2011 Match Lists

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Someone PM'ed me asking about Vandy's match list this year. Since it is public knowledge in our med center newspaper, I figured I could post it here too. So proud of our amazing class!

Anesthesiology (6):
-Brigham & Women’s
-Brigham & Women’s
-Columbia
-Mass General
-Vanderbilt
-Vanderbilt

Dermatology (1):
-Vanderbilt

Emergency Medicine (7):
-Brown
-MGH/Brigham
-Mt. Sinai
-U of Chicago
-UCLA-Olive View
-Vanderbilt
-Vanderbilt

General Surgery (5):
-Mayo
-U of Maryland
-U of Mississippi
-UCLA
-Vanderbilt

Internal Medicine (21):
-Brigham & Women’s
-Case Western
-Duke
-Duke
-Grand Rapids Med Education Partners
-Mass General
-Mass General
-Mayo
-Northwestern
-Rush- Chicago
-U of Chicago
-U of Chicago
-U of Louisville
-U of Rochester
-U of Virginia
-U Washington-Seattle
-Vanderbilt
-Vanderbilt
-Vanderbilt
-Wake Forest

Medicine-Primary (1):
-Boston U

Med-Peds (4):
-Johns Hopkins
-Mass General
-Mass General
-Rush-Chicago

Neurology (4):
-Columbia
-Mass General/Brigham
-Northwestern
-Wash U/Barnes-Jewish

Neurosurgery (2):
-U of Michigan
-Vanderbilt

OB-GYN (3):
-BIDMC- Boston
-Cornell
-Northwestern

Ophthalmology (4):
-U of Arizona
-U of Michigan
-U of Wisconsin
-Vanderbilt

Ortho (4):
-Baylor
-Carolinas
-Emory
-Vanderbilt

ENT (6):
-Einstein
-Mt. Sinai- NYC
-NYU
-U of Connecticut
-U of Virginia
-Vanderbilt

Pathology (1):
-UCLA

Pediatric Neurology (1):
-Harvard/Children’s Hosp/BIDMC

Pediatrics (7):
-Children’s Mercy Hospital- Kansas City
-CHOP- Philadelphia
-Cincinnati Children’s
-MUSC- South Carolina
-U of Colorado
-UCSF- San Francisco
-Vanderbilt

Psychiatry (6):
-Brown
-Columbia
-Utah
-Northwestern
-NYU
-Vanderbilt

Radiation Oncology (1):
-Wash U/Barnes-Jewish

Radiology (8):
-Johns Hopkins
-Penn
-U of Illinois
-U of Iowa
-U of Missouri
-Vanderbilt
-Vanderbilt
-Wash U/Barnes-Jewish

Thoracic Surgery (1):
-Stanford

Urology (1):
-Brigham & Women’s
 
Considering how many/most pre-meds end up in a different specialty than they initially planned on...

Huh? "many/most"? 😱 Who cares about what the many/most do? Top 10% and AOA, baby.
 
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2011 University of Michigan Medical School
Residency Match List

See attached .doc file
 

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x1000000

I cant believe the school even gives out a list with names and locations. I thought you always had the opportunity to keep that info private?

I can see your point, though I highly doubt it matters. Most hospitals post their resident list online, so a simple Google search will turn up your name, year, and program.
 
I removed the names. The school asks us ahead of time if we don't want our match listed, so everybody has the option of anonymity. Also, some of the other match lists posted on here have the names.

I apologize for the quality, as I just took screen shots and pasted them in a word doc.
 
x1000000

I cant believe the school even gives out a list with names and locations. I thought you always had the opportunity to keep that info private?

My school posts a complete list with our names on it which is easily accessible from the school's website. And we don't have the option of taking our match off of the list. I tried to maintain some privacy for the class by at least deidentifying the information before I posted it here, but it wouldn't be hard to find the full list.
 
take those people's names off!

Most schools I've come across post the names, specialty, and program publicly on the school website. My school does not give the option. Personally, I don't see why it would matter to anyone. As someone said previously, you can easily find the resident list with pictures at most programs websites.

..and here is:

Brown: http://med.brown.edu/about/match
USF: http://health.usf.edu/nocms/publicaffairs/now/pdfs/MatchDay2011_List.pdf
 
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Match itself shows how unprivate these things is because the match day ceremony requires med students to read it out in front of the rest of the world that is their classmates and family members and other audience who are there to witness it.

Depends on the school. Fortunately, my school just gave out envelopes and you could open them where/when you wanted to. I think that making you read your Match result out in front of an audience is just cruel.
 
Most schools I've come across post the names, specialty, and program publicly on the school website. My school does not give the option. Personally, I don't see why it would matter to anyone. As someone said previously, you can easily find the resident list with pictures at most programs websites.

..and here is:

Brown: http://med.brown.edu/about/match
USF: http://health.usf.edu/nocms/publicaffairs/now/pdfs/MatchDay2011_List.pdf

What's with the guy doing his EM residency at McMaster U in Canada? Is that common? Nothing wrong with that but I have never heard of someone going from a US med school to do an international residency. It's almost always been the other way around with people going to med school overseas and trying their best to land a residency spot here. Of course he must have had his reasons (maybe he's Canadian?) but I swear I've never seen that before.
 
Not to be mean but you know that schools do post people's names for the public to see at several schools.

USF even lets anyone in the general public watch the match day ceremony live online.

its not as big of a deal.

Fact is when you become a physician you will be easily searchable on websites like vitals.com, ratemds.com, and health grades.

Where you went to school, where you did residency, how long you've been practicing will be available.

So what is the big deal.
a school releasing someone's information is quite a bit different than a classmate or a random person releasing someone's information on freakin' SDN, in my opinion. that's all i'm saying.
 
a school releasing someone's information is quite a bit different than a classmate or a random person releasing someone's information on freakin' SDN, in my opinion. that's all i'm saying.

bro, i am not sure what the difference really is between a list posted by the school on their website on freakin' internet, and anyone reposting THE SAME list on freakin' SDN, in my opinion. that's all people here are saying
 
a school releasing someone's information is quite a bit different than a classmate or a random person releasing someone's information on freakin' SDN, in my opinion. that's all i'm saying.

you have a very odd opinion on the matter
 
Anesthesiology (8)
Mass Gen
OHSU
UC Irvine
U. Penn
U. Utah
U. Utah
U. Washington
U. Washington


Dermatology (1)
OHSU


Emergency Medicine (8)
Lincoln Medical –NY
OHSU
OHSU
St. Louis Univ SOM
U. Arizona
U. Iowa
WSU – Detroit
WSU - Detroit


Family Medicine (23)
Alaska Family Med / Prov
Camp Pendelton – Naval Hospital
John Peter Smith Hosp - TX
OHSU
OHSU
OHSU
OHSU
Prov Milwaukie – OR
Prov Milwaukie – OR
Prov Milwaukie – OR
Prov Milwaukie – OR
Prov Sacred Heart - WA
St. Anthony – CO
St. Mary's - CO
Sutter – Santa Rosa CA
SW Washington
SW Washington
SW Washington
UCSF
U. Utah
U. Washington
U. Wisconsin
Utah HealthCare Institute


Family Med / Preventative Med (1)
OHSU


General Surgery (7)
Bassett Medical Center – NY
Maricopa - AZ
OHSU
OHSU
SUNY Upstate
U. North Carolina
Virginia Mason - WA


Internal Medicine (22)
Boston U
Columbia – NYP Hospital
Exempla St. Joseph - CO
Kaiser – Oakland CA
Legacy / Good Sam – OR
Legacy / Good Sam - OR
Mayo
OHSU
OHSU
OHSU
Prov Portland - OR
Prov St. Vincent – OR
Prov St. Vincent -OR
Santa Clara - CA
U. Arizona
U. Colorado
UC Davis
UCSF
U. Maryland
U. Michigan
U. Utah
U. Washington


Medicine – Family Med (2)
Eastern VA
U. Washington


Medicine – Pediatrics (1)
Tulane


Medicine – Primary (3)
U. Colorado
U. Colorado
U. Washington


OB/Gyn (3)
Duke
Kaiser – Santa Clara
U. Washington


Ophthalmology (2)
UC Davis
U. Washington


Oral Maxillofacial Surgery (1)
OHSU


Otolaryngology (2)
Madigan Army Med Center
U. Michigan


Pathology (1)
OHSU


Pediatrics (11)
Duke
Kaiser Los Angeles - CA
Loma Linda
OHSU
OHSU
Stanford
UCLA – Harbor
UCLA – Harbor
U. Colorado
UVM/Fletcher Allen – VT
U. Washington


Phys Medicine and Rehab (1)
UPMC - PA


Psychiatry (5)
Harvard – Longwood
Med College Georgia
OHSU
OHSU
U. Utah


Radiology – Diagnostic (3)
David Grant Med Center
Duke
OHSU


Urology (2)
U. Colorado
U. Washington
 
bro, i am not sure what the difference really is between a list posted by the school on their website on freakin' internet, and anyone reposting THE SAME list on freakin' SDN, in my opinion. that's all people here are saying

eh, some of the match lists posted on this site are clearly meant only for internal consumption. in that case, names should be expunged.
 
Depends on the school. Fortunately, my school just gave out envelopes and you could open them where/when you wanted to. I think that making you read your Match result out in front of an audience is just cruel.

well, that and the fact that reading off names one at a time would take about 8 hours or so when you have a class of 251.
 
I must have made a mistake somewhere because we had 146 ppl in the match and there are only 144 on this list. Sorry!

Maybe I'll double check it later -- after my Boards in 3 days!!! 😱


Anesthesiology

Brigham & Women's Hospital
Stanford
UC Irvine
UCSF
UCSF
UCSF

Dermatology
Duke
NYU
UCSF

Emergency Medicine
Alameda County Medical Center
Stanford
UC San Diego
UCSF
UCSF

Family Medicine
Contra Costa Regional Medical Center
Sutter Medical Center of Santa Rosa
Sutter Medical Center of Santa Rosa
Sutter Medical Center of Santa Rosa
Sutter Medical Center of Santa Rosa
Swedish Medical Center
UC Davis
UC Davis
UC Davis
UCSF
UCSF
UCSF
UCSF
White Memorial Medical Center

Internal Medicine
California Pacific Medical Center
Cambridge Health Alliance
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
Emory
Harbor-UCLA Medical Center
Olive View / UCLA
Olive View / UCLA
Santa Clara Valley Medical Center
Scripps Mercy Hospital
Stanford
Stanford
Stanford
Stanford
Stanford
UC Davis
UC Irvine
UC San Diego
UCLA
UCSF
UCSF
UCSF
UCSF
UCSF
UCSF
UCSF
UCSF
University of Washington
Vanderbilt

Internal Medicine - Preventative Medicine
Kaiser Permanente, San Francisco

Internal Medicine - Primary Care
Boston University
Brigham & Women's Hospital
NYU
UC Davis
UCSF
UCSF
UCSF
UCSF
UCSF
UCSF
University of Washington

Neurological Surgery
National Capital Consortium - Walter Reed
Stanford
UCSF

Neurology
UCLA
UCSF
UCSF

OB Gyn

Boston University
Boston University
Kaiser Permanente, Oakland
Northwestern McGaw/NMH/VA
Oregon Health & Science University
Santa Clara Valley Medical Center
Stanford
UCSF
UCSF
UCSF
University of Chicago
University of Iowa
University of Michigan
University of North Carolina

Ophthalmology
Harvard - Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary
Harvard - Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary
New York Eye & Ear Infirmary
UCSF

Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery
UCSF
UCSF

Orthopaedic Surgery
Massachusetts General Hospital
Rush University Medical Center
Stanford
UCSF
UCSF

Otolaryngology
Oregon Health & Science University

Pediatrics
Children's Hospital Oakland
Johns Hopkins Hospital
Massachusetts General Hospital
New York Presbyterian Hospital - Weill Cornell
Stanford
Stanford
Stanford
Stanford
Stanford
UC Irvine
UC San Diego
UC San Diego
UCSF
UCSF
UCSF
UCSF
UCSF
UCSF
UCSF
University of Washington

Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation

Stanford

Psychiatry

California Pacific Medical Center
Cambridge Health Alliance
Massachusetts General Hospital
Stanford
UCLA Semel Institute for Neuroscience
UCLA Semel Institute for Neuroscience
University of Southern California
University of Texas Southwestern
University of Washington

Radiation Oncology
University Hospitals Case Medical Center

Radiology
Duke
Oregon Health & Science University
Santa Clara Valley Medical Center
UC Davis
UCSF
UCSF

Surgery

Cleveland Clinic
Tufts
UCSF
UCSF
UCSF, East Bay
Washington University - Barnes Jewish Hospital

Surgery - Preliminary

UCSF
 
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say what??

many match lists are only published internally i.e. they are only made available to faculty/students/staff at the school. when someone decides to put such a list up on the internet, i feel the names should be removed first. another practice you'll see is to release two versions: one internal with names, one put up on the school's frontpage without them.

if the full version is readily available via Google, then yeah, obviously privacy isn't an issue. but the whole reason for this thread is that many match lists are hard to come by, unless you're privy to that information. in that case, at least respect your colleagues' privacy to the same extent that your school did.
 
many match lists are only published internally i.e. they are only made available to faculty/students/staff at the school. when someone decides to put such a list up on the internet, i feel the names should be removed first. another practice you'll see is to release two versions: one internal with names, one put up on the school's frontpage without them.

if the full version is readily available via Google, then yeah, obviously privacy isn't an issue. but the whole reason for this thread is that many match lists are hard to come by, unless you're privy to that information. in that case, at least respect your colleagues' privacy to the same extent that your school did.

I did not know that you dictate what the whole reason for this thread is. I apologize.
 
bro, i am not sure what the difference really is between a list posted by the school on their website on freakin' internet, and anyone reposting THE SAME list on freakin' SDN, in my opinion. that's all people here are saying

I agree here. Who cares if the names are on the site?

All the schools I've been accepted to post full match lists with names/hopsitals/etc.

What is the big deal? Most of the schools I've seen in the top 50 (US News) have been posting their lists. What is to hide and who cares if people know where you go. You all realize that the residents at any decent hospital have their pictures and names listed publicly. The information is not private.
 
many match lists are only published internally i.e. they are only made available to faculty/students/staff at the school. when someone decides to put such a list up on the internet, i feel the names should be removed first. another practice you'll see is to release two versions: one internal with names, one put up on the school's frontpage without them.

if the full version is readily available via Google, then yeah, obviously privacy isn't an issue. but the whole reason for this thread is that many match lists are hard to come by, unless you're privy to that information. in that case, at least respect your colleagues' privacy to the same extent that your school did.

I guess I applied to a lot of "public" schools because most of them have the match lists available to the public. 😕😕 Confused why this needs to be a secret. Anyone can look up where you are working once you're a resident.
 
Incidentally, the Stanford one was totally weird. Only 4 gen surg matches?


I don't see what's so weird about that. Stanford attracts smart kids. Smart kids know that a general surgery residency is an idiotic choice for anyone.:laugh:
 
I don't see what's so weird about that. Stanford attracts smart kids. Smart kids know that a general surgery residency is an idiotic choice for anyone.:laugh:

Stanford has smaller class sizes than other programs - about 70-80 students.
 
I don't see what's so weird about that. Stanford attracts smart kids. Smart kids know that a general surgery residency is an idiotic choice for anyone.:laugh:

Er...so are all general, transplant, pediatric as well many plastic, many ortho, and the vast majority of vascular and cardiothoracic surgeons idiots?

I hope I or my kids never get sick!
 
Er...so are all general, transplant, pediatric as well many plastic, many ortho, and the vast majority of vascular and cardiothoracic surgeons idiots?


The point was that general surgery is a miserable residency. The residents are easily the most miserable and unhappy category of residents you'll find in nearly every hospital.

Also, I'm not sure I've ever heard of an orthopedic surgeon who completed a general surgery residency.
 
The point was that general surgery is a miserable residency. The residents are easily the most miserable and unhappy category of residents you'll find in nearly every hospital.

Also, I'm not sure I've ever heard of an orthopedic surgeon who completed a general surgery residency.

General surgery residency training is a lot of hard work but I have only encountered general surgery residents who are satisfied with their job. Sure, it's exhausting, but at the end of the day these people are passionate about the craft of surgery. It's a very satisfying career. I don't think it's fair to say that general surgery residents are "easily the most miserable and unhappy category of residents."
 
General surgery residency training is a lot of hard work but I have only encountered general surgery residents who are satisfied with their job. Sure, it's exhausting, but at the end of the day these people are passionate about the craft of surgery. It's a very satisfying career. I don't think it's fair to say that general surgery residents are "easily the most miserable and unhappy category of residents."


If I had a dime for every time a general surgery resident told me "do anything but surgery" or "if I had to do it again, I'd do anything but surgery", I would have paid back my student loans already.

I'm sure plenty are satisfied with their career down the road when they're in practice. But it's no big secret that general surgery residency is a bitch.
 
A lot of this is pretty institution dependent. Call schedules and responsibilities and nursing culture differ a lot between hospitals. The gen Surg residents here are happy, happier than a lot of the Surg spec residents in many cases.

If I had a dime for every time a general surgery resident told me "do anything but surgery" or "if I had to do it again, I'd do anything but surgery", I would have paid back my student loans already.

I'm sure plenty are satisfied with their career down the road when they're in practice. But it's no big secret that general surgery residency is a bitch.
 
If I had a dime for every time a general surgery resident told me "do anything but surgery" or "if I had to do it again, I'd do anything but surgery", I would have paid back my student loans already.

I'm sure plenty are satisfied with their career down the road when they're in practice. But it's no big secret that general surgery residency is a bitch.

And yet most of the general surgeons I know at my hospital are pretty pleasant. The only one I can think of that's a jerk but I also know never wanted to be a doctor in the first place (his dad pushed him into it). I think the only doctor I've ever met who flat out told me not to go into medicine is a plastic surgeon, but he's just miserable anyway. I'm basing this off the fact that my mom remembers getting crap from him 30 years ago when he was a resident at the hospital where she was a nurse.
 
Incidentally, the Stanford one was totally weird. Only 4 gen surg matches?

Your perspective is skewed by the fact that my class had a record number of students go into gen surg last year, that vandys residency is pretty friendly as these things go, and that Vanderbilt's PD is nationally known for being one of the most benevolent, encouraging mentors out there. Most academic programs (eg Stanford) put more like 4-6 per year in gen surg, with occasional odd years. Vandy only had 4 or 5 do gen surg this year too if I recall.
 
A lot of this is pretty institution dependent. Call schedules and responsibilities and nursing culture differ a lot between hospitals. The gen Surg residents here are happy, happier than a lot of the Surg spec residents in many cases.

Good point. Just because most/some GS residencies are awful doesn't mean they all are.
 
So how are these matches listed here. Is each person's residency listed per school, just not with names?
 
Biggest class in history...(due to >70% of the original class of 2010 taking a year off, and a good majority of the original class of 2011 not taking a year off).

Anesthesiology (6)
BWH (2)​
NYP Columbia (2)​
Stanford​
NYU

Dermatology (5)
UT Southwestern​
UCSF​
Yale​
NYU​
UCLA

Internal Medicine (35)
Johns Hopkins​
MGH (9)​
Brigham (10)​
NYP Columbia (2)​
UCSF (3)​
Vanderbilt​
Mt. Auburn​
Yale​
Beth Israel Deaconess Med Center (2)​
Stanford (2)​
Duke​
Northwestern​
Mt. Sinai

Internal Medicine/Primary Care (11)
U Washington​
MGH (1)​
UCSF (2)​
BWH (4)​
Cambridge Health Alliance (2)​
Eistein/Montefiore

Med/Peds (3)
BWH/Children's Hospital Boston (2)​
UCLA

Family Medicine (8)
Mayo​
Ventura County Med Center​
Tufts/Cambridge Health Alliance (2)​
Geisinger Health System​
Swedish Medical Center​
Maine Medical Center​
U Toronto

Emergency Medicine (9)
BWH (2)​
Denver Health Medical Center​
NYP Columbia and Cornell​
Beth Israel Deaconess Med Center​
Baylor College of Medicine​
U Massachusetts​
Northwestern​
University Hospital – Cincinnati

General Surgery (8)
MGH (3)​
Stanford​
NYP Cornell​
Baylor College of Medicine​
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center​
Duke

Neurology (1)
Mt. Sinai

Neurosurgery (4)
MGH (2)​
UCSF​
U Washington

Ob/Gyn (8)
UCSF​
UCLA​
BWH-MGH (3)​
National Capital Consortium – USHUHS​
Harbor-UCLA​
Brown

Ophthalmology (7)
MEEI (3)​
Albert Einstein​
UCSF​
JHU​
U Maryland

Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery (2)
MGH (2)

Orthopedic Surgery (6)
Hospital for Special Surgery​
San Antonio Military Medical Center​
UCLA​
Mt. Sinai​
McGill​
MGH

Otolaryngology (5)
UCI​
MEEI (2)​
Northwestern​
USC

Pathology (1)
BWH

Pediatrics (13)
UCSF (3)​
MGH (2)​
UCSD​
Children's Hospital Boston (3)​
UCLA​
Stanford​
U Washington​
NYP Columbia

Plastic Surgery (4)
U Penn​
Ohio State University​
UCSF​
Brown

Preliminary Medicine (1)
Mt. Auburn

Preliminary Surgery (2)
BWH​
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

Psychiatry (8)
Cambridge Health Alliance (2)​
NYU​
NYP Cornell​
UCLA​
GWU​
MGH​
NYP Columbia

Radiation Oncology (7)
Harvard (3)​
UCSF (2)​
Memorial Sloan-Kettering​
U Wisconsin

Radiology (9)
BWH (2)​
MGH​
UCSF (3)​
U Vermont​
Stanford​
U Washington

Urology (4)
MGH (2)​
Stanford​
Einstein/Montefiore

Other (3)
Consulting – Bain & Company​
Israel Defense Forces​
PhD in Health Policy and Management – Harvard Business School​
 
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