2019 Match Results

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Dermatology

Larkin Palm Springs Miami, FL AOA
Beaumont Health Detroit, MI ACGME
HonorHealth Phoenix, AZ ACGME
Riverside Methodist Hospital Columbus, OH ACGME

ALL Ex-DO Programs. From the derm perspective, DO opportunities are shrinking. There will be an upcoming meeting in couple weeks for all ex-DO Derm program directors. The agenda is how we can preserve these derm spots as the MDs are infiltrating into these positions. At the rate it is going, DO dermatologist maybe a thing of the past.
 
Best I would chose is the quality of IM match: 1. good sample size, 2. good range of competitiveness. Good IM acme program, DO are competing with US MD and Outstanding IMGs from the world. I do not believe ortho is good caliber: most are AOA and former AOA program where you are competing only DOs and the business of audition of who like who osteopathic thinking. For traditional acgme ortho: bravo cuz you are competing with much great pool of applicant, and it should be that way.
 
But is sheer number of ortho really a measuring stick? I don’t really care about match lists because they’re very individualized and don’t reflect what SDN think they do. Idk I’d go more off of stats like 85% got top choice or something like that


I was just talking about ortho specifically not the whole list, in regards to the conversation above where nearly 50% of ortho applicants from KCU / dmu didn’t match
 
I was just talking about ortho specifically not the whole list, in regards to the conversation above where nearly 50% of ortho applicants from KCU / dmu didn’t match

Just curious, is there data showing how many people from KCU/DMU actually applied to ortho? Or is that a number based off of another poster's claim?
 
8 ortho. Sheesh. Looks like Ohio-com and campbell both faired better than schools like KCU/DMU. Interesting dynamic.

Nvm. I made this comment under the assumption OU-COM only had like 100ish students in the class. I thought almost 10% of their class matched ortho. Obviously wrong as their class is 250ish.
 
I was just talking about ortho specifically not the whole list, in regards to the conversation above where nearly 50% of ortho applicants from KCU / dmu didn’t match
Most schools are going to have a lot of unmatched because over 300 people applied for 115 spots. Also, the school really has nothing to do with matching ortho. It’s totally an individual person thing.
 
Most schools are going to have a lot of unmatched because over 300 people applied for 115 spots. Also, the school really has nothing to do with matching ortho. It’s totally an individual person thing.

I wouldn't be so sure on that second part, especially with state schools like MSU and OU. There are a number of residencies in Ohio that are flooded with OU grads because OU has a great relationship with the PDs of those residencies. Riverside Methodist and Grandview medical are two that come to mind, but there are others too. This might change post merger, but historically this has been the case.
 
I wouldn't be so sure on that second part, especially with state schools like MSU and OU. There are a number of residencies in Ohio that are flooded with OU grads because OU has a great relationship with the PDs of those residencies. Riverside Methodist and Grandview medical are two that come to mind, but there are others too. This might change post merger, but historically this has been the case.

Exactly. OSU went 3/3 with all 3 matching here
 
You also need to remember this cycle was kinda weird since there was COMLEX inflation. There were tons of ortho applicants that “fell in love with ortho” after getting their boards back since they saw a good score. However, since everyone’s score went up, they really didn’t have an advantage.

I feel like this cycle got a ton of ortho apps from people who may not have been ortho, but were like “hey I have good scores, let’s try it” kinda thing and that could have shown through during auditions/interviews.
 
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Their IM program. The IM program and PMR program are completely diffferent


Correct. PM&R loves DOs , even at placed like NYU, Stanford and their ilk.


This might be a dumb question.. but whatever.

In general (for DO schools), what do people consider the most important things in a match list? I was under the impression that more ACGME matches and a broad spectrum of specialties were better. I get that the number of kids to match certain specialties can vary year to year... pending on what clinical interests are... but what are the best indicators that a school has their stuff together?

What I look for are:
Uber competitive specialties like Derm, Ortho, etc
University hospitals
Historic ACGME residencies
Reputation of program based upon the opinions of our wise SDN attending and residents.

The last one is in some ways the most important, because without insider knowledge as to who has a good program, looking at matchlists is a fool's errand.
 
ALL Ex-DO Programs. From the derm perspective, DO opportunities are shrinking. There will be an upcoming meeting in couple weeks for all ex-DO Derm program directors. The agenda is how we can preserve these derm spots as the MDs are infiltrating into these positions. At the rate it is going, DO dermatologist maybe a thing of the past.
This is so dumb. Doesn’t matter if they are ex DO bc they are acgme now. What matte is DMU just pumped out 4 derm matches which is consistent, actually higher, that previous years. The fact ex DO programs are matching mostly DO is a GOOD thing and should be the thing to take away from this. My school match as many derm this year as it had total in the last 6 years.
 
I can confirm ~15 applied orthopedics.

You also need to remember this cycle was kinda weird since there was COMLEX inflation. There were tons of ortho applicants that “fell in love with ortho” after getting their boards back since they saw a good score. However, since everyone’s score went up, they really didn’t have an advantage.

I feel like this cycle got a ton of ortho apps from people who may not have been ortho, but were like “hey I have good scores, let’s try it” kinda thing and that could have shown through during auditions/interviews.

Can you expand more on the COMLEX inflation last year? I've read that scores were higher last year, but no explanation as to why.
 
This might be a dumb question.. but whatever.

In general (for DO schools), what do people consider the most important things in a match list? I was under the impression that more ACGME matches and a broad spectrum of specialties were better. I get that the number of kids to match certain specialties can vary year to year... pending on what clinical interests are... but what are the best indicators that a school has their stuff together?

I look for matches in the specialty at specific programs I’m interested in. So literally the opposite of what everyone else fawns over—surgical sub specialties in the NE would be my nightmare. I look for IM programs in Florida.
 
This match is at UPMC mercy, not UPMC main (Presbyterian). Entirely different programs...


Outside of 4 transition year DOs, there is only DO in each year for categorical IM at UPitt. This is good to see, hopefully there will be more than one this year.
 
Can you expand more on the COMLEX inflation last year? I've read that scores were higher last year, but no explanation as to why.

Simplest explanation is COMLEX isn't really a standardized exam. Averages and percentiles fluctuate dramatically from year to year.
 
Are former AOA programs "safe" when it comes to the merger? I know that many have initial accreditation but is there a list of which ones have passed the 10-year accreditation visit? Is there a chance that some people have the rug pulled out from under them if the ACGME decides to close them?
 
This is so dumb. Doesn’t matter if they are ex DO bc they are acgme now. What matte is DMU just pumped out 4 derm matches which is consistent, actually higher, that previous years. The fact ex DO programs are matching mostly DO is a GOOD thing and should be the thing to take away from this. My school match as many derm this year as it had total in the last 6 years.
Tell him its dumb in a couple years when your trying to audition. I love how you just bashed an attending Derm who is part of a DO derm residency trying to keep options open for you. Maybe you should listen to him rather than the sunshine and unicorn farts advice coming out of your school. Seems like he might just be a better source.
 
These people are my friends, I’m one of the DMU students that didn’t match ortho. I know where my friends matched.

Ahh gotcha. Sorry to hear that. I hope good things are heading your way!

What happens when someone doesn't match a specialty they were interested in? are they forced to scramble into FM or IM? transitional year? research year? Any insight?
 
What happens when someone doesn't match a specialty they were interested in? are they forced to scramble into FM or IM? transitional year? research year? Any insight?

You’re not forced into anything it’s your medical degree. You may be told it’s the best option for you, but they can’t force you to do anything.

I do not want to do IM/ FM so I took a TY in the SOAP, but I don’t recommend banking on the soap. Dual apply before thinking soaping is easy.

I’m applying general surgery next year. Research was a legitimate option, but I preferred to be gaining clinical skills.

What a person does after not matching should be what’s most advantageous for them to succeed the next cycle.
 
Tell him its dumb in a couple years when your trying to audition. I love how you just bashed an attending Derm who is part of a DO derm residency trying to keep options open for you. Maybe you should listen to him rather than the sunshine and unicorn farts advice coming out of your school. Seems like he might just be a better source.

On the SDN DO forum, real world advice and info is too real for people. We need to keep it at sunshine and unicorn farts.
 
This is so dumb. Doesn’t matter if they are ex DO bc they are acgme now. What matte is DMU just pumped out 4 derm matches which is consistent, actually higher, that previous years. The fact ex DO programs are matching mostly DO is a GOOD thing and should be the thing to take away from this. My school match as many derm this year as it had total in the last 6 years.

Where’s your data to support those 4 derm matches?
 
MSUCOM has at least 3 ortho match that I know of personally. 4 anesthesia match I know of personally . A ton of people matched Er at , 1 AOA derm, 1 neuro surg MSUCOM . They haven’t released the official list yet .
 
ALL Ex-DO Programs. From the derm perspective, DO opportunities are shrinking. There will be an upcoming meeting in couple weeks for all ex-DO Derm program directors. The agenda is how we can preserve these derm spots as the MDs are infiltrating into these positions. At the rate it is going, DO dermatologist maybe a thing of the past.
Genuinely curious question here: What’s stopping you guys from not taking MD applicants if you’re so concerned about this? I don’t think it would be fair to do that, but that doesn’t stop the MD side from doing the same so what’s the issue?
 
Genuinely curious question here: What’s stopping you guys from not taking MD applicants if you’re so concerned about this? I don’t think it would be fair to do that, but that doesn’t stop the MD side from doing the same so what’s the issue?
I hear some former AOA programs are already doing this. Like demanding a Sky High Step 1 score or a regular comlex score.
 
I hear some former AOA programs are already doing this. Like demanding a Sky High Step 1 score or a regular comlex score.
Yeah and I don’t think that’s fair since so many complain about programs doing this to DOs. But it still happens...
 
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Yeah and I don’t think that’s fair since so many complain about programs doing this to DOs. But it still happens...
To play the devil's advocate but also disperse truth: many top MD programs still demand DO students to have a much higher step score than their MD counterpart to be considered at their program. It would be one thing if they expected the COMLEX score to be higher but once someone is leveling oranges to oranges with taking step boards as a DO, don't you think that should merit equal conderation? My source: several PDs I have talked to.

On the flip side, there is no MD that can take COMLEX due to the OMM added component so where is the oranges to oranges? again I'm just playing the devil's advocate and making the rationale behind some former AOA PDs. To me the DO reasoning seems to have better ground than the ones some MD residency programs have. But to note, I can't know what goes behind the curtains, this is just an argument to be made logically.
 
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On the SDN DO forum, real world advice and info is too real for people. We need to keep it at sunshine and unicorn farts.
Nonsense, this is a group of highly intelligent and motivated young professionals. You’re simply upset that everyone doesn’t share your bleak outlook and penchant for communicating “real world advice” in a grating and irritating way. Give your future colleagues some credit.

Rudeness does not lend credence to whatever you happen to be saying.
 
Genuinely curious question here: What’s stopping you guys from not taking MD applicants if you’re so concerned about this? I don’t think it would be fair to do that, but that doesn’t stop the MD side from doing the same so what’s the issue?
OSU is doing this. In order to APPLY for a residency at OSU, MDs have to complete 30 hours of OSU specific OMM training. Aint no MDs gonna do that. IMG applications not even looked at.
 
OSU is doing this. In order to APPLY for a residency at OSU, MDs have to complete 30 hours of OSU specific OMM training. Aint no MDs gonna do that. IMG applications not even looked at.

And they have to have this completed before their audition, which means they would need to do it during 3rd year haha.
 
I think the best thing we can do is wait until next years match. If DOs get crushed then one side will say I told you so. If DOs gain access to more competitive programs/specialties then hip hip hurray, there’s hope.

Tell me what you think: do DOs Trump or get Burned in match 2020?
 
I think the best thing we can do is wait until next years match. If DOs get crushed then one side will say I told you so. If DOs gain access to more competitive programs/specialties then hip hip hurray, there’s hope.

Tell me what you think: do DOs Trump or get Burned in match 2020?

Less competitive applicants will get screwed cause no AOA spots that they can match into. Most DO students apply ACGME already anyways.
 
I think the best thing we can do is wait until next years match. If DOs get crushed then one side will say I told you so. If DOs gain access to more competitive programs/specialties then hip hip hurray, there’s hope.

Tell me what you think: do DOs Trump or get Burned in match 2020?
I have high hopes. Staying positive our matches continue to see positive trend and hopefully a continuation of this year in 2020 and beyond
 
I think the best thing we can do is wait until next years match. If DOs get crushed then one side will say I told you so. If DOs gain access to more competitive programs/specialties then hip hip hurray, there’s hope.

Tell me what you think: do DOs Trump or get Burned in match 2020?
The problem is not that DO's will trump, its that a small group will have amazing matches and then a bunch of MS0's and 1st years will come tell us everything is getting better even as placement drops (i.e. the average match will get worse). But I am tired of doing this right now, I just thought the post I replied to earlier was really disrespectful considering who he was bashing and what that poster is trying to do for us.

Just putting it out there that I am grateful @Solodyn for what you and other DO attending's are doing in our residency programs. I have no plans of going Derm at this point, but I am 100% appreciative of people trying to keep that option open for DO's in what is, a rather rigged system.
 
To play the devil's advocate but also disperse truth: many top MD programs still demand DO students to have a much higher step score than their MD counterpart to be considered at their program. It would be one thing if they expected the COMLEX score to be higher but once someone is leveling oranges to oranges with taking step boards as a DO, don't you think that should merit equal conderation? My source: several PDs I have talked to.

On the flip side, there is no MD that can take COMLEX due to the OMM added component so where is the oranges to oranges? again I'm just playing the devil's advocate and making the rationale behind some former AOA PDs. To me the DO reasoning seems to have better ground than the ones some MD residency programs have. But to note, I can't know what goes behind the curtains, this is just an argument to be made logically.
Not sure i get your point, but if its that do’s and md’s should get equal consideration for the same step score then I disagree. I wish I didn’t, but at the end of the day they go to superior schools and they should be thought of more highly than us. Everyone knows that the same app from meherry vs Harvard is going to end up in the harvard grads favor. It’s not magically unfair when the same thing happens to a DO
 
OSU is doing this. In order to APPLY for a residency at OSU, MDs have to complete 30 hours of OSU specific OMM training. Aint no MDs gonna do that. IMG applications not even looked at.
Why even bother? How bout we just invite them only to waste their time with “courtesy interviews” like they do to us lol
 
Not sure i get your point, but if its that do’s and md’s should get equal consideration for the same step score then I disagree. I wish I didn’t, but at the end of the day they go to superior schools and they should be thought of more highly than us. Everyone knows that the same app from meherry vs Harvard is going to end up in the harvard grads favor. It’s not magically unfair when the same thing happens to a DO
My point was that equal consideration in the MD world is only made when DOs score much higher in the boards to their counterpart. In essence, this is not even mentioning acceptance but rather a chance to interview. The fact that some DO residency PDs do the same to the MD applicants is more valid in the sense that they don't have a comlex score from the MDs to compare with. I understand that the harvard grad is having the upper hand compared to the meharry grad but that wasn't my point.
 
Can you link the thread?

Ask and ye shall receive: MD & DO - 2019 Match Lists

If anyone wants to see what a real powerhouse match list looks like, look at Stanford's list on page 1. I think they have 1 non-elite match on their entire list and it was still a strong match (Kaiser Permanente IM).

There are only 3 FM matches total. There are also 4 psych, 4 rad, ENT, 3 nuero, 4 surgery, 6 EM, 3 gas with many of them being in California. All from a class of <60 students with no home program who are first ever graduating class. Sorry, that list is pretty dang good considering. Especially percentage wise for specialties, its better than most DO schools, no excuses needed.

http://medicine.cnsu.edu/shareddocs/Academic/2019-Match-Results.pdf

Exactly nothing about their match list is impressive. They had an ENT match to one of the weakest programs in the country and 2 UMich matches in non-competitive fields. For any MD program (whether new or not) that's not good.

It's compensation has been increasingly pretty nicely, yes.

Also people have realized it has amazing work-life balance. On top of that, it used to be very easy to get into so you could almost look forward to a derm lifestyle without the inflated competition. Given it's likely the new derm, that mindset will change but the other benefits remain.

It is definitely NOT the new derm. Yes, you can make a lot of money in psych if you're willing to work for it. Or you can make ~250k working few hours with no call. Derm is really the only field where you're going to work 40 hour weeks with a nice schedule and clear $400k unless you have a strong business model or are very savvy. Psych is more popular because it's taking a swing towards being a more medical field (genetic testing, medication management increasing and psychotherapy declining, etc) as well as the lifestyle aspect which our generation values far more than our predecessors. Do not fool yourself into thinking psych is the new derm. It is not.


Lol.

PCOM had Michigan Psych. DMU had Psych at Mayo. Id say thats pretty solid

UMich psych is a solid match. Mayo is a mid-tier psych program and probably the weakest of the 3 programs in Minnesota. Psych is a weird field where a lot of the powerhouse programs are actually weaker than people outside the field would expect (Mayo, WashU, Cleveland Clinic, etc). Show me a DO matching into Yale, Stanford, or Pitt for psych and that'll turn my head.

For me, the only enjoyable psych cases were inpatient ward. I was fascinated by acute mania and schizophrenia. I despised all outpatient days... this is coming from an outpatient primary care guy

This is also what I find most enjoyable. I'll likely do a mix because it's easy to do both and I like variety, but inpt psychosis is what got me into the field.

I'm the opposite. I find acute mania and schizophrenia to be extremely medical. No communication with the patient.

A bit hyperbolic, but communication is tougher with them at first. However, I think seeing them go from legitimately crazy to mostly normal after a week or so of being (re-) started on meds still blows my mind.

Just looked him up. I am a straight male, but almost fell in love with this absolutely glorious looking beast who accomplished the "impossible". Lol

I mean, he finished a half-Iron Man race. That's an automatic interview at most ortho programs (and an auto match if they can also bench 2x their weight).

This might be a dumb question.. but whatever.

In general (for DO schools), what do people consider the most important things in a match list? I was under the impression that more ACGME matches and a broad spectrum of specialties were better. I get that the number of kids to match certain specialties can vary year to year... pending on what clinical interests are... but what are the best indicators that a school has their stuff together?

Other than just gratification of seeing good matches, the only real useful thing to glean is what programs have taken students from your school in your field of interest. For example, Mayo Derm has taken numerous KCU students in the past, so derm hopefuls from KCU have a bit of an in there compared to other ACGME derm programs they would apply to. It's good for figuring out where you'll have ins and what reaches you may actually have a chance at. The other thing is that if a school fails to match someone into a field for several years in a row, then it should be a sign that you may be at a disadvantage if shooting for that field. Beyond that there's not much utility for future applicants.
 
I don’t understand why everyone keeps saying wait until next years match. It’s unlikely we are going to see any major change. We may get a glimpse of a starting trend (good or bad), but it will be years before we know the overall outcome for DOs in a combined match.
 
OUHCOM Self Reported List

Anesthesiology

Cleveland Clinic South Pointe Cleveland, OH AOA
University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center Cleveland, OH ACGME
University of Cincinnati Cincinnati, OH ACGME
Grandview Medical Center Dayton, OH ACGME
Cleveland Clinic Main Campus Cleveland, OH ACGME
Penn State Medical Center Hershey, PA ACGME
Ohio State University Columbus, OH ACGME


Dermatology

Larkin Palm Springs Miami, FL AOA
Beaumont Health Detroit, MI ACGME
HonorHealth Phoenix, AZ ACGME
Riverside Methodist Hospital Columbus, OH ACGME


Emergency Medicine

Grandview Medical Center Dayton, OH AOA
St. John Medical Center Westlake, OH AOA
Adena Regional Medical Center Chillicothe, OH ACGME
Penn State Hershey Medical Center Hershey, PA ACGME
Detroit Medical Center Detroit, MI ACGME
Mercy St. Vincent Toledo, OH ACGME
Beaumont Farmington Hills Detroit, MI ACGME
University of Southern California Los Angeles, CA ACGME
Akron General Akron, OH ACGME
Doctors Hospital Columbus, OH ACGME
Orange Park Medical Center Jacksonville, FL ACGME
University of Buffalo Buffalo, NY ACGME
Cook County Chicago, IL ACGME
MetroHealth Cleveland, OH ACGME
University of Toledo Toledo, OH ACGME
Florida State Sarasota Memorial Hospital Sarasota, FL ACGME
St. Elizabeth Boardman Boardman, OH ACGME
Henry Ford Wyandotte Detroit, MI ACGME
Albany Medical Center Albany, NY ACGME
University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center Cleveland, OH
Lakeland Health Saint Joseph, MI ACGME
Wright State University Dayton, OH ACGME
St. Barnabas New York, NY ACGME


Family Medicine

Dublin Methodist Hospital Dublin, OH ACGME
Ohio State University Columbus, OH ACGME
Cleveland Clinic Fairview Hospital Cleveland, OH ACGME
Western Reserve Hospital Cuyahoga Falls, OH ACGME
Grant Medical Center Columbus, OH ACGME
St. John Medical Center Westlake, OH ACGME
University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, NC ACGME
Summa Akron City Akron, OH ACGME
Mercy St. Rita's Lima, OH ACGME
Waco Family Medicine Waco, TX ACGME
Ft. Hood Killeen, TX Army
Riverside Methodist Hospital Columbus, OH ACGME
Grandview Medical Center Dayton, OH AOA
St. Luke's Family Medicine Maumee, OH ACGME
Maine-Dartmouth Family Medicine Augusta, ME Dual
Womack Army Medical Center Fort Bragg, NC Army
Novant Health Charlotte, NC
New Hanover Regional Medical Center Wilmington, NC ACGME


General Surgery

William Beaumont Army Medical Center El Paso, TX Army
Cleveland Clinic South Pointe Cleveland, OH AOA
Mt. Carmel Health System Columbus, OH ACGME
Detroit Medical Center Detroit, MI ACGME
Mercy St. Vincent Toledo, OH ACGME
Jewish Hospital Cincinnati, OH ACGME


Internal Medicine

Fairfield Medical Center Lancaster, OH AOA
St. John Medical Center Westlake, OH AOA
Grandview Medical Center Dayton, OH AOA
Cleveland Clinic Main Campus Cleveland, OH ACGME
Aultman Canton, OH ACGME
St. Elizabeth Youngstown Hospital Youngstown, OH ACGME
Riverside Methodist Hospital Columbus, OH ACGME
MetroHealth Cleveland, OH ACGME
Doctors Hospital Columbus, OH ACGME
Henry Ford Macomb Hospital Detroit, MI ACGME
SAUSHEC San Antonio, TX Air Force
Mt. Carmel Health Systems Columbus, OH ACGME
NCH Florida Naples, FL ACGME
St. Vincent Hospital Indianapolis, IN ACGME
Christ Hospital Cincinnati, OH ACGME
UH Parma Medical Center Parma, OH ACGME
OVMC Wheeling, WV ACGME
Jewish Hospital Cincinnati, OH ACGME
Wright State University Dayton, OH ACGME
Mercy Health ACGME
University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Mercy Hospital Pittsburgh, PA ACGME
Western Reserve Hospital Cuyahoga Falls, OH ACGME


Neurology

Garden City Hospital Detroit, MI AOA
Cleveland Clinic Main Campus Cleveland, OH ACGME


OB/GYN

Jersey Shore University Medical Center Neptune, NJ ACGME
Grandview Medical Center Dayton, OH ACGME
TriHealth Cincinnati, OH ACGME
SUMMA Akron City Akron, OH ACGME
Riverside Methodist Hospital Columbus, OH ACGME
Mercy St. Vincent Toledo, OH ACGME
MetroHealth Cleveland, OH ACGME
West Virginia University Morgantown, WV ACGME
Wright State University Dayton, OH ACGME


Orthopedic Surgery

Mercy St. Vincent Toledo, OH AOA
PCOM Philadelphia, PA AOA
Aultman Canton, OH AOA
Grandview Medical Center Dayton, OH AOA
Doctors Hospital Columbus, OH AOA
Community Memorial Hospital Ventura, CA AOA
Valley Hospital Las Vegas, NV AOA
Western Reserve Hospital Cuyahoga Falls, OH ACGME


Pathology

Ohio State University Columbus, OH ACGME


Pediatrics

Kaiser Permanente Northern California Oakland, CA ACGME
Akron Children's Hospital Akron, OH ACGME
Our Lady of the Lake Baton Rouge, LA ACGME
University of Kentucky Lexington, KY ACGME
Medical College of Wisconsin Affiliated Hospitals Milwaukee, WI ACGME
Case Western Rainbow Babies and Children's Hospital Cleveland, OH ACGME
Nationwide Children's Hospital Columbus, OH ACGME
Children's Hospital at St. Vincent Indianapolis, IN ACGME
Cleveland Clinic Children's Cleveland, OH ACGME
Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School New Brunswick, NJ ACGME


PMR

University of Louisville Louisville, KY ACGME
University of South Florida Tampa, FL ACGME
University of Michigan Ann Arbor, MI ACGME
MetroHealth Cleveland, OH ACGME


Psychiatry

University of Louisville Louisville, KY ACGME
Michigan State University East Lansing, MI ACGME
Riverside Methodist Hospital Columbus, OH ACGME
University of South Florida Tampa, FL ACGME
MetroHealth Cleveland, OH ACGME
Akron General Akron, OH ACGME
Ohio State University Columbus, OH ACGME
University of Colorado Denver, CO ACGME
Baylor College of Medicine Houston, TX ACGME


Radiology

Cleveland Clinic Main Campus Cleveland, OH ACGME
Aultman Hospital Canton, OH ACGME
University Hospitals Case Western Cleveland, OH ACGME
University of Minnesota Minneapolis, MN ACGME


Urology

McLaren Detroit, MI ACGME


Many of the AOA residencies in Ohio have received ACGME accreditation so those places will still be available after the merger.
Excellent EM matches. I think LA County/USC and cook county are two of the top programs in the country
 
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