- Joined
- Jan 29, 2019
- Messages
- 13
- Reaction score
- 4
Hi everyone,
I made this account as a throw-away because I need some advice in my decision of which to rank #1.
Brown:
Pros:
Pros:
I made this account as a throw-away because I need some advice in my decision of which to rank #1.
Brown:
Pros:
- Good gut feeling at the interview day, seemed like everyone I met was happy to be there, lots of residents who become attendings.
- Early psychotherapy training that seems very thoughtful
- Have strong women's mental health
- Very organized interview day, kind staff, got along well with most residents and applicants
- Don't have a lot in my interest in global mental health (one elective in Kenya)
- Less elective time than Sinai
- Providence seems cute, but also limiting in terms of food choices
- Patient diversity is questionable even though the hospital page somewhere says that Providence is a "minority majority" city.
Pros:
- Incredible idea of residents forming their own path which would work great with my creativity and desired to combine multiple things in psych
- Huge amount of support for global mental health
- NYC is full of opportunity
- Diversity of patients
- Didn't have a very smooth interview day here, one attending said that the culture is "not nurturing" and the PD said that you have to be "self-driven" and "ask for what you want". While I understand where they are coming from, I'm not sure if this all translates to an un-supportive environment.
- NYC is not a city my partner wants to live in because it's overwhelming, dirty(-er than the city we live in), expensive. Would have to get rid of a lot of things including my car.
- Didn't mesh as much with the residents so don't have a sense of who they are, seems like a bigger program that I might get lost in the mix in.
- Psychotherapy is less intentional in that it is divided between different sites (6 months at the VA, different clinics here and there), so I don't think you would see the same patient for all three years
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