Is it possible to set up your own rotations easily enough during third year?
If I want to be back in southern California for residency, wouldn't it make sense to try to do all my rotations down there...not just the audition rotations?
Setting up rotations is dependent on your school, and the hospital you want to rotate at.
There is big business at play when it comes to medical schools and their relationships with the hospitals in the area. It gets especially tricky when multiple schools are competing for the same area hospitals to rotate at.
That being said, elective rotations can be done anywhere. At some hospitals you will need to apply via VSAS, which is the visiting student application service-basically an attempt at streamlining the process by which you get electives. At some hospitals you will fill out their own application. At some you just call up the clinical education coordinator and they sort it all out over the phone.
Generally, if the hospital has an established relationship with your school, you just send a few emails or make a few calls and you are done.
If the hospital is truly an "outside" hospital (no formal relationship with the school), you will need to provide a drug test, tb test, medical records, background checks, proof of flu shot etc.
most students get their background checks/drug tests/vaccinations yada yada once per year, and just keep copies of all of them.
Thats elective rotations.
Core rotations (IM, Surgery, Peds, OB/Gyn, psych, FM, neuro) you need to complete at a hospital/office that has been approved by your school. I have never tried to do a core outside of my schools network, and i am not even sure that its possible.
If you can do all of your rotations in one location, its worth doing. You dont want to be traveling around the country between rotations. Or maybe you do. It will be expensive though.
Just dont expect to be able to do your core rotations wherever you please. There is probably a strict list somewhere on your school website that tells you where you can choose from for cores.