don't see how FMGs are stealing AMGs spots. Most FMGs I've met are pretty darn smart and work their butts off, because they have to continue to prove that they deserve to be there. I think the system favors AMGs. If you do the work and have your stuff together, you should be able to land a decent residency spot on your first try. Many bright FMGs have to apply two or more times before they can get a residency....which is commonly in the primary care sector that many AMGs don't go into anyway.
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#31 |
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Banned
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And back to immigrants taken er jurbs.
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#32 |
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2K Member
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if you can take Step I, II, III and get 99 percentile on them in a different language, and learn medicine alllllllllllll over again in a completely random language (medicinal English), and understand all the cultural barriers etc in the US, by all means, we need you! (most foreign medical grads can only get into primary care)
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#33 |
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MS2
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#34 |
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Junior Member
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It is just an excuse for laziness.
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#35 |
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Senior Member
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The US has more residency slots than there are American medical school graduates. The only way to fill the rest of them is to import physicians from abroad.
__________________
http://medschoolodyssey.wordpress.com |
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#36 |
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Member
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http://content.healthaffairs.org/con.../1461.abstract
According to this study: 1. Doctors who graduated from foreign medical schools, and who were not US citizens when they went to medical school, who then went on to practice in the US, had significantly lower mortality rates than a) doctors who went to US medical schools and b) doctors who went to foreign medical schools and who were US citizens when they went to medical school. 2. No significant difference in mortality rates between a) all international medical graduates and b) graduates of US medical schools. |
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#37 |
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3K Member
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It's unfair to those countries that these docs come from, most of these countries desperately need them... No unfairness to slacker AMGs that are fearing for their own residency spot (to reiterate average and even slightly below average AMGs have no problems at all getting very solid residencies and at good locations also)..
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#38 | |
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Senior Member
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#39 | |
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Enjoying the Dark Side
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#40 |
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aw buddy
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#41 | |
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Senior Member
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They can study months, years, for USMLE. And they are smart. They can certainly outscore American-mainland rejects, who resort to Caribbean for-profit schools. Many US-IMGs from many caribbean schools have higher mortality rates. |
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#42 | |
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Banned
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#43 | |
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Señor Member
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#44 | |
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Sunny California
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Per the study: FMG > AMG/IMG. Many of these people had to get into medical schools in countries where it's a lot harder than here. Then they had to pass exams emphasized in that country - followed by passing exams in the US - in a non native language many times. If you're good enough to do that, I'd be more than happy to have you as my doctor. If someone does my job better than me, the world doesn't owe me that job. |
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#45 |
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Senior Member
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#1. America claims to be the land of the free. You cant have your cake and eat it too. FMGs have every right to be here as you do. They have the same tuition, they pay the same taxes, and they ultimately help the same American people when they practice here.
#2. If an FMG is better qualified than an AMG, is it selfish for you to say that they dont deserve the spot. That is highly unfair to sick Americans who just want the best possible healthcare. #3. If an FMG can out compete you, well you dont deserve that spot and clearly did not work hard enough. #4. FMGs fill the primary care spots that would normally be empty Fact: The US NEEDS fmg's to fill in the spots in rural locations and provide health care to people who normally might be able to find it. This will change in a few years, but for now you should be thanking FMGs that they were willing to leave their country and family to come to the US to be a family physician (in most cases) and deal with fat complaining people who dont understand why eating at McDonalds 3x a day is making them unhealthy.
__________________
Class of 2015 |
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#46 | |
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Member
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The main point here is that if you're worried about FMGs taking "your spot" (as if you deserve a spot just for being in the US) then you should spend less time worrying and complaining about that, and more time kicking ass in the clinic and on the boards. |
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#47 |
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2K Member
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Think people are forgetting that our taxes pay the salary and cost of training residents. So yes american citizens should get dibs thats a no brainer.
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#48 |
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Senior Member
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#49 |
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2K Member
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And somehow having american citizens getting first dibs on residencies will somehow treat fewer patients or treat them in a subpar manner? The obligation to the patients will be fulfilled regardless of who gets priority on residency placement. Im all for FMG filling vacancies but think any american citizen should get first priority.
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#50 | |
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Senior Member
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