2018 Match List

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For the Touro Match List (its the combined Middletown and Harlem list) -> There actually were radiology matches, somehow left of the list. I know personally of 2 who matched at St Lukes/Roosevelt for rads. There was also an IR match at Ohio State. Some great matches didn't get listed somehow, but they are sending an updated list soon, with the corrections. Also a lot of the matches have multiple people going to the program, but did not get listed more than once on the list.
 
I am guessing the medprelim/rad matches are radiology matches. Looks like solid rad matches.

Yeah thats correct, also the TRIs are mostly for anesthesia, rads, PMR matches and not just random TRIs for people who didn't match
 
Back to the topics: My school, CCOM, matched to pretty strong IM programs including University of Washington, University of Colorado, George Washington, Ohio State, Cincinnati, Rush and Loyola.
Oh, we matched into peds at Duke, MCW and Iowa

Is the full CCOM match list posted?
 
The Montefiore IM match is impressive to me, and especially the UTSW IM. MD ENT is always a fantastic match.

Yep UTSW might be the best DO IM match I’ve ever seen.

I imagine Dallas must be getting too expensive, or something else to explain why surely USMD’s no longer want this program...😉
 
It’s the Fresno campus, not the real USCF, not quite a golden ticket into ReproEndo. Still…congrats to that person, hopefully it was at or near the top of their list.

That’s not UCSF. A lot of programs have big names attached to them that don’t necessarily reflect one way or another.

Either way, this person still have my blessing. I'd take a portal site with a big name attached to it anyday!
 
That Touro match list above also includes Harlem's class. It's very impressive! And that Peds match to Montefiore is 👍 thumbs up awesome, congrats!
 
Georgetown IM, GWU for primary care, and of course Cornell psych are pretty impressive. Overall I think that whole list is really good
 
Is the full CCOM match list posted?

CCOM doesn’t publicly post their match lists, we just get it emailed to us once its all compiled. I really don’t feel like typing it all out....
 
Full ATSU SOMA match list

Anesthesiology
University of Utah (surgery Prelim at Harbour-UCLA)
University of Cincinnati

Emergency Medicine
Oklahoma State University
Henry Ford Macomb Hospital
Case Western/University Hospitals
Albert Einstein Medical Center PA
Texas Tech University
Good Samaritan Hospital and Medical Center
Wright State University
Aria Health
Kennedy Univers Hosp/Our Lady of Lourdes
ProMedica Monroe Regional Hospital

Family Medicine
North Colorado Medical Center
Puyallup Tribal Health Authority
San Joaquin General Hospital
UCSF-Fresno (x3)
Cook County Hospital
NYU Langone Hospital
Providence St. Peter Hospital
Wright Center Tucson AZ (x3)
Memorial Hospital South Bend, IN
Long Beach Memorial Medical Center
University of Texas Rio Grande Valley
Kaiser Permanente-Fontana Medical Center
Chino Valley Medical Center
St. Anthony Hospital Colorado
Mercy Medical Center CA
Brown University
Mountain Vista Medical Center
St. Joseph's Hospital Phoenix
MacNeal Hospital
Sparrow Hospital MSU
Loma Linda University
Wright Center Washington DC
Wright State University
Montclair Hospital Medical Center
University of Minnesota
Williamsport Hospital
Sunrise Health GME Consortium
Natividad Medical Center
Riverside University Health System

Internal Medicine
Laredo Medical Center
Riverside Medical Center
Mountain Vista Medical Center
University of Massachusetts
Redmond Regional Medical Center
SUNY HSC Brooklyn
INOVA Fairfax Hospital
College Medical Center
St. Joseph Hospital Denver
UH Regional Hospitals Richmond Heights
Wright Patterson Med Center, Wright-Patterson AFB
Harnett Health System
University of Nebraska Medical Center
NYP Brooklyn Methodist

Neurology
Oregon Health and Science University

Obstetrics and Gynecology
Mercy Hospital and Medical Center Chicago
Henry Ford Wyandotte Hospital
St John Macomb Oakland

Orthopedic Surgery
Louisiana State University
Mountain View Regional Medical Center NM
University of Washington Affiliated Hospitals
Genesys Regional Medical Center
Larkin Community Hospital

Pediatrics
University of Southern California (x3)
Loma Linda University
Phoenix Children’s Hospital (x2)
Children’s Hospital of Michigan
Oklahoma State University
Baystate Medical Center

Psychiatry
Naval Medical Center San Diego
Maricopa Medical Center Phoenix (x2)
Tripler Army Medical Center
Mercy Medical Center Des Moines
Palm Beach Consortium
University of Arizona

Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
University of Utah (x2)
Casa Colina Centers for Rehab
Loma Linda Medical Center

Radiology
Temple University



Peconic Bay Medical center - Prelim
Providence Sacred Heart - Prelim
Jewish Hospital - Prelim
Inspira Health Network - TRI
San Antonio Military Medical Center - TY
College Medical Center - TY
Madigan Army Medical Center - TY
Peconic Bay Medical Center - TRI
San Antonio Military Medical Center - TY
 
Very curious about this Ortho match at University of Washington. Anyone have details about this? Probably one of the most impressive matches since Integrated-Plastics at UPenn
 
Very curious about this Ortho match at University of Washington. Anyone have details about this? Probably one of the most impressive matches since Integrated-Plastics at UPenn
No details. Super good guy, very likeable. Not even from the west coast.
 
I'm procrastinating studying so here is CCOM's match list...a lot of people matched at the same place I just didn't reflect that in this list.

Anesthesiology

Advocate Health Care- IL

Rush University Medical Center-IL

Loyola University Medial Center-IL

Cleveland Clinic Fdn-OH

Med Coll Wisconsin Affil Hosps-WI

Arrowhead Regional Medical Center- CA (surgery prelim)


Child Neurology

Loma Linda University- CA


Radiology

Loyola University Medical Center-IL

U Illinois COM – IL

Franciscan Health Olympia Fields- IL (AOA)

Aultman Hospital/NEOMED-OH

McLaren Oakland- MI (AOA)

SAUSHEC-Brooke Army MC- TX


Emergency Medicine

Unity Health-AR

Presence Resurrection Med Ctr-IL

Franciscan Health Olympia Fields -IL (AOA)

Rush University Medical Center – IL

U IL- St Francis- IL

U Illinois COM – IL

Indiana Univ School of Medicine – IN

Western Michigan Univ Stryker SOM

Hennepin Co Med Ctr-MN

St Josephs Reg Med Ctr-NJ

Hofstra Northwell SOM-NY

Nassau University Med. Center, East Meadow, NY (AOA)

St. John Medical Center – OH (AOA)

Greenville Health Sys/Univ of So Carolina – SC

Med Coll Wisconsin Affil Hosps -WI

Darnall Army Community Hospital -TX



Family Medicine


Kaiser Permanente-Napa/Solano-CA

Glendale Adventist Med Ctr-CA

Riverside University Health Sys-CA

UC San Diego Med Ctr-CA

St Joseph Hospital SCL Health-CO

St Anthony Hospital North-CO

LECOM/ST Petersburg General Hosptial, St Petersburg, FL (AOA)

Larkin Community Hospital- FL (AOA)

Eisenhower Army Medical Center- GA

A-OPTIC/Lake Cumberland Regional Hospital- KY (AOA)

Northwestern McGaw/NMH/VA-IL

Resurrection Medical Center- IL (AOA)

Presence St Joseph Hosp-IL

Adventist Hinsdale Hospital- IL (AOA)

Adventist LaGrange Memorial Hospital – IL (AOA)

U IL-Methodist Med Ctr- IL

MacNeal Hospital-IL

La Grange Mem Hosp-IL

Advocate Christ Medical Center- IL (AOA)

Carle Foundation- IL (AOA)

Center for Family Medicine/SIU Springfield- IL (AOA)

Adventist Hinsdale Hospital – IL (AOA)

Franciscan Health Olympia Fields- IL (AOA)

Advocate Health Care-IL

St Francis Hosp Ctr-IN

Beaumont Health System-OUWB-MI

Harnett Health Systems- NC (AOA)

Mayo Clinic School of Grad Med Educ-MN

Hunterdon Medical Center- NJ (AOA)

Summa Akron City Hospital- OH (AOA)

Penn Highlands Healthcare, DuBois, PA (AOA)

Williamsport Hospital-PA

Geisinger Health System- PA

U Texas Southwestern Med School-TX

CommuniCare, Texas Institute for GME and Research-TX (AOA)

MultiCare Good Samaritan Hosp-WA

Aurora St Lukes Medical Ctr-WI

Gundersen Lutheran Med Fdn-WI

Med Coll Wisconsin Affil Hosps

Monroe Clinic-WI


General Surgery

Doctor's Hospital -OH (AOA)


Internal Medicine

U Colorado SOM-Denver-CO

U Connecticut School of Medicine-CT

Walter Reed Army Medical Center-DC

George Washington Univ-DC

Advocate Health Care-IL

Advocate Lutheran General-IL (AOA)

Franciscan Health Olympia Fields- IL (AOA)

Cook County Health and Hosps Sys-IL

Loyola Univ Med Ctr-IL

Riverside Medical Center- IL (AOA)

Rush University Med Ctr-IL

Univ of Chicago Med Ctr-IL Northshore

U Illinois COM-Chicago

Henry Ford Hospital-MI

Central Michigan University COM- MI

Western Michigan Univ Stryker SOM- MI

Garden City Hospital- MI (AOA)

U Minnesota Med School- MN

St Louis Univ SOM-MO

Southeasterm Health- NC

Dartmouth-Hitchcock Med Ctr-NH

Hofstra Northwell SOM-Lenox Hill Hosp-NY

NYMC-Westchester Med Ctr-NY

Kettering Med Ctr-OH

U Cincinnati Med Ctr-OH

Ohio State University Med Ctr

Millcreek Community Hospital-PA (AOA)

Madigan Army Medical Center-WA

U Washington Affil Hosps- WA

Med Coll Wisconsin Affil Hosps- WI



Neurology

U Florida COM-Shands Hosp- FL

Rush University Med Ctr-IL

Sparrow Hospital-MI

CMSRU/Cooper University Hospital-NJ

U Cincinnati Med Ctr-OH


Neurological Surgery

Advocate BroMenn Medical Center- IL (AOA)


OBGYN

Resurrection Healthcare Consortium. Chicago, IL (AOA)

Presence St Joseph Hosp-IL

Rush University Med Ctr-IL

Western Michigan Univ Stryker SOM

Naval Hospital- VA


Orthopedic Surgery

Jack Hughston Memorial Hospital-AL (AOA)

Riverside Univ. Health System Medical Center, Moreno Valley, CA (AOA)

Franciscan Health Olympia Fields-IL (AOA)

PCOM- PA (AOA)


Pathology

UC Davis Med Ctr-CA

Northwestern McGaw/NMH/VA-IL


Pediatrics

Medical College of Georgia-GA

Tripler Army Medical Center-HI

U Iowa Hosps and Clinics-IA

Advocate Health Care-IL

Rush University Med Ctr-IL

Indiana Univ Sch Of Med-IN

U Louisville SOM-KY

St Louis Univ SOM-MO

Duke Univ Med Ctr-NC

SUNY Upstate Med University

NYCOMEC/Wyckoff Heights Medical Center- NY (AOA)

Geisinger Health System-PA

Naval Hospital-VA

Med Coll Wisconsin Affil Hosps


Pediatrics Emergency Medicine

Indiana Univ Sch Of Med


PM&R

Marianjoy Rehab Hosp-IL

Advocate Health Care-IL

Schwab Rehab Hosp-IL

U Illinois COM-Chicago

U Texas Southwestern Med Sch-Dallas


Psychiatry

U Arizona COM-Phoenix

Sky Ridge Medical Center -CO (AOA)

Western Michigan Univ Stryker SOM

Loyola Univ Med Ctr-IL

Advocate Health Care-IL


TRI

CEME/Palm Beach Consortium for GME- FL (AOA)

ProMedica Monroe Regional Hospital- MI (AOA)

OMNEE Southeastern Health- NC (AOA)
 
I'm procrastinating studying so here is CCOM's match list...a lot of people matched at the same place I just didn't reflect that in this list.

So glad you did this, and not me. That excel sheet is a mess to play around with.
 
1 surgery at CCOM. And it’s AOA. I’m sure that won’t be pointed out lol.
 
So one thing that I’ve gathered from these lists is that even though there are some good IM matches, the majority or close to are community IM programs.

This may be naive, but it seems from my research that University IM at X-state school isn’t usually “that” hard. So are people mostly choosing community programs? Or is it simply just way harder for DOs to go to University IM?

PS: absolutely not knocking people who went the community route, I’m interested in a IM subspecialty though so it’s relatively important for me to do the “U of” track
 
So one thing that I’ve gathered from these lists is that even though there are some good IM matches, the majority or close to are community IM programs.

This may be naive, but it seems from my research that University IM at X-state school isn’t usually “that” hard. So are people mostly choosing community programs? Or is it simply just way harder for DOs to go to University IM?

PS: absolutely not knocking people who went the community route, I’m interested in a IM subspecialty though so it’s relatively important for me to do the “U of” track
You'll be surprised at how many DO students applying IM with just a comlex score of 500/600 and hope for the best
 
here is CCOM's match list

Don't want to sound like an a$$ but considering that CCOM has the strongest rotations of any DO school with campus resources comparable to an average MD school (with actual NIH funded research), this list was sad. Only 1 GS out of a class of 200 students? The ortho program at St. James also heavily and openly favors CCOM students. No derm. No urology. Considering their $100k/year pricetag, I was expecting more.
 
Don't want to sound like an a$$ but considering that CCOM has the strongest rotations of any DO school with campus resources comparable to an average MD school (with actual NIH funded research), this list was sad. Only 1 GS out of a class of 200 students? The ortho program at St. James also heavily and openly favors CCOM students. No derm. No urology. Considering their $100k/year pricetag, I was expecting more.
A weaker class? if the candidates were all borderline and they have plenty of competitive applicants I don't think there is enough affiliation to justify it. Just a guess
 
Don't want to sound like an a$$ but considering that CCOM has the strongest rotations of any DO school with campus resources comparable to an average MD school (with actual NIH funded research), this list was sad. Only 1 GS out of a class of 200 students? The ortho program at St. James also heavily and openly favors CCOM students. No derm. No urology. Considering their $100k/year pricetag, I was expecting more.

retweet
 
lol not everyone wants to be a surgeon?????
I think you misinterpreted my post. I would never do surgery. I 100% empathize with people who would never do surgery. I also have been through close to a decade’s worth of match list threads and have seen time and time again DO schools get **** for not having surgery matches. Keep your pants on funny guy.
 
I think you misinterpreted my post. I would never do surgery. I 100% empathize with people who would never do surgery. I also have been through close to a decade’s worth of match list threads and have seen time and time again DO schools get **** for not having surgery matches. Keep your pants on funny guy.

Gal*
 
My b.

But you gotta admit. Only took 10 minutes for my prediction to be accurate.

Yeah bc people on the DO forums continue to read into match lists to a fault when the match is a very individualized, student-specific process. I’ll never understand the judgmental attitudes on here, especially coming from M1s and M2s.
 
Don't want to sound like an a$$ but considering that CCOM has the strongest rotations of any DO school with campus resources comparable to an average MD school (with actual NIH funded research), this list was sad. Only 1 GS out of a class of 200 students? The ortho program at St. James also heavily and openly favors CCOM students. No derm. No urology. Considering their $100k/year pricetag, I was expecting more.
I need you to sit down before you read this because this will come as a devastating shock to you, and totally upend your belief systems, but not everybody wants to go into Gen Surg or other uber-specialties.
 
Don't want to sound like an a$$ but considering that CCOM has the strongest rotations of any DO school with campus resources comparable to an average MD school (with actual NIH funded research), this list was sad. Only 1 GS out of a class of 200 students? The ortho program at St. James also heavily and openly favors CCOM students. No derm. No urology. Considering their $100k/year pricetag, I was expecting more.

Unless it becomes a trend, I wouldn't worry too much about this.
--The interests of classes vary year to year (case in point: my class has more than double of the pediatricians of the two classes before us)
--Interest in gen surg has gone downhill in the last couple of years, and like @Goro said, surgery's not for everybody
--No derm and no urology aren't that surprising: both are really hard to get, and not that many people are in love with urology in the first place
--It's a strong match list otherwise with solid matches in a lot of specialties. The lack of gen surg is an interesting anomaly, but not a reason to panic.
 
Gen Surg is still relatively DO unfriendly. Here's some info from the 4th years at my school who matched into it. You could def argue that if they went to any other MD school in Texas, they'd have interviewed and matched at schools higher up on their match list.

Student 1:
USMLE I - 246
USMLE II - 240
COMLEX I - 695
COMLEX II - 688
COMLEX PE - Pass
Quartile: 1st
Publications: 1
Sub-Is (away rotations): 3 (UTRGV, UAMS, & UTHSCSA)
Programs applied to: 94 (ACGME match only)
Interviews offered: 24
Interviews attended: 15
Matched: Sunrise Health GME Consortium, categorical, #9 on rank list

Student 2:
USMLE I - 242
USMLE II - 248
COMLEX I - 641
COMLEX II - 615
COMLEX PE - Pass
Quartile: 2nd
Publications: 1
Sub-Is (away rotations): 2 (Baylor Dallas & UTHSCSA)
Programs applied to: 135 (ACGME match only)
Interviews offered: 20
Interviews attended: 15
Matched: Texas Tech Lubbock, categorical, #4 on rank list

Student 3:
USMLE I- 253
USMLE II- 260
COMLEX I- 670
COMLEX II- 700
COMLEX PE- Pass
Quartile: ranked in top 10
Publication: 7 at the time (4 first authors) and 3 more during interview season—these were all abstracts not real full papers
Sub I (away rotation): None; only did one with Cook’s Children.
Programs applied to: 75 (only applied to major academic centers in Midwest/SE)
Interviews offered: 7
Interview attended: 7
Matched: University of Texas HSC San Antonio/Research tract program, #1 on rank list
 
This is also directly from the 3 DO students who matched from my school:

1. Do I need to take USMLEs?
Yes, as of now it is the recommendation to take both USMLE 1 and 2. There still exists the DO stigma in the surgery field, although decreasing every year. You want to be on an even playing field as your MD colleagues. As of now, there are about 10-11 surgery programs with dual accreditation. The remaining 200+ are still ACGME only. This gives you an idea of why you should take USMLEs. In regards to scores, I have come to realize that some programs may have a step score cut off (240s) when it comes to choosing DO applicants, at least based on the stats provided above. Keep that in mind. One of us know of a few MD applicants with lower boards than us DO’s that matched at their Top 3 programs. Clearly they were ranked higher than us despite “more competitive applications.”
 
I need you to sit down before you read this because this will come as a devastating shock to you, and totally upend your belief systems, but not everybody wants to go into Gen Surg or other uber-specialties.

To add on, from talking to my classmates at CCOM I have found that greater than 1/3 of my class already know they want to go into FM, OB/GYN, & psyc. This includes some extremely intelligent people at the top of the class. A good number also want to do EM as well. That's about 100 people that have little intention of going into a more competitive specialty or surgery. We have some pretty good surgery rotations, so I don't know if it scares people away from the lifestyle, but self-selection plays a large part. The last few years CCOM has had 5-6 students go into General Surgery, so this year was an off year.
 
To add on, from talking to my classmates at CCOM I have found that greater than 1/3 of my class already know they want to go into FM, OB/GYN, & psyc. This includes some extremely intelligent people at the top of the class. A good number also want to do EM as well. That's about 100 people that have little intention of going into a more competitive specialty or surgery. We have some pretty good surgery rotations, so I don't know if it scares people away from the lifestyle, but self-selection plays a large part. The last few years CCOM has had 5-6 students go into General Surgery, so this year was an off year.
Off year at my school too. I think it's because you know, something something millennials... 😉
 
Gen Surg is still relatively DO unfriendly. Here's some info from the 4th years at my school who matched into it. You could def argue that if they went to any other MD school in Texas, they'd have interviewed and matched at schools higher up on their match list.

Student 1:
USMLE I - 246
USMLE II - 240
COMLEX I - 695
COMLEX II - 688
COMLEX PE - Pass
Quartile: 1st
Publications: 1
Sub-Is (away rotations): 3 (UTRGV, UAMS, & UTHSCSA)
Programs applied to: 94 (ACGME match only)
Interviews offered: 24
Interviews attended: 15
Matched: Sunrise Health GME Consortium, categorical, #9 on rank list

Student 2:
USMLE I - 242
USMLE II - 248
COMLEX I - 641
COMLEX II - 615
COMLEX PE - Pass
Quartile: 2nd
Publications: 1
Sub-Is (away rotations): 2 (Baylor Dallas & UTHSCSA)
Programs applied to: 135 (ACGME match only)
Interviews offered: 20
Interviews attended: 15
Matched: Texas Tech Lubbock, categorical, #4 on rank list

Student 3:
USMLE I- 253
USMLE II- 260
COMLEX I- 670
COMLEX II- 700
COMLEX PE- Pass
Quartile: ranked in top 10
Publication: 7 at the time (4 first authors) and 3 more during interview season—these were all abstracts not real full papers
Sub I (away rotation): None; only did one with Cook’s Children.
Programs applied to: 75 (only applied to major academic centers in Midwest/SE)
Interviews offered: 7
Interview attended: 7
Matched: University of Texas HSC San Antonio/Research tract program, #1 on rank list

This is also directly from the 3 DO students who matched from my school:

1. Do I need to take USMLEs?
Yes, as of now it is the recommendation to take both USMLE 1 and 2. There still exists the DO stigma in the surgery field, although decreasing every year. You want to be on an even playing field as your MD colleagues. As of now, there are about 10-11 surgery programs with dual accreditation. The remaining 200+ are still ACGME only. This gives you an idea of why you should take USMLEs. In regards to scores, I have come to realize that some programs may have a step score cut off (240s) when it comes to choosing DO applicants, at least based on the stats provided above. Keep that in mind. One of us know of a few MD applicants with lower boards than us DO’s that matched at their Top 3 programs. Clearly they were ranked higher than us despite “more competitive applications.”

The applicants (~7) I’ve talked to that have matched all shared the same sentiments. They felt like once you break 230 you will probably find a spot somewhere but you need to apply super broad because of the factors mentioned above. 240 is better. Make sure you have plenty of interviews and programs on your rank list.
 
Why someone would choose a field where you literally have to bust your ass, like ruin your life ass bustin’, in med school, only to commit to 5 years of 90+ hour weeks, aggressive attendings, high attrition, and poop...all that poop, is beyond me.

But like every other field I can’t find any interest in, I’m super glad there are folks who love it. And man, surgeons sure do love it.
 
Why someone would choose a field where you literally have to bust your ass, like ruin your life ass bustin’, in med school, only to commit to 5 years of 90+ hour weeks, aggressive attendings, high attrition, and poop...all that poop, is beyond me.

But like every other field I can’t find any interest in, I’m super glad there are folks who love it. And man, surgeons sure do love it.

All that for poor compensation too. Makes no sense, but glad people do it.
 
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I think you misinterpreted my post. I would never do surgery. I 100% empathize with people who would never do surgery. I also have been through close to a decade’s worth of match list threads and have seen time and time again DO schools get **** for not having surgery matches. Keep your pants on funny guy.
I second keeping your pants on, now if your funny or not I don’t know.
 
Gen Surg is still relatively DO unfriendly. Here's some info from the 4th years at my school who matched into it. You could def argue that if they went to any other MD school in Texas, they'd have interviewed and matched at schools higher up on their match list.

Student 1:
USMLE I - 246
USMLE II - 240
COMLEX I - 695
COMLEX II - 688
COMLEX PE - Pass
Quartile: 1st
Publications: 1
Sub-Is (away rotations): 3 (UTRGV, UAMS, & UTHSCSA)
Programs applied to: 94 (ACGME match only)
Interviews offered: 24
Interviews attended: 15
Matched: Sunrise Health GME Consortium, categorical, #9 on rank list

Student 2:
USMLE I - 242
USMLE II - 248
COMLEX I - 641
COMLEX II - 615
COMLEX PE - Pass
Quartile: 2nd
Publications: 1
Sub-Is (away rotations): 2 (Baylor Dallas & UTHSCSA)
Programs applied to: 135 (ACGME match only)
Interviews offered: 20
Interviews attended: 15
Matched: Texas Tech Lubbock, categorical, #4 on rank list

Student 3:
USMLE I- 253
USMLE II- 260
COMLEX I- 670
COMLEX II- 700
COMLEX PE- Pass
Quartile: ranked in top 10
Publication: 7 at the time (4 first authors) and 3 more during interview season—these were all abstracts not real full papers
Sub I (away rotation): None; only did one with Cook’s Children.
Programs applied to: 75 (only applied to major academic centers in Midwest/SE)
Interviews offered: 7
Interview attended: 7
Matched: University of Texas HSC San Antonio/Research tract program, #1 on rank list


Any word/ideas on why the applicant with higher scores and such received a smaller yield of interviews? Apply more top heavy?
 
Don't want to sound like an a$$ but considering that CCOM has the strongest rotations of any DO school with campus resources comparable to an average MD school (with actual NIH funded research), this list was sad. Only 1 GS out of a class of 200 students? The ortho program at St. James also heavily and openly favors CCOM students. No derm. No urology. Considering their $100k/year pricetag, I was expecting more.
Wait did we have this exact same conversation last year? Cause I am having some serious Deja Vu. I mean I even am okay with your statement cause its hard for me to believe that only 1 person wanted surgery out of 200, but still, I feel like this thought was an exact repeat from last year (although the thread is gone).

Are we getting an instagram of a hottie who matched plastics with no research and like a 250+ USMLE if this post gets 30 likes? Only one way to find out, and I can't like myself.
 

Any word/ideas on why the applicant with higher scores and such received a smaller yield of interviews? Apply more top heavy?

It looks like he only applied to university programs that had a heavier research focus.
 
Student 3 is matched to a much better programs despite the lower interview numbers. The match worked out in his favor.
 
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