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I'm planning to apply to anesthesiology residency programs and have been doing research. I wanted to ask you all- which programs that you know of are best and why? Thank you!
Here is my list for the Midwest. I'm leaving out a program in Chicago but I'm sure at least 1 belongs on my list. Please remember these are NATIONAL rankings mostly and there are plenty of very very good Midwest programs like Ohio State, Wisconsin, etc not on my list:
1. WashU
2. Mayo
3. Michigan
4. Pitt
Agree with this list. Can confirm Ohio state is good, we have had some of their grads. Our Cleveland Clinic grads are always strong.
Cleveland Clinic is a solid program. The nice thing about the consortium is they have excellent systems in place as it pertains to support and resources. All you have to do is ask and you get support. Plus a strong respected department. You just need a strong work ethic and you will be rewarded.
does Cleveland Clinic have a list of current residents with what medical schools they went to? I was curious and couldn't find a list online. Many (most?) programs usually have class by class lists of residents and where they went to medical school that you can easily find online.
Interesting. When I applied they had a list of everyone and there were a lot of international and caribbean grads.
I'm happy to work hard and learn as much as I can. Be the best I can be. You make a good point. Thank you.
Is Pittsburgh considered Midwest? I always thought that was East Coast.Here is my list for the Midwest. I'm leaving out a program in Chicago but I'm sure at least 1 belongs on my list. Please remember these are NATIONAL rankings mostly and there are plenty of very very good Midwest programs like Ohio State, Wisconsin, etc not on my list:
1. WashU
2. Mayo
3. Michigan
4. Pitt
Is Pittsburgh considered Midwest? I always thought that was East Coast.
Is Pittsburgh considered Midwest? I always thought that was East Coast.
Here is my list for the Midwest. I'm leaving out a program in Chicago but I'm sure at least 1 belongs on my list. Please remember these are NATIONAL rankings mostly and there are plenty of very very good Midwest programs like Ohio State, Wisconsin, etc not on my list:
1. WashU
2. Mayo
3. Michigan
4. Pitt
No worries. I was half joking. I am no American geography expert. As in, I don’t know what comprises MW, East Coast etc, besides taking an educated guess based on where it lies on a map.I apologize if western Pennsylvania is considered East Coast.
Settling the debate: Is Pittsburgh in the Midwest?
I interviewed at #1 and #3 last year and honestly loved them both. I ranked them 2 and 1 respectively. Sadly I did not match at either one (though it's probably better this way) and ended up next on my list at another "solid mid-tier" Midwest program that's been mentioned in here. My program is honestly probably a better fit for me despite my rank list. I am exceptionally happy with my current training and my program.Here is my list for the Midwest. I'm leaving out a program in Chicago but I'm sure at least 1 belongs on my list. Please remember these are NATIONAL rankings mostly and there are plenty of very very good Midwest programs like Ohio State, Wisconsin, etc not on my list:
1. WashU
2. Mayo
3. Michigan
4. Pitt
My comment was made because I came from a program not named here because it will never be named by the academic powerhouses because that isn’t what it was. I really think it is a gem, because starting very early there is a great deal of autonomy with sick patients. I admit my bias, but when I picked a residency, I picked a place that I wanted to let me learn to care for very sick adult. Mission accomplished.
My comment was made because I came from a program not named here because it will never be named by the academic powerhouses because that isn’t what it was. I really think it is a gem, because starting very early there is a great deal of autonomy with sick patients. I admit my bias, but when I picked a residency, I picked a place that I wanted to let me learn to care for very sick adult. Mission accomplished.
Having just retired from Mayo Rochester, I’m biased, but here goes.
Residents are very happy
Great “small town atmosphere” (107,000)
Great training experience (I did residency there)
Good name to have on resume and LOR’s
Cold weather, though.
CRNA ‘s get you out (for lecture and relief)
Resident-friendly staff
Etc
I'm very much of the opinion that many academic powerhouses and the like are loaded with fellows and that definitely detracts from resident experience. Especially if these places have "good" fellowships, that means the fellow is most likely doing rather than supervising, which means the resident isn't doing jack****. Not to mention, these kind of places also have a bazillion fellows in every specialty (transplant, thoracic, neuro, in addition to the ACGME ones), so it's not just a few cases that get poached. I went to a mid-tier program where it was just me and the attending in CDH repairs, pneumonectomies, aneurysm clippings, spinal cord stims, congenital heart parturients, LVADs, lung and heart transplants, etc etc, and I can say for a fact that when I went to do fellowship at a name program that some of the finishing CA-3s were on the same level I was at as a midyear CA-2.
Very important. I had a fantastic CV fellowship but it definitely limited the experience of the residents.
The flip side to that argument is such cases (especially highly complex cardiac and Peds cardiac) should probably be managed by a fellowship grad in the year 2018. There was a time where residents got sufficient exposure at certain programs, but I think those days are largely in the rear. It would be hard for a new grad to find such a job anyway (and they probably wouldn’t want one) that’s in a semi-desirable area.
Very important. I had a fantastic CV fellowship but it definitely limited the experience of the residents.
The flip side to that argument is such cases (especially highly complex cardiac and Peds cardiac) should probably be managed by a fellowship grad in the year 2018. There was a time where residents got sufficient exposure at certain programs, but I think those days are largely in the rear. It would be hard for a new grad to find such a job anyway (and they probably wouldn’t want one) that’s in a semi-desirable area.
I'd argue that it doesn't matter what you want to do with your life, doing bigger cases as a resident is helpful learning experience. I don't do off pump double lung transplants as an attending but I'm glad I got to do them as a resident.
I trained at a place where fellows were nearly all supervision except Pain which was great for my training.
Current CCF resident, just feel like I should correct some of the posts on here about our program. Interns average about 40 hours / week with rare 16 hour call + 7 months in the anesthesia department. Hours increase from there to ~55/week as a CA3. RARELY in OR past 5pm (you get paid $45/hour for every hour past 5:30PM)[I've turned in about 4 hours in 4 years], precall days home by 2:30, ALWAYS post call days off. Intern and CA1 take PACU GENA call (come in at 4, cover PACU, sleep, go home with day off). CA2 call can be busy only due to OLT and its the only year you can be stuck in those. CA3 call you start cases with CRNAs/residents, pre op and create plans, give breaks as needed, help with lines, etc. (feels a lot like being a staff). I guess that's "work horse" but imagine many staff/PP jobs require more of you.
We run about 120 OR's / day with cases running until 9-10PM most nights. Our patients are SICK. You learn very quickly how to manage very critically ill patients. It is not uncommon for interns to be doing kidney transplants supervised 1:2. Any given day there can be 3-4 crani's running simultaneously totalling 8-10/day. All department section heads assign residents preferred cases and we can always request assignments ahead of time. No fellows in GENA OR's. I did 14 OLT's and have 19 classmates. Lap liver resections are commonplace (probably done 30-40). Plenty of awake intubations on ENT.
CTA has 20 OR's, with A, B, and C round cases most days. CA2s are there to do lines, learn (lecture/study/OR teaching), and are out of OR at 3PM everyday to do pre ops for the next day (though this can be a burden). CA3s sit own cases and have a month of only TEE. Most residents will do 50+ CPB cases at the end of CA2 year.
Regional starts as an intern and can do as much or as little as you prefer. Elective months for CA3s you can do 8-16 blocks/day at some sites. I've logged >300 PNBs, >100 spinals, >100 epidurals. Current PD working to expand electives to other hospitals in and out of state (possibly out of country).
The resources we have are par none. TEE simulation, bronch sim, cadaver courses (stick cadavers with needles, practice chest tubes, etc), prestigious research institute, academic moneys, call moneys, conference moneys, iphone with unlimited data, new drugs, new toys, in house moonlighting, disability insurance negotiated to the CCF rate (its low). I take for granted that we have about 10 bronchoscopes for the main OR's that we are allowed to use electively for "practice."
The PD is a huge advocate for the residents and actively changes/addresses issues as they arise. For instance, ended cardiac (medicine) ICU due to long hours/high call volume and replaced it with floor consults (8A - 4P). Residents wanted more Pediatric experience so restarted our rotation at Akron Children's Hospital (more PP model - do 14 ENT cases/day if you want). He has fought hard to keep us in IR for 1 month doing tunneled lines/hickmains/ports/pigtails. We have a half day of academic time EVERY week on Thursday meaning you are unassigned from duties for half of the day to work on fellowship/job apps, research, study, logging cases, etc.
In basically every fellowship, we have prominent and well-known staff for LOR, mentorship, etc.
In brief, I do not think its fair to call CCF a mid-tier program with other programs such as IU, Ohio State, and Cincinatti. We may not be #1 hospital in America but I don't think you'll feel the experience was lacking and it certainly isn't fair to call us mid tier because we are perceived to work more than some. If you want to learn anesthesia and set yourself up for success, I don't know that you'll find a better place in the Midwest. And I promise you Cleveland is not as bad as it sounds, even with Lebron and Johnny Manziel gone.
The resources we have are par none.
I just find it interesting when people who have only worked in one place talk about how nowhere else can match what they do there. There are probably at least a dozen programs (if not 20-30) that have at worst similar (and sometimes better) experiences for their residents.
To be clear, that was in reference to the resources (not experience which is 100% subjective).
"Cleveland Clinic ended 2017 with operating income of $330.6 million, up nearly 36 percent from $243.2 million in 2016, according to recently released bondholder documents.
Cleveland Clinic's revenues increased to $8.4 billion in 2017, up from $8 billion in the year prior. The boost was partially attributable to a 7 percent year-over-year increase in patient visits."
As a graduate of this prestigious program the SYSTEM is about as perfect as it gets. Well thought put plans to get patients through the operative process. The real world is not as perfect. And some thought needs to be placed in teaching the residents how they built such a good system.Current CCF resident, just feel like I should correct some of the posts on here about our program. Interns average about 40 hours / week with rare 16 hour call + 7 months in the anesthesia department. Hours increase from there to ~55/week as a CA3. RARELY in OR past 5pm (you get paid $45/hour for every hour past 5:30PM)[I've turned in about 4 hours in 4 years], precall days home by 2:30, ALWAYS post call days off. Intern and CA1 take PACU GENA call (come in at 4, cover PACU, sleep, go home with day off). CA2 call can be busy only due to OLT and its the only year you can be stuck in those. CA3 call you start cases with CRNAs/residents, pre op and create plans, give breaks as needed, help with lines, etc. (feels a lot like being a staff). I guess that's "work horse" but imagine many staff/PP jobs require more of you.
We run about 120 OR's / day with cases running until 9-10PM most nights. Our patients are SICK. You learn very quickly how to manage very critically ill patients. It is not uncommon for interns to be doing kidney transplants supervised 1:2. Any given day there can be 3-4 crani's running simultaneously totalling 8-10/day. All department section heads assign residents preferred cases and we can always request assignments ahead of time. No fellows in GENA OR's. I did 14 OLT's and have 19 classmates. Lap liver resections are commonplace (probably done 30-40). Plenty of awake intubations on ENT.
CTA has 20 OR's, with A, B, and C round cases most days. CA2s are there to do lines, learn (lecture/study/OR teaching), and are out of OR at 3PM everyday to do pre ops for the next day (though this can be a burden). CA3s sit own cases and have a month of only TEE. Most residents will do 50+ CPB cases at the end of CA2 year.
Regional starts as an intern and can do as much or as little as you prefer. Elective months for CA3s you can do 8-16 blocks/day at some sites. I've logged >300 PNBs, >100 spinals, >100 epidurals. Current PD working to expand electives to other hospitals in and out of state (possibly out of country).
The resources we have are par none. TEE simulation, bronch sim, cadaver courses (stick cadavers with needles, practice chest tubes, etc), prestigious research institute, academic moneys, call moneys, conference moneys, iphone with unlimited data, new drugs, new toys, in house moonlighting, disability insurance negotiated to the CCF rate (its low). I take for granted that we have about 10 bronchoscopes for the main OR's that we are allowed to use electively for "practice."
The PD is a huge advocate for the residents and actively changes/addresses issues as they arise. For instance, ended cardiac (medicine) ICU due to long hours/high call volume and replaced it with floor consults (8A - 4P). Residents wanted more Pediatric experience so restarted our rotation at Akron Children's Hospital (more PP model - do 14 ENT cases/day if you want). He has fought hard to keep us in IR for 1 month doing tunneled lines/hickmains/ports/pigtails. We have a half day of academic time EVERY week on Thursday meaning you are unassigned from duties for half of the day to work on fellowship/job apps, research, study, logging cases, etc.
In basically every fellowship, we have prominent and well-known staff for LOR, mentorship, etc.
In brief, I do not think its fair to call CCF a mid-tier program with other programs such as IU, Ohio State, and Cincinatti. We may not be #1 hospital in America but I don't think you'll feel the experience was lacking and it certainly isn't fair to call us mid tier because we are perceived to work more than some. If you want to learn anesthesia and set yourself up for success, I don't know that you'll find a better place in the Midwest. And I promise you Cleveland is not as bad as it sounds, even with Lebron and Johnny Manziel gone.
Well to be fair, do you work in the real world? Or the military world.As a graduate of this prestigious programming the SYSTEM is about as perfect as it gets. Well thought put plans to get patients through the operative process. The real world is not as perfect. And some thought needs to be placed in teaching the residents how they built such a good system.
Current CCF resident, just feel like I should correct some of the posts on here about our program. Interns average about 40 hours / week with rare 16 hour call + 7 months in the anesthesia department. Hours increase from there to ~55/week as a CA3. RARELY in OR past 5pm (you get paid $45/hour for every hour past 5:30PM)[I've turned in about 4 hours in 4 years], precall days home by 2:30, ALWAYS post call days off. Intern and CA1 take PACU GENA call (come in at 4, cover PACU, sleep, go home with day off). CA2 call can be busy only due to OLT and its the only year you can be stuck in those. CA3 call you start cases with CRNAs/residents, pre op and create plans, give breaks as needed, help with lines, etc. (feels a lot like being a staff). I guess that's "work horse" but imagine many staff/PP jobs require more of you.
We run about 120 OR's / day with cases running until 9-10PM most nights. Our patients are SICK. You learn very quickly how to manage very critically ill patients. It is not uncommon for interns to be doing kidney transplants supervised 1:2. Any given day there can be 3-4 crani's running simultaneously totalling 8-10/day. All department section heads assign residents preferred cases and we can always request assignments ahead of time. No fellows in GENA OR's. I did 14 OLT's and have 19 classmates. Lap liver resections are commonplace (probably done 30-40). Plenty of awake intubations on ENT.
CTA has 20 OR's, with A, B, and C round cases most days. CA2s are there to do lines, learn (lecture/study/OR teaching), and are out of OR at 3PM everyday to do pre ops for the next day (though this can be a burden). CA3s sit own cases and have a month of only TEE. Most residents will do 50+ CPB cases at the end of CA2 year.
Regional starts as an intern and can do as much or as little as you prefer. Elective months for CA3s you can do 8-16 blocks/day at some sites. I've logged >300 PNBs, >100 spinals, >100 epidurals. Current PD working to expand electives to other hospitals in and out of state (possibly out of country).
The resources we have are par none. TEE simulation, bronch sim, cadaver courses (stick cadavers with needles, practice chest tubes, etc), prestigious research institute, academic moneys, call moneys, conference moneys, iphone with unlimited data, new drugs, new toys, in house moonlighting, disability insurance negotiated to the CCF rate (its low). I take for granted that we have about 10 bronchoscopes for the main OR's that we are allowed to use electively for "practice."
The PD is a huge advocate for the residents and actively changes/addresses issues as they arise. For instance, ended cardiac (medicine) ICU due to long hours/high call volume and replaced it with floor consults (8A - 4P). Residents wanted more Pediatric experience so restarted our rotation at Akron Children's Hospital (more PP model - do 14 ENT cases/day if you want). He has fought hard to keep us in IR for 1 month doing tunneled lines/hickmains/ports/pigtails. We have a half day of academic time EVERY week on Thursday meaning you are unassigned from duties for half of the day to work on fellowship/job apps, research, study, logging cases, etc.
In basically every fellowship, we have prominent and well-known staff for LOR, mentorship, etc.
In brief, I do not think its fair to call CCF a mid-tier program with other programs such as IU, Ohio State, and Cincinatti. We may not be #1 hospital in America but I don't think you'll feel the experience was lacking and it certainly isn't fair to call us mid tier because we are perceived to work more than some. If you want to learn anesthesia and set yourself up for success, I don't know that you'll find a better place in the Midwest. And I promise you Cleveland is not as bad as it sounds, even with Lebron and Johnny Manziel gone.
As a graduate of this prestigious program the SYSTEM is about as perfect as it gets. Well thought put plans to get patients through the operative process. The real world is not as perfect. And some thought needs to be placed in teaching the residents how they built such a good system.
I just find it interesting when people who have only worked in one place talk about how nowhere else can match what they do there. There are probably at least a dozen programs (if not 20-30) that have at worst similar (and sometimes better) experiences for their residents.
I see your point about the “system”. Back in the nineties I did a SICU month at CCF and I was surprised when we admitted OLT’s who received 0-2 units of PRBC’s intraoperatively. At my home program, it was unusual for the patients to get less than 8 and sometimes much much more.
Current CCF resident, just feel like I should correct some of the posts on here about our program. Interns average about 40 hours / week with rare 16 hour call + 7 months in the anesthesia department. Hours increase from there to ~55/week as a CA3. RARELY in OR past 5pm (you get paid $45/hour for every hour past 5:30PM)[I've turned in about 4 hours in 4 years], precall days home by 2:30, ALWAYS post call days off. Intern and CA1 take PACU GENA call (come in at 4, cover PACU, sleep, go home with day off). CA2 call can be busy only due to OLT and its the only year you can be stuck in those. CA3 call you start cases with CRNAs/residents, pre op and create plans, give breaks as needed, help with lines, etc. (feels a lot like being a staff). I guess that's "work horse" but imagine many staff/PP jobs require more of you.
We run about 120 OR's / day with cases running until 9-10PM most nights. Our patients are SICK. You learn very quickly how to manage very critically ill patients. It is not uncommon for interns to be doing kidney transplants supervised 1:2. Any given day there can be 3-4 crani's running simultaneously totalling 8-10/day. All department section heads assign residents preferred cases and we can always request assignments ahead of time. No fellows in GENA OR's. I did 14 OLT's and have 19 classmates. Lap liver resections are commonplace (probably done 30-40). Plenty of awake intubations on ENT.
CTA has 20 OR's, with A, B, and C round cases most days. CA2s are there to do lines, learn (lecture/study/OR teaching), and are out of OR at 3PM everyday to do pre ops for the next day (though this can be a burden). CA3s sit own cases and have a month of only TEE. Most residents will do 50+ CPB cases at the end of CA2 year.
Regional starts as an intern and can do as much or as little as you prefer. Elective months for CA3s you can do 8-16 blocks/day at some sites. I've logged >300 PNBs, >100 spinals, >100 epidurals. Current PD working to expand electives to other hospitals in and out of state (possibly out of country).
The resources we have are par none. TEE simulation, bronch sim, cadaver courses (stick cadavers with needles, practice chest tubes, etc), prestigious research institute, academic moneys, call moneys, conference moneys, iphone with unlimited data, new drugs, new toys, in house moonlighting, disability insurance negotiated to the CCF rate (its low). I take for granted that we have about 10 bronchoscopes for the main OR's that we are allowed to use electively for "practice."
The PD is a huge advocate for the residents and actively changes/addresses issues as they arise. For instance, ended cardiac (medicine) ICU due to long hours/high call volume and replaced it with floor consults (8A - 4P). Residents wanted more Pediatric experience so restarted our rotation at Akron Children's Hospital (more PP model - do 14 ENT cases/day if you want). He has fought hard to keep us in IR for 1 month doing tunneled lines/hickmains/ports/pigtails. We have a half day of academic time EVERY week on Thursday meaning you are unassigned from duties for half of the day to work on fellowship/job apps, research, study, logging cases, etc.
In basically every fellowship, we have prominent and well-known staff for LOR, mentorship, etc.
In brief, I do not think its fair to call CCF a mid-tier program with other programs such as IU, Ohio State, and Cincinatti. We may not be #1 hospital in America but I don't think you'll feel the experience was lacking and it certainly isn't fair to call us mid tier because we are perceived to work more than some. If you want to learn anesthesia and set yourself up for success, I don't know that you'll find a better place in the Midwest. And I promise you Cleveland is not as bad as it sounds, even with Lebron and Johnny Manziel gone.