
So the takeaway is DO > Carib MD? Good to know 🙂
Agree if by "foreign medical school," you mean "Caribbean." True foreign medical schools that cater to the best and brightest folks from that home country can be a different story. But that usually doesn't apply to US citizens looking to study abroad.A US medical degree, regardless of letters you get after your name, will always be better than anything granted by a foreign medical school. IF you want to practice in the US.
Getting a degree from a prestigious university overseas won't help you much if you want to practice in the US. A caribbean degree offers an "easier" route to finding residencies in the US despite "lesser" education. I had the opportunity to go to a prestigious school overseas but I realized that it would be much harder learning through a different system and then trying to get a residency in the US. The "name" of the school was a big time motivator but in the end what was most important was practicing what I wanted in the US ... regardless of what school is on my diploma.
Why so many people hate on the caribbean (and by caribbean i mean big 4) when they have little / no experience except what they read online or overhead rumors ... is beyond me. And so many premeds preaching this to boot! They haven't even seen med school yet! Maybe people feel threatened.
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My best friend from high school finished SGU and is now doing his surgical rotations. I guess everyone is going to write him off as "the exception", "the unicorn", the one of thousands that made it... not true at all.
What is true is that IMG's are not as competitive for top tier residency positions. That should go without say. These are very limited so they will only go to the best and you really have to stand out from the caribbean to get something like ortho or derm.
If you are interested in going to the caribbean than talk to one of the thousands of residents who have succeeded at SGU. Look them up online and send an email...
I 100% agree that caribbean schools are for profit businesses making TONS of money. Much of that $$ coming from ignorant people who shouldn't be in med school in the fist place. Carib should be the last resort and people that blindly go into spending so much money / time / energy into something ... shouldn't be in medicine. But it isn't true that they don't offer a valuable opportunity for those students who really want it. That is my point and what annoys me on these forums.
I think that all of us agree that the Caribbean is a last resort. That said, I fully agree that is a viable option. I think the big four (most of which are owned by DeVry now) take a lot of money to give you a shot at a dream. They teach to the boards, but they take a less qualified student body as a whole and have greater attrition.
I've know folks that have gone to AUC and loved everything about it (small classes, good weather, decent housing) and matched (mostly in NY in non-prestigious residencies). They didn't think of themselves as unicorns just as more willing to work hard than everyone else. That said, I don't think I'd encourage anyone to go this route. It's a tough personal call, but I encourage folks to live their dream (or at least try to) and this is one viable path.
While the amount of money in this sucks, I'm a big fan of saying if you have a dream try and live it. I'd rather loose some money now and fail at my dream than live a life wondering what if. I see blogs like this of people the FAILED out: http://www.6medschool.com/. Generally, the don't regret the process, but are happy to have tried. Sometimes life is about more than just money.
This WAS arguably a viable route but is becoming progressively less so every year for four reasons: (1) the ramping up of numbers at US med schools faster than any increase in residency slots. This means there are fewer and fewer seats for IMGs every year. (2) the end of pre matches. This means offshore grads have to go head to head with US grads for every spot. (3) SOAP, which basically means the scramble is more beneficial to US grads, and (4) the proposed alignment of MD and DO residencies, which will serve to box out more non US med student. So yeah, this was a viable longshot when I was in med school, but I sure wouldn't advise it as strongly to someone who has yet to start.
I couldn't agree more with all your points. Sometimes the thought of not having tried is worse than a long shot. Not only would I not advise this to someone starting out, but I'd say they are completely nuts, ignorant and a lot of other things that would get be kicked of here.
It is a LAST RESORT. You've burned all other options. You couldn't get your MCAT score high enough, you spent years doing grade repair, but there is no route to repair, you've applied several cycles to MD and DO schools and no has given you a call back and there is nothing that schools told you that you can fix. You've considered more established international programs (thinking places like the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland).
ADVISE anyone to go this route... NO. Anyone starting out looking at this route is crazy. That said, I still think it's viable to become a doctor. And, there are other countries your medical degree would be recognized (assuming you don't mind living outside the US).
Ill take better preparation for the board exams over the name of a school which is why i made my choice.
I think you missed my point or I didn't make it clear. I'd advise people to go to a well know established foreign medical school if THEY DO NOT MIND NOT COMING BACK TO THE US. It depends on circumstances of course. But, your odds are better of practicing in the country you went to school in (Caribbean is the exception). Of course, you'd need to research the path to residency there.
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That is changing. In countries like the UK, Ireland and Australia, foreign citizens are automatically last in line for post graduate training, even when the foreign citizen graduated from medical school in that country. Many of these schools have increased enrollment and started graduate-entry MD programs for internationals, but there has been no increase in post-graduate spots since the assumption is that the internationals will leave after completing their degree.
I have to agree w/ most of what was said here, w/ one reservation. Technically in the most recent years there has been enough PGY1 spots for every US med school grad. Match rates for USMG's is 93-94%. Why is it NOT 100%?
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