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Hi everyone,
I got a 215 on step 1 and was hoping to get a residency spot in Anesthesiology in two years. I go an allopathic medical school in PA! Do you guys think I could get into this field?
You'll probably match somewhere with that score, though below average is a big red flag, just apply very broadly and try to do really well on step 2.
If 215 is a big red flag, then what is failing? I'm not arguing. I'm just perplexed by the thought that a 215 is a big red flag when half the applicants will likely have scores around there or less.
You'll probably match somewhere with that score, though below average is a big red flag, just apply very broadly and try to do really well on step 2.
I'm just venturing a guess here, but I imagine a lot of people with below average scores will stick to applying peds/FM/IM, which drives up the number of people applying gas with average or above average scores.
There were definitely people with >235 applying for gas, so you're misreading a table somewhere.
Here's the actual data:
http://www.nrmp.org/data/chartingoutcomes2011.pdf
If 215 is a big red flag, then what is failing? I'm not arguing. I'm just perplexed by the thought that a 215 is a big red flag when half the applicants will likely have scores around there or less.
So the majority of people applying have big red flags? I am confused because charting outcomes shows a very favorable chance of matching from an allo school even with a 188.
Basically half of anesthesiologists have below average scores according to the data.
OP, according to the data you have a 99.1% of matching with that score. You are fine.
Um no. This is not how statistics works. Nor is Step 1 the only factor in matching. You really can't look at a list and say, well most people who applied matched, because you don't know what kind of self selection and heavy handed advising is happening at the med school level to get those results. For instance if the only people who applied for gas either had above average scores or something else strong going for them (networking, research, top Step 2 score), the person with merely a below average score and little else might actually have very low odds.
That being said, if the OP applies to enough places, has other strong components on his application (research, networking, great evals), and interviews well, they probably can nab something. But we aren't talking about a 99% sure thing.
Um no. This is not how statistics works. Nor is Step 1 the only factor in matching. You really can't look at a list and say, well most people who applied matched, because you don't know what kind of self selection and heavy handed advising is happening at the med school level to get those results. For instance if the only people who applied for gas either had above average scores or something else strong going for them (networking, research, top Step 2 score), the person with merely a below average score and little else might actually have very low odds.
That being said, if the OP applies to enough places, has other strong components on his application (research, networking, great evals), and interviews well, they probably can nab something. But we aren't talking about a 99% sure thing.
If anything, it's the opposite direction - people who can't match ortho or don't want to work like gensurg and apply anesthesia - I would think that would increase the numbers.
Not true. There aren't many people that decide on anesthesia as a fall back for med students. It's a unique field. There are actually a lot of people that matched into other fields (typically surg subspecialties) that switch into anesthesia because they want to get away from theirs. It's to the point that many programs reserve spots each year for out-of-match applicants.
Not true. There aren't many people that decide on anesthesia as a fall back for med students. It's a unique field. There are actually a lot of people that matched into other fields (typically surg subspecialties) that switch into anesthesia because they want to get away from theirs. It's to the point that many programs reserve spots each year for out-of-match applicants.
Um no. This is not how statistics works. Nor is Step 1 the only factor in matching. You really can't look at a list and say, well most people who applied matched, because you don't know what kind of self selection and heavy handed advising is happening at the med school level to get those results. For instance if the only people who applied for gas either had above average scores or something else strong going for them (networking, research, top Step 2 score), the person with merely a below average score and little else might actually have very low odds.
That being said, if the OP applies to enough places, has other strong components on his application (research, networking, great evals), and interviews well, they probably can nab something. But we aren't talking about a 99% sure thing.
Wouldn't anesthesia programs reserving out of match spots mean that anesthesia is a fallback program for people going into more competitive residencies?
Hi everyone,
I got a 215 on step 1 and was hoping to get a residency spot in Anesthesiology in two years. I go an allopathic medical school in PA! Do you guys think I could get into this field?
Good advice if your school has a decent gas program. I guess it's nice to know you'll go somewhere, but I would've strongly considered switching specialties if my only option had been my home program.Just get to know the Anesthesia guys at your medical school. If you can show as a medical student you are a hard worker and serious, they will take you. Apply broadly, you'll be fine.
A few of my classmates with similar scores got interviews at some really good programs. Apply broadly, and you'll be in good shape. Look into some of the midwestern/mid-southern programs. They tend to be less competitive despite still being pretty awesome.
What is a good program?
Is there a list or a thread with a ranking or a general list of quality programs? Just curious.
Um no. This is not how statistics works. Nor is Step 1 the only factor in matching. You really can't look at a list and say, well most people who applied matched, because you don't know what kind of self selection and heavy handed advising is happening at the med school level to get those results. For instance if the only people who applied for gas either had above average scores or something else strong going for them (networking, research, top Step 2 score), the person with merely a below average score and little else might actually have very low odds.
That being said, if the OP applies to enough places, has other strong components on his application (research, networking, great evals), and interviews well, they probably can nab something. But we aren't talking about a 99% sure thing.
Just wondering: if i was interested in anesthesia, would they look for research done in the field or can it be ANY research?