2018 Match List

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I am bored in a meeting so I formatted the DMU list, cheers:
*spoiler: there's a poop ton of EM.

Anesthesiology (10)
ACGME University Wisconsin Hosptial and Clinics Madison WI (x2)
ACGME PGY-2 Johns Hopkins Hospital Baltimore MD
ACGME University Hospitals Columbia MO
ACGME University of Missouri-KC Programs - St. Lukes Kansas City MO
ACGME Baylor-Scott & White Temple TX
ACGME PGY-2 Baystate Medical Center Springfield MA
ACGME University of Nebraska Medical Center Omaha NE
ACGME University of Kentucky Medical Center Lexington KY
AOA South Pointe Hospital Warrensville Heights OH

Dermatology (1)

ACGME PGY-2 KCU-GME Consortium - ADCS - Orlando Maitland FL

Diagnostic Radiology (3)
ACGME PGY-2 Cook County Health and Hospital System Chicago IL
ACGME University of Minnesota Medical School Minneapolis MN
ACGME PGY-2 Indiana University School of Medicine Indianapolis IN

Emergency Medicine (31)
ACGME Kent Hostpital Warwick RI (x2)
ACGME University of Nevada Las Vegas SOM Las Vegas NV
ACGME St. Vincent Mercy Medical Center Toledo OH
ACGME St. Barnabas Hospital Bronx NY
ACGME St. Vincent Mercy Medical Center Toledo (x2)
ACGME Madigan Army Medical Center Tacoma WA
ACGME SIU SOM and Affilicated Hospitals Springfield IL
ACGME Hofstra Northwell SOM - Staten Island University Staten Island NY
ACGME University at Buffalo SOM Buffalo NY (x3)
ACGME Henry Ford Wyandotte Hospital Wyandote MI (x2)
ACGME Medical College of Wisonsin Affiliated Hospitals Milwaukee WI (x2)
ACGME Henry Ford Allegiance Health Jackson MI
ACGME Case Western/MetroHealth Medical Center Cleveland OH
ACGME UPMC Hamot Medical Center Erie PA
ACGME St. John Macomb - Oakland Hospital Warren MI
ACGME Western Michican University Stryker SOM Kalamazoo MI
ACGME Henry Ford Macomb Hospital Clinton Township MI
ACGME University of Texas HSC San Antonio TX
ACGME U Illinois COM Chicago IL
ACGME University of Missouri - KC Programs Kansas City MO
ACGME McLaren Oakland - Macomb Mount Clements MI
ACGME Grand Strand Regional Medical Center Myrtle Beach SC
Military Darnall Army Medical Center Fort Hood TX
AOA INTEGRIS Southwest Medical Center Oklahoma City OK
AOA Franciscan Health Olympia Fields Olympia Fields I

EM-IM (1)
ACGME Henry Ford Hospital Detroit MI

Family Medicine (45)
ACGME Northwestern McGaw/NMH/VA - Erie-Swedish Chicago IL
ACGME Northwestern McGaw/NMH/VA - Lake Forest Grayslake IL
ACGME U Minnesota Medical School - St. Cloud Minneapolis MN
ACGME Mercy Medical Center Des Moines IA
ACGME U Texas Rio Grande Valley - DHR-Edinburg McAllen TX
ACGME University of Oklahoma COM Tulsa OK
ACGME Northeast Iowa Medical Education Foundation Waterloo IA
ACGME University of Minnesota Medical School/UMN - St. Cloud Hospital St. Cloud MN
ACGME Research Medical Center Kansas City MO
ACGME Broadlawns Medical Center Des Moines IA (x6)
ACGME Mercy Hospital St. Louis St. Louis MO
ACGME Gundersen Lutheran Medical Foundation La Crosse WI
ACGME Center for Family Medicine Sioux Falls SD
ACGME Central Iowa Health System - Iowa Lutheran Des Moines IA (x3)
ACGME Rapid City Regional Hospital Rapid City SD
ACGME Hennepin County Medical Center Minneapolis MN
ACGME Rapid City Regional Hospital Rapid City SD
ACGME University of Wisconsin SOM and Public Health - Eau Claire Madison WI
ACGME Genesis Quad Cities Davenport IA
ACGME HealthPartners Institute - Western WI Rural St. Paul MN
ACGME Genesis Quad Cities Davenport IA
ACGME Siouxland Medical Education Foundation Sioux City
ACGME Henry Ford Macomb Hospital Clinton Township MI
ACGME University of Kansas SOM - Via Christi Wichita KS
ACGME Mayo Clinic School of Graduate Medical Education Rochester MN
ACGME University of Missouri-KC Programs Kansas City MO
ACGME Aurora St. Lukes Medical Center Milwaukee WI
ACGME North Colorado Medical Center Greeley CO
ACGME Genesis Quad Cities Davenport IA
ACGME Idaho State University Pocatello ID Family
ACGME St. Anthony Hospital Oklahoma City OK
AOA Doctors Hospital Columbus OH
AOA Wright Center National Family Medicine - Tucson AZ Scranton
AOA CORE/Holzer Health System Gallipolis OH
AOA HEARTLand/Monroe Clinic Monroe WI
AOA McLaren Bay Region Bay City MI
Military Naval Hospital Jacksonville FL (x2)

General Surgery (10)
ACGME University of Nebraska Medical Center Omaha NE (x2)
ACGME Western Michican University Stryker SOM Kalamazoo MI
ACGME Mount Carmel Health System Columbus OH
AOA South Pointe Hospital Warrensville Heights OH
AOA DMC Osteopathic Division - Sinai Grace Detroit MI
AOA Henry Ford Allegiance Health Jackson MI
AOA Metro Health Hospital - University of Michigan Wyoming MI
AOA Franciscan Health Olympia Fields Olympia Fields IL
Military Naval Medical Center San Diego CA

Internal Medicine (34)
ACGME Hennepin County Medical Center Minneapolis MN
ACGME St. Vincent Hosptial Center Indianapolis IN
ACGME Central Iowa Health System - Iowa Methodist Des Moines IA (x4)
ACGME Aurora Health Care/ASMC Milwaukee WI (x2)
ACGME Mercy Medical Center Des Moines IA (x2)
ACGME Mercy Health Grand Rapids Grand Rapids MI
ACGME University of Nebraska Medical Center Omaha NE (x2)
ACGME Henry Ford Hospital Detroit MI
ACGME U Texas at Austin Dell Medical School Austin TX
ACGME Research Medical Center - Overland Park Overaland Park MO (x2)
ACGME Hennepin County Medical Center Minneapolis MN
ACGME Sunrise Health GME Consortium - NV Henderson NV
ACGME Maine Medical Center - Rural Portland ME
ACGME Marshfield Clinic Marshfield WI
ACGME Indiana University School of Medicine Indianapolis IN
ACGME Alameda Health System - Highland Hospital Oakland CA
ACGME Billings Clinic Billings MT
ACGME U Illinois - St. Francis Medical Center Peoria IL
ACGME Hennepin County Medical Center Minneapolis MN
ACGME SUNY Upstate Medical University Syracuse NY
ACGME Case Western/MetroHealth Medical Center Cleveland OH
ACGME Providence Health Portland OR
ACGME Advocate Health Care - ALGH Park Ridge IL
ACGME Creighton University Affliated Hospitals Omaha NE
AOA St. Bernards Medical Center Jonesboro AR
AOA Valley Hospital Medical Center Las Vegas NV
AOA Franciscan Health Olympia Fields Olympia Fields IL

IM-Peds (1)
ACGME Marshfield Clinic Marshfield WI

Neurology (3)
ACGME Medical College of Wisonsin Affiliated Hospitals Milwaukee WI
ACGME Medical University of South Carolina Charleston SC (Child)
ACGME Cleveland Clinic Foundation Cleveland OH

NMM (1)
AOA SCS/MSUCOM/Mercy Health Muskegon MI

OB/Gyn (10)
ACGME University of Nebraska Medical Center Omaha NE
ACGME U Illinois - St. Francis Medical Center Peoria IL (x2)
ACGME SUNY Upstate Medical University Syracuse NY
ACGME Spectrum Health - Michigan State University Grand Rapids MI
ACGME York Hospital York PA
AOA McLaren Macomb Mount Clements MI
AOA Resurrection Healthcare Consortium Chicago IL
AOA Doctors Hospital Columbus OH
Military Tripler Army Medical Center Honolulu HI

Orthopedic Surgery (5)
AOA Doctors Hospital Columbus OH
AOA McLaren Greater Lansing Lansing MI
AOA Beaumont Hospital - Farmington Hills Farmington Hills MI
AOA Grandview Hospital & Medical Center Dayton OH
Military Naval Medical Center Portsmouth VA

Otolaryngology (1)
AOA Western Reserve Hospital Cuyahoga Falls OH

Pathology
ACGME Indiana University School of Medicine Indianapolis IN
ACGME LSU SOM - New Orleans New Orleans LA
ACGME University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics Madison WI

Pediatrics (24)
ACGME Childrens Mercy Hospital Kansas City MO (x2)
ACGME Medical College of Georgia Augusta GA
ACGME St. Louis Unviersity SOM St. Louis MO
ACGME University of Arizona - COM Phoenix AZ
ACGME University of Nebraska Medical Center Omaha NE (x4)
ACGME Jefferson Medical College/duPont Childrens Philadelphia PA
ACGME Michigan St Univ CHM-East Lansing Lansing MI
ACGME Central Iowa Health System - Blank Childrens Hospital Des Moines IA (x2)
ACGME SIU SOM and Affilicated Hospitals Springfield IL
ACGME University of South Dakota SSOM Sioux Falls SD (x2)
ACGME University of Connecticut School of Medicine Hartford CT
ACGME Emory University SOM Atlanta GA
ACGME East Tennessee State University Johnson City TN
ACGME Advocate Health Care - ACMC Oak Lawn IL
ACGME Loyola University Medical Center Maywood IL
ACGME LSU SOM - New Orleans New Orleans LA
ACGME University of Oklahoma COM - Tulsa Tulsa OK
AOA Maimonides Medical Center Brooklyn NY

Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation (4)

ACGME PGY-2 University Wisconsin Hosptial and Clinics Madison WI
ACGME PGY-2 Tufts Medical Center Boston MA
ACGME PGY-2 Detroit Medical Center/Wayne State University Detroit MI
ACGME PGY-2 University Hospitals Columbia MO

Psychiatry (8)

ACGME University of South Dakota SSOM Sioux Falls SD
ACGME Maimonides Medical Center Brooklyn NY
ACGME University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics Iowa City IA
ACGME Medical College of Wisconsin Affiliated Hospitals - Central WI Wausau WI
ACGME Broadlawns UnityPoint Des Moines IA
ACGME Medical University of South Carolina Charleston SC
ACGME Cleveland Clinic Foundation Cleveland OH
Military Walter Reed National Military Medical Center Bethesda MD

Urology (1)

AUA PGY-2 Sparrow Hospital East Lansing MI

Vascular Surgery (1)

ACGME University of Rochester/Strong Memorial Rochester NY

Traditional Rotating Internship (3)
AOA OMECO/St. Anthony Hospital Oklahoma City OK
AOA OMNEE/Cape Fear Valley Medical Center Fayetteville NC
AOA OMNEE/Southeastern Health Lumberton NC

Transitional Year (7)
ACGME St. Elizabeth Youngstown Hospital Youngstown OH
ACGME Indiana University School of Medicine Indianapolis IN
ACGME Adena Health System Chillicothe OH
ACGME Medical College of Wisonsin Affiliated Hospitals Milwaukee WI
ACGME Central Iowa Health System - Iowa Methodist Des Moines IA
Military Naval Medical Center San Diego CA
Military Eisenhower Army Medical Center August GA

Preliminary positions (6)
ACGME MedStar Harbor Hospital Baltimore MD
ACGME UC San Francisco - East Bay - CA Oakland CA (surgery)
ACGME Michigan St Univ CHM-East Lansing Lansing MI (surgery)
ACGME University of Missouri-KC Programs Kansas City MO (surgery)
ACGME St. Mary Medical Center Long Beach CA
ACGME University Hospitals Columbia MO

Why are all ortho AOA?
 
Any word/ideas on why the applicant with higher scores and such received a smaller yield of interviews? Apply more top heavy?
1) No audition rotations
2) Applied to more competitive places that aren't DO friendly
3) Most importantly - applied to less programs
He/she was lucky to match with 7 interviews, but the CVs were super good that heavy research programs wanted that person more.
 
Bro you keep saying this and not a single person even knows what you are talking about.



Nice little fake scenario that has never happened.



Yeah this also isn’t true. I know the exact post you are talking about and you are taking it super out of context (a habit of yours) and exaggerating it as it had nothing to do with 4th year.
The user your quoting really just seems like a butthurt , self hating DO if you ask me. Ruining the celebration. Rude.
We know it's harder for DO's to match, the point of this thread is to show that's its still possible and life is good :3
 
Match Results 2018
OSU COM


Anesthesiology
Oklahoma State University Tulsa, OK
University of Oklahoma COM-OK City
Texas A&M Scott & White Temple, TX x2
University of Minnesota Minneapolis, MN

Emergency Medicine
Oklahoma State University Tulsa, OK x5
Norman Regional Health System Norman, OK x3
University of Texas HSC-San Antonio
Freeman Health System Joplin, MO x2
Integris Health OKC, OK
Comanche County Memorial Hospital Lawton, OK x2

Family Medicine
Oklahoma State University Tulsa, OK x 4
University of Oklahoma COM-Tulsa x2
University of Oklahoma COM-OK City
In His Image Tulsa, OK.
Chickasaw Nation Medical Center Ada, OK. x2
McAlester Regional Medical Center McAlester, OK.
University of Tennessee COM-Memphis
Tahlequah Medical Group Tahlequah, OK x2
Choctaw Nation Heath Service Authority & Health Center Talihina, OK x3
St. Anthony Hospital OKC, OK
Robert Packer Hospital/Guthrie Sayre, PA.
USAF Medical Center Scott AFB Belleville, IL
Unity Health-White County Medical Center Program. Searcy, Ark.

General Surgery
Henry Ford Allegiance Health Jackson, MI.
University of Oklahoma COM-Tulsa

Internal Medicine
Oklahoma State University Tulsa, OK x5
University of Oklahoma COM-Tulsa x3
Northeastern Health System Tahlequah, OK x4
Texas A&M Scott & White Temple, TX x2
Freeman Health System Joplin, MO
Wake Forest Baptist Med Ctr Salem, NC.
SAUSHEC- Brooke Army MC/Wilford Hall USAF MC
Desert Regional Medical Center Palm Springs, CA.
University of Kansas SOM-Kansas City
Riverside Methodist Columbus, OH

Neurology
University of Texas at Austin Dell Medical School. Austin, TX.
University of Cincinnati Med Ctr. Cincinnati, OH.
Rush University Med Ctr Chicago, IL.
STILL OPTI/Advocate BroMenn Med Ctr. Normal, IL.

Obstetrics Gynecology
Oklahoma State University Tulsa, OK x4
University of Oklahoma COM-Tulsa
MSUCOM/St Joseph Mercy Oakland. Pontiac, MI.
CORE/Grandview Hosp & Med Ctr. Dayton, OH.
OMECO/St. Anthony Hospital. OKC, OK.

Orthopedic Surgery
Oklahoma State University Tulsa, OK
MWU/OPTI/Franciscan Health Olympia Fields, IL.

Otolaryngology
Oklahoma State University Tulsa, OK

Pathology
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences. Little Rock, AR.
University of Chicago (NorthShore) Program. Evanston, IL.

Pediatrics
Oklahoma State University Tulsa, OK x3
University of Oklahoma COM-Tulsa x 3
University of Oklahoma COM-OKC x 2
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences. Little Rock, AR.
Washington University/B-JH/SLCH Consortium Program. St. Louis, MO.

Child Neurology
Case Western/Univ Hosps Cleveland Med Ctr Cleveland OH

Phys Medicine & Rehab
University of Kansas SOM-Kansas City

Psychiatry
Oklahoma State University Tulsa, OK x5
University of Oklahoma COM-Tulsa x2

Med-Peds
University of Oklahoma COM-Tulsa x2

Radiology
Oklahoma State University Tulsa, OK
University of Oklahoma COM-OKC

Traditional Rotating Internship
OMECO/St Anthony Hospital. OKC, OK.
 
1) No audition rotations
2) Applied to more competitive places that aren't DO friendly
3) Most importantly - applied to less programs
He/she was lucky to match with 7 interviews, but the CVs were super good that heavy research programs wanted that person more.

He is a close friend of mine. He did not do any away rotation due to personal matters that came up. His opinion is that away rotations should be only used for obtaining good academic faculty letters since most letters from DO schools are not worth a damn. Also he suggested that people should be going to reach away rotations only expecting to come away with good letters since only 20% of the people from our school actually get matched to the place they did away rotations at-- as you can see he matched to the program where student 1 and 2 both rotated at.

He suspects his low interview invite may be a combo of not having the best letters (one strong letter, one chair letter and one very average/ letter from the clerkship director) plus the fact that his personal statement strongly suggested that he was looking for a very academic program with a track record of producing academic surgeons and MOSTLY because of being DO. He mentioned that both student 1 & 2 however did get interview offers at 5-6 places (the less academic focused university programs such as TT el paso, UTRGVU, Baylor Dallas, SLU) that he did not get any love from.

Finally he mentioned that everyone of his interviewers complimented him on having a solid plan for the future in addition to having a good track record of producing research results.

Some DO biases questions he wrote down and gave to me:
-Vascular Surgeon on first interview: "We have never had a DO in faculty or resident. How did you end up at a DO school?"
-CRS on first interview: "You have an excellent grades and CV, can you explain how someone like you ends up at a DO school?"
-CRS on 2nd interview: "I love DOs, they are great. You obvioulsy have the horsepower, but have you ever worked in an academic center? Do you know how to work with residents? You do know that the academic center is much more intense than any community program.
-Surg Onc on 3rd interview: "DOs are awsome, but what if no one ever hires you as a PD or APD or chairman? How will you handle it?
-"We can rank so many DOs each year"
-"Can you explain this COMLEX score? I just looked at your USMLE score and assume it is good.
-Harvard trained doc: "Tell me about your life story. How did you end up at you DO school"
-"Congratulations on a great CV but can you explain what caused you to go to a DO school?"
-"Can you do some OMM if my back starts hurting in the OR?
 
I am probably biased but in my opinion Oklahoma State's match list (above) is a perfect DO match list. What I mean is: They create their own residencies in most specialties and have a good relationship with the state MD school, and the vast majority of the students match at these places (meaning most of them matched their first/second choice because everyone seems to want to stay in OK).
 
Lol @ doing OMM in the OR. That's the type of **** a surgeon would say to a DO anesthesiologist
 
Some DO biases questions he wrote down and gave to me:
-Harvard trained doc: "Tell me about your life story. How did you end up at you DO school"
/QUOTE]

I'm currently doing a surgical sub-specialty elective at a state MD school and have been asked this twice so far (have 3 weeks left). Last time, I mentioned my wife and how she has family near school and my scholarship, the doc just looked at me, nodded, and said "interesting." Will probably not be asking him for an LOR. The anti-DO bias is very real in surgery and its subspecialties.
 
I am probably biased but in my opinion Oklahoma State's match list (above) is a perfect DO match list. What I mean is: They create their own residencies in most specialties and have a good relationship with the state MD school, and the vast majority of the students match at these places (meaning most of them matched their first/second choice because everyone seems to want to stay in OK).

That was the “bad” board year too.
 
Match Results 2018
OSU COM


Anesthesiology
Oklahoma State University Tulsa, OK
University of Oklahoma COM-OK City
Texas A&M Scott & White Temple, TX x2
University of Minnesota Minneapolis, MN

Emergency Medicine
Oklahoma State University Tulsa, OK x5
Norman Regional Health System Norman, OK x3
University of Texas HSC-San Antonio
Freeman Health System Joplin, MO x2
Integris Health OKC, OK
Comanche County Memorial Hospital Lawton, OK x2

Family Medicine
Oklahoma State University Tulsa, OK x 4
University of Oklahoma COM-Tulsa x2
University of Oklahoma COM-OK City
In His Image Tulsa, OK.
Chickasaw Nation Medical Center Ada, OK. x2
McAlester Regional Medical Center McAlester, OK.
University of Tennessee COM-Memphis
Tahlequah Medical Group Tahlequah, OK x2
Choctaw Nation Heath Service Authority & Health Center Talihina, OK x3
St. Anthony Hospital OKC, OK
Robert Packer Hospital/Guthrie Sayre, PA.
USAF Medical Center Scott AFB Belleville, IL
Unity Health-White County Medical Center Program. Searcy, Ark.

General Surgery
Henry Ford Allegiance Health Jackson, MI.
University of Oklahoma COM-Tulsa

Internal Medicine
Oklahoma State University Tulsa, OK x5
University of Oklahoma COM-Tulsa x3
Northeastern Health System Tahlequah, OK x4
Texas A&M Scott & White Temple, TX x2
Freeman Health System Joplin, MO
Wake Forest Baptist Med Ctr Salem, NC.
SAUSHEC- Brooke Army MC/Wilford Hall USAF MC
Desert Regional Medical Center Palm Springs, CA.
University of Kansas SOM-Kansas City
Riverside Methodist Columbus, OH

Neurology
University of Texas at Austin Dell Medical School. Austin, TX.
University of Cincinnati Med Ctr. Cincinnati, OH.
Rush University Med Ctr Chicago, IL.
STILL OPTI/Advocate BroMenn Med Ctr. Normal, IL.

Obstetrics Gynecology
Oklahoma State University Tulsa, OK x4
University of Oklahoma COM-Tulsa
MSUCOM/St Joseph Mercy Oakland. Pontiac, MI.
CORE/Grandview Hosp & Med Ctr. Dayton, OH.
OMECO/St. Anthony Hospital. OKC, OK.

Orthopedic Surgery
Oklahoma State University Tulsa, OK
MWU/OPTI/Franciscan Health Olympia Fields, IL.

Otolaryngology
Oklahoma State University Tulsa, OK

Pathology
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences. Little Rock, AR.
University of Chicago (NorthShore) Program. Evanston, IL.

Pediatrics
Oklahoma State University Tulsa, OK x3
University of Oklahoma COM-Tulsa x 3
University of Oklahoma COM-OKC x 2
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences. Little Rock, AR.
Washington University/B-JH/SLCH Consortium Program. St. Louis, MO.

Child Neurology
Case Western/Univ Hosps Cleveland Med Ctr Cleveland OH

Phys Medicine & Rehab
University of Kansas SOM-Kansas City

Psychiatry
Oklahoma State University Tulsa, OK x5
University of Oklahoma COM-Tulsa x2

Med-Peds
University of Oklahoma COM-Tulsa x2

Radiology
Oklahoma State University Tulsa, OK
University of Oklahoma COM-OKC

Traditional Rotating Internship
OMECO/St Anthony Hospital. OKC, OK.

This is an incredible matchlist, not really familiar with the quality of the programs but it’s nice to see a DO school with solid multispecialty programs for their students to ‘fall back’ on


Sent from my iPhone using SDN mobile
 
I am probably biased but in my opinion Oklahoma State's match list (above) is a perfect DO match list. What I mean is: They create their own residencies in most specialties and have a good relationship with the state MD school, and the vast majority of the students match at these places (meaning most of them matched their first/second choice because everyone seems to want to stay in OK).
Texas A&M Scott and White = formerly Baylor Scott and White?

This list is uninspiring. The "superstars" from their class got (chose?) mediocre programs in their specialty of choice. Last years class was far better and I suspect next years will be as well.
 
Wow! Looks like Oklahomans really want to stay in OK.

Match Results 2018
OSU COM


Anesthesiology
Oklahoma State University Tulsa, OK
University of Oklahoma COM-OK City
Texas A&M Scott & White Temple, TX x2
University of Minnesota Minneapolis, MN

Emergency Medicine
Oklahoma State University Tulsa, OK x5
Norman Regional Health System Norman, OK x3
University of Texas HSC-San Antonio
Freeman Health System Joplin, MO x2
Integris Health OKC, OK
Comanche County Memorial Hospital Lawton, OK x2

Family Medicine
Oklahoma State University Tulsa, OK x 4
University of Oklahoma COM-Tulsa x2
University of Oklahoma COM-OK City
In His Image Tulsa, OK.
Chickasaw Nation Medical Center Ada, OK. x2
McAlester Regional Medical Center McAlester, OK.
University of Tennessee COM-Memphis
Tahlequah Medical Group Tahlequah, OK x2
Choctaw Nation Heath Service Authority & Health Center Talihina, OK x3
St. Anthony Hospital OKC, OK
Robert Packer Hospital/Guthrie Sayre, PA.
USAF Medical Center Scott AFB Belleville, IL
Unity Health-White County Medical Center Program. Searcy, Ark.

General Surgery
Henry Ford Allegiance Health Jackson, MI.
University of Oklahoma COM-Tulsa

Internal Medicine
Oklahoma State University Tulsa, OK x5
University of Oklahoma COM-Tulsa x3
Northeastern Health System Tahlequah, OK x4
Texas A&M Scott & White Temple, TX x2
Freeman Health System Joplin, MO
Wake Forest Baptist Med Ctr Salem, NC.
SAUSHEC- Brooke Army MC/Wilford Hall USAF MC
Desert Regional Medical Center Palm Springs, CA.
University of Kansas SOM-Kansas City
Riverside Methodist Columbus, OH

Neurology
University of Texas at Austin Dell Medical School. Austin, TX.
University of Cincinnati Med Ctr. Cincinnati, OH.
Rush University Med Ctr Chicago, IL.
STILL OPTI/Advocate BroMenn Med Ctr. Normal, IL.

Obstetrics Gynecology
Oklahoma State University Tulsa, OK x4
University of Oklahoma COM-Tulsa
MSUCOM/St Joseph Mercy Oakland. Pontiac, MI.
CORE/Grandview Hosp & Med Ctr. Dayton, OH.
OMECO/St. Anthony Hospital. OKC, OK.

Orthopedic Surgery
Oklahoma State University Tulsa, OK
MWU/OPTI/Franciscan Health Olympia Fields, IL.

Otolaryngology
Oklahoma State University Tulsa, OK

Pathology
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences. Little Rock, AR.
University of Chicago (NorthShore) Program. Evanston, IL.

Pediatrics
Oklahoma State University Tulsa, OK x3
University of Oklahoma COM-Tulsa x 3
University of Oklahoma COM-OKC x 2
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences. Little Rock, AR.
Washington University/B-JH/SLCH Consortium Program. St. Louis, MO.

Child Neurology
Case Western/Univ Hosps Cleveland Med Ctr Cleveland OH

Phys Medicine & Rehab
University of Kansas SOM-Kansas City

Psychiatry
Oklahoma State University Tulsa, OK x5
University of Oklahoma COM-Tulsa x2

Med-Peds
University of Oklahoma COM-Tulsa x2

Radiology
Oklahoma State University Tulsa, OK
University of Oklahoma COM-OKC

Traditional Rotating Internship
OMECO/St Anthony Hospital. OKC, OK.
 
He is a close friend of mine. He did not do any away rotation due to personal matters that came up. His opinion is that away rotations should be only used for obtaining good academic faculty letters since most letters from DO schools are not worth a damn. Also he suggested that people should be going to reach away rotations only expecting to come away with good letters since only 20% of the people from our school actually get matched to the place they did away rotations at-- as you can see he matched to the program where student 1 and 2 both rotated at.

He suspects his low interview invite may be a combo of not having the best letters (one strong letter, one chair letter and one very average/ letter from the clerkship director) plus the fact that his personal statement strongly suggested that he was looking for a very academic program with a track record of producing academic surgeons and MOSTLY because of being DO. He mentioned that both student 1 & 2 however did get interview offers at 5-6 places (the less academic focused university programs such as TT el paso, UTRGVU, Baylor Dallas, SLU) that he did not get any love from.

Finally he mentioned that everyone of his interviewers complimented him on having a solid plan for the future in addition to having a good track record of producing research results.

Some DO biases questions he wrote down and gave to me:
-Vascular Surgeon on first interview: "We have never had a DO in faculty or resident. How did you end up at a DO school?"
-CRS on first interview: "You have an excellent grades and CV, can you explain how someone like you ends up at a DO school?"
-CRS on 2nd interview: "I love DOs, they are great. You obvioulsy have the horsepower, but have you ever worked in an academic center? Do you know how to work with residents? You do know that the academic center is much more intense than any community program.
-Surg Onc on 3rd interview: "DOs are awsome, but what if no one ever hires you as a PD or APD or chairman? How will you handle it?
-"We can rank so many DOs each year"
-"Can you explain this COMLEX score? I just looked at your USMLE score and assume it is good.
-Harvard trained doc: "Tell me about your life story. How did you end up at you DO school"
-"Congratulations on a great CV but can you explain what caused you to go to a DO school?"
-"Can you do some OMM if my back starts hurting in the OR?
I’ve never really understood why people ask stellar DO applicants these kinds of questions. I imagine the conversation going like this:

Interveiwer: “You are obviously a great student, so why did you go to a DO school”?

Applicant: “I wasn’t a very good student in undergrad, and now I am better than pretty much everyone.”

Interviewer: “Okay great, just wanted to clarify.”

I mean, what exactly are they trying to achieve? It’s like asking Michael Jordan why he got cut from his high school basketball team. It just doesn’t matter at this point.
 
Texas A&M Scott and White = formerly Baylor Scott and White?

This list is uninspiring. The "superstars" from their class got (chose?) mediocre programs in their specialty of choice. Last years class was far better and I suspect next years will be as well.


In my opinion its one of the most solid lists there is because you know 90ish% of the class got exactly what they wanted.. to stay in OK. Not prestigious, but if you get what you want then I would call that as good as it gets. But, I would wager that the U of Minnesota and Scott & white anesthesia matches were two of the best anesthesia applicants in the country. Both had great board scores and 5 first and second author pubs in the top 3 anesthesia journals in the world. Both ranked those programs 1 and matched there. They could have gone wherever they wanted.
 
It’s like asking Michael Jordan why he got cut from his high school basketball team. It just doesn’t matter at this point.

No. It’s more like asking him why he went to a lower division college ball team when he playing against people who are not, on the average, as competitive as the higher division college basketball.

Just remember, DO school to residency is like college to med school. It’s the immediate prior step.
 
No. It’s more like asking him why he went to a lower division college ball team when he playing against people who are not, on the average, as competitive as the higher division college basketball.

Just remember, DO school to residency is like college to med school. It’s the immediate prior step.
Okay, it’s like asking a top 10 NFL quarterback like Ben Roethlisberger why he attended a small college. It all leads back to the same thing, it doesn’t matter. These DO students have proven they are “first round draft picks” so to speak, simple as that.
 
Okay, it’s like asking a top 10 NFL quarterback like Ben Roethlisberger why he attended a small college. It all leads back to the same thing, it doesn’t matter. These DO students have proven they are “first round draft picks” so to speak, simple as that.

Just let them keep thinking it does matter. The reason they spend so much time on SDN is because it's the only place they can find people who share the same pathetic, unwarranted views of their DO counterparts. Nobody gives a **** in the real world, so they come here to complain about it and circle jerk each other on a fairly regular, if not daily, basis.
 
Just let them keep thinking it does matter. The reason they spend so much time on SDN is because it's the only place they can find people who share the same pathetic, unwarranted views of their DO counterparts. Nobody gives a **** in the real world, so they come here to complain about it and circle jerk each other on a fairly regular, if not daily, basis.

If no one shares this view, how come there are different outcome in the match (even at fellowship level) given the same step scores and residency programs attended?
 
If no one shares this view, how come there are different outcome in the match (even at fellowship level) given the same step scores and residency programs attended?
Not this again....its literally every thread either you or sab comes in and takes dumps on DOs...we get it we're second class citizens when it comes to matching still but once you'er in practice nobody gives two sh**s. Eventually it won't be that way I think
 
If no one shares this view, how come there are different outcome in the match (even at fellowship level) given the same step scores and residency programs attended?

You just continue to sit behind that pretty little facade that SDN has painted for you. I think you're just to egocentric to come to the realization that you are in fact not gods gift to the world and that although you may have placed yourself into a MD program, there are many DO students that are going to do better than you and be better than you. I think it frightens you that some DOs are making amazing matches and that's why you come here to spew whatever hatred you can manage to conjure up.

Let me guess....

"They only matched into those programs because they're noncompetitive." ???

or is it.....

"They only matched into those programs because they know so and so." ???


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I am probably biased but in my opinion Oklahoma State's match list (above) is a perfect DO match list. What I mean is: They create their own residencies in most specialties and have a good relationship with the state MD school, and the vast majority of the students match at these places (meaning most of them matched their first/second choice because everyone seems to want to stay in OK).

This is far from a perfect list. I’d say it’s the weakest match list of all the ones posted so far, and probably one of the weakest I’ve ever seen. With what you guys are saying, if the PD’s weren’t nice to their own students it may have been possible a lot of these grads may have gone unmatched.
 
No. It’s more like asking him why he went to a lower division college ball team when he playing against people who are not, on the average, as competitive as the higher division college basketball.

Just remember, DO school to residency is like college to med school. It’s the immediate prior step.
I have a feeling that when you show up to parties everyone there starts to leave...
 
If no one shares this view, how come there are different outcome in the match (even at fellowship level) given the same step scores and residency programs attended?
Academia is really the only place in the world where picking prestige over production doesn’t have terrible consequences. If Amazon only cared about recruiting coders and engineers from Ivy League schools they would go out of business.
 
This is far from a perfect list. I’d say it’s the weakest match list of all the ones posted so far, and probably one of the weakest I’ve ever seen. With what you guys are saying, if the PD’s weren’t nice to their own students it may have been possible a lot of these grads may have gone unmatched.

Its not a coincidence that the whole class matched in OK... 90% of our classes are from OK. People wanna stay around their families. OSU isnt like all the other DO schools (excluding a couple) who have a majority of the class coming from other states. People wanted to stay and so they did. OSU PDs favor OSU students. OSU has enough residency spots for almost 2x its amount of students. Its how it goes. There are 3rd years I know with over 10 pubs in top journals, and 250+ 700+ scores who will likely stay in oklahoma when they certainly could go elsewhere. Pretty ignorant to call a list weak when these students benefited from going to a DO school with the resources to keep their students home, and the students all got exactly what they wanted. Especially because the residencies at our hospital will all likely receive ACGME (most except for 2 already have). If every DO school could say this DO schools would have alot more respect.
 
This is far from a perfect list. I’d say it’s the weakest match list of all the ones posted so far, and probably one of the weakest I’ve ever seen. With what you guys are saying, if the PD’s weren’t nice to their own students it may have been possible a lot of these grads may have gone unmatched.

Lol tell that to all the people who matched into the exact program they wanted to. OSU recruits a different type of student than the schools whose match lists are above, of course the match list isn't going to look the same. It has nothing to do with the PDs "being nice" and everything to do with the mission of the school and the residency programs.
 
What a matchlist doesn’t reflect is individual’s hopes and dreams and geographical ties. If a mid/lower tier program is someone’s #1 and he/she matched here, it’s a fantastic match. Not everyone wants to move across the country to train at JH/Harvard and risk dealing with personality like certain people we come across in this thread


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This is far from a perfect list. I’d say it’s the weakest match list of all the ones posted so far, and probably one of the weakest I’ve ever seen. With what you guys are saying, if the PD’s weren’t nice to their own students it may have been possible a lot of these grads may have gone unmatched.
It can still be a great match while being an underwhelming match compared to other matches. They grow local and stay local, and it would appear to be a very good fit. Yes, it is not a "desirable" list - it's a pretty perfect list for the school tho
 
What a matchlist doesn’t reflect is individual’s hopes and dreams and geographical ties. If a mid/lower tier program is someone’s #1 and he/she matched here, it’s a fantastic match. Not everyone wants to move across the country to train at JH/Harvard and risk dealing with personality like certain people we come across in this thread


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Actually, that's false. EVERYONE wants to get into the top program at the top university and they're a failure if they don't. Nobody wants to do community health at a hospital they worked at as a teen or young adult with the physicians and nursing staff they've come to know and love.
 
I’ve never really understood why people ask stellar DO applicants these kinds of questions. I imagine the conversation going like this:

Interveiwer: “You are obviously a great student, so why did you go to a DO school”?

Applicant: “I wasn’t a very good student in undergrad, and now I am better than pretty much everyone.”

Interviewer: “Okay great, just wanted to clarify.”

I mean, what exactly are they trying to achieve? It’s like asking Michael Jordan why he got cut from his high school basketball team. It just doesn’t matter at this point.

It's not necessarily a malicious question. Some interviewers legit just want to get to know you. A couple of those questions were a bit silly though.
 
Actually, that's false. EVERYONE wants to get into the top program at the top university and they're a failure if they don't. Nobody wants to do community health at a hospital they worked at as a teen or young adult with the physicians and nursing staff they've come to know and love.
Honestly if you can't do otalarygonoligical surgery at the Ronald Reagan center why did you even go to med school?
/s
 
Honestly if you can't do otalarygonoligical surgery at the Ronald Reagan center why did you even go to med school?
/s

Excuse me, Miss....

This forum is for those of us that actually have a shot in the medical field.

Can someone show her to the kitchen, I think she's lost.
 
Its not a coincidence that the whole class matched in OK... 90% of our classes are from OK. People wanna stay around their families. OSU isnt like all the other DO schools (excluding a couple) who have a majority of the class coming from other states. People wanted to stay and so they did. OSU PDs favor OSU students. OSU has enough residency spots for almost 2x its amount of students. Its how it goes. There are 3rd years I know with over 10 pubs in top journals, and 250+ 700+ scores who will likely stay in oklahoma when they certainly could go elsewhere. Pretty ignorant to call a list weak when these students benefited from going to a DO school with the resources to keep their students home, and the students all got exactly what they wanted. Especially because the residencies at our hospital will all likely receive ACGME (most except for 2 already have). If every DO school could say this DO schools would have alot more respect.

Just because the students got what they wanted, doesn't make the quality of the programs any better.
 
Just because the students got what they wanted, doesn't make the quality of the programs any better.
Agree

But I suppose they should have disregarded what they wanted to please some random internet poster

See the way I look at programs I look at how their seniors are doing clinically, what kind of job offers they get and where they are going next. If I think I would be happy with the lowest offer/opportunity, that program is good enough for me. And not malignant.

Quality, is subjective on an individual level


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Just because the students got what they wanted, doesn't make the quality of the programs any better.

I never said anything about the quality of the programs. I said it was a perfect match list. Every DO school should strive to have a match list like OSU. Especially because most schools mission are to train physicians for a certain region. Difference is that for most DO schools its lip service and OSU provides the resources to actually back it up.
 
I never said anything about the quality of the programs. I said it was a perfect match list. Every DO school should strive to have a match list like OSU. Especially because most schools mission are to train physicians for a certain region. Difference is that for most DO schools its lip service and OSU provides the resources to actually back it up.

If every med school thought this way, I wouldn't be in med school right now. Many people train in different areas b/c their areas have too many applicants for not enough medical schools and residencies to train them all. Other areas (like Oklahoma) have more resources than students to fill them all. And on top of that, which is why I say it's not a perfect match list, many people move to other areas to get the best training for residency they can get, then move back home to practice.

The notion that 2/3 of students are going to practice where they train for residency is going to dwindle in my opinion. That was decades ago where ppl didn't think about the match until 4th year and ppl applied to like 8 programs. Today it's completely different.
 
I never said anything about the quality of the programs. I said it was a perfect match list. Every DO school should strive to have a match list like OSU. Especially because most schools mission are to train physicians for a certain region. Difference is that for most DO schools its lip service and OSU provides the resources to actually back it up.

What I think @MADD!!! is also getting at (or maybe it’s just my opinion) is there is a double standard going on here.

What can arguably be seen as a list of “non-prestigious, unimpressive” matches (I, for one, think it’s great they’re matching where they want and don’t care about the prestige stuff) is being praised by a few (namely @AnatomyGrey12, who attends the school and likes to critique other match lists) as a great match list because grads largely matched where they wanted and stayed in state/area (aligning with the school mission). However, somewhat ironically, said person (and others as well) regularly critiques/puts down other match lists for not having enough “impressive” matches at mid/top tier programs that he/she deems worthy, even though the majority of those grads are likely matching in their top 3 (they give breakdowns of this on several non-state DO schools sites), a lot of the time in their home state/area as well.

So, it would seem, a double standard being applied by some (namely one very vocal poster who enjoys critiquing match lists and debating what’s prestigious). There are other DO schools (non-state schools at that) that take majority/most of their students from in state and subsequently send most of them to in-state/area residency and/or one of individual’s top three preferred residency. It’s a double standard to call OSU’s list “perfect/great” because they accomplish this then sneer at other school’s lists (that also accomplish this feat, though not to “90%”) because they “only matched 2 in gen surg” or only sent 6 to mid/top tier programs.

And also want to echo what was said above. Some areas are more desirable and produce way more applicants/grads than others and sticking around for med school/residency isn’t as viable of an option for students/grads in these areas.
 
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I never said anything about the quality of the programs. I said it was a perfect match list. Every DO school should strive to have a match list like OSU. Especially because most schools mission are to train physicians for a certain region. Difference is that for most DO schools its lip service and OSU provides the resources to actually back it up.

I've never heard anyone ever bring up this sort of "compliment" about an MD match list. "90% of the students matched into uncompetitive specialties in uncompetitive programs... but at least most of them were able to stay in close proximity to the school! It's a perfect match list!"
 
What I think @MADD!!! is also getting at (or maybe it’s just my opinion) is there is a double standard going on here.

What can arguably be seen as a list of “non-prestigious, unimpressive” matches (I, for one, think it’s great they’re matching where they want and don’t care about the prestige stuff) is being praised by a few (namely @AnatomyGrey12, who attends the school and likes to critique other match lists) as a great match list because grads largely matched where they wanted and stayed in state/area (aligning with the school mission). However, somewhat ironically, said person (and others as well) regularly critiques/puts down other match lists for not having enough “impressive” matches at mid/top tier programs that he/she deems worthy, even though the majority of those grads are likely matching in their top 3 (they give breakdowns of this on several non-state DO schools sites), a lot of the time in their home state/area as well.

So, it would seem, a double standard being applied by some (namely one very vocal poster who enjoys critiquing match lists and debating what’s prestigious). There are other DO schools (non-state schools at that) that take majority/most of their students from in state and subsequently send most of them to in-state/area residency and/or one of individual’s top three preferred residency. It’s a double standard to call OSU’s list “perfect/great” because they accomplish this then sneer at other school’s lists (that also accomplish this feat, though not to “90%”) because they “only matched 2 in gen surg” or only sent 6 to mid/top tier programs.

And also want to echo what was said above. Some areas are more desirable and produce way more applicants/grads than others and sticking around for med school/residency isn’t as viable of an option for students/grads in these areas.
And now we wait.
 
Just because the students got what they wanted, doesn't make the quality of the programs any better.
For starters, all of those programs already are, or will soon be ACGME accredited. Second, but it makes the quality of the list better. If you are looking for prestigious matches then no OSU’s doesn’t measure up. *shrug* when the guy who is a Hopkins/MGH type anesthesia applicant used his super star status to pick the exact program he wanted to go to I’m having a hard time critiquing his match. Same with the other 4th years I’m aware of.

So, it would seem, a double standard being applied by some (namely one very vocal poster who enjoys critiquing match lists and debating what’s prestigious). There are other DO schools (non-state schools at that) that take majority/most of their students from in state and subsequently send most of them to in-state/area residency and/or one of individual’s top three preferred residency. It’s a double standard to call OSU’s list “perfect/great” because they accomplish this then sneer at other school’s lists (that also accomplish this feat, though not to “90%”) because they “only matched 2 in gen surg” or only sent 6 to mid/top tier programs.

What can arguably be seen as a list of “non-prestigious, unimpressive” matches (I, for one, think it’s great they’re matching where they want and don’t care about the prestige stuff) is being praised by a few (namely @AnatomyGrey12, who attends the school and likes to critique other match lists) as a great match list because grads largely matched where they wanted and stayed in state/area (aligning with the school mission). However, somewhat ironically, said person (and others as well) regularly critiques/puts down other match lists for not having enough “impressive” matches at mid/top tier programs that he/she deems worthy, even though the majority of those grads are likely matching in their top 3 (they give breakdowns of this on several non-state DO schools sites), a lot of the time in their home state/area as well.

I never sneered at another match list and no where in this thread have I been negative about a school’s match list.

In case anyone wanted to know @GSWfan15 is salty because in a completely different thread I told a pre-med poster to choose RVU over Western and part of that discussion (I had multiple reasons why that did NOT involve a match list) was I said I thought RVU’s match list was consistently better. This was definitely not even close to the bulk of my reasons why.
 
Match Lists can help a little but for the most part they mean a hell of a lot less than people make them out to mean on here. Not everyone wants to be in the ivory tower in some super-competitive specialty. The vast majority of people at my school simply want to be a primary care doc or a community oriented specialist, at least from what some have told me. So while yes, impressive matches always look good, just because there's only 3 gen surg matches means next to nothing, as pointed out above. I know we all want all the info we can about our future prospects but I think we're looking in the wrong area to be completely honest. And everyone gets all mad about it.

MAKE SDN CHILL AGAIN
 
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