As far as the residency shortage? Where as even qualified applicants fail to match.
I'd say you guys are pretty ******
I just called CASPR/CRIP 2 mins ago. 444 spots now with 35 programs awaiting their status to participate in 2013 match. There are 10 qualified students who did not match that are going to be added to our bunch for sure. The unqualified student will certainly become qualified and will be added to 2013 as well. So 619 that are currently qualified for 444 current spots. That's 175 students without a job. 29% CURRENTLY will be left high and dry. Way to go APMA.
Students will be given updated numbers that are much more accurate than anything that has been posted on here so far (aside from Sigs post regarding last years match).
Western has 24 that will be in the match. A few are doing masters degrees.
Still, this makes me super nervous. I keep seeing programs (at least in California) closing all the time with no new ones to replace them. There have been a few programs who have increased the number they will take, but that hasn't offset the closing programs.
Keep working hard out there!
Are you willing to go out of state?
They are changing it so that ppl who haven't passed both boards can't participate in the match. So that should make the numbers a little friendlier? Correct me if I'm wrong.
Can't remember the 2013 projections off the top of my head, but for some reason I'm thinking the 570 number thrown out above is a little more accurate. The COTH will meet again in mid-August (16th-19th-ish). New numbers should be made available soon after that weekend.
All that is true, but if what is going around is correct, you can PASS boards and STILL not get a spot, and THAT is the worrisome reality. The low number of those whom do not pass wont help us out for THIS cycle.
Please tell me I am wrong.
I agree that there are external factors (like the ones you already mentioned) that can influence whether a student matches or not. BUT if this profession is to be taken seriously then everyone should be able to get post graduate training if they are passing boards and meeting the minimum academic criteria of their podiatry school. If they do all that and are still clueless then one needs to question those mininum standards.
-But not all students should get residencies.
Perhaps you mean "not all students should NECESSARILY get residencies." it's certainly conceivable that all students who pass step two are capable/"worthy" of a residency. Making a statement saying that not all should is a little extreme, in my opinion.
1st sentence - sure
2nd sentence - not sure
3rd sentence - i just drank a mountain dew, I like to get extreeeeeeeme
I agree, if one repeatedly fails boards, then he or she should needs to pursue other opportunities.
I would really like to pursue podiatry, but I must also consider the risks of not obtaining a residency spot.
Nobody anticipates being in the bottom 5-10 percent of his or her class, but that is where some people end up.
No, there was not enough spots for all qualified applicants last year.I don't know the specifics of all the students but I do know there were no glaring red flags for the ones that did not obtain a spot, from what I was told. Perhaps a heart to heart with a director at our schools should be in order.
Simply put, after the scramble it's first come first serve. Should these students be punished? And should the re applicants who are residents now be stripped of their current spots? should the residents who failed boards part 1 three times but obtained a residency be booted out of their spots? Come on, now.
Granted, a residency is a privilege not a right based on a variety of factors. But IMHO, no student or graduate who meets the criteria should be without a spot. MD students who did not get the scores they wanted do an interm year that's paid and try for the specialty they want or do IM. They are not stuck and not all graduating MDs are in top of their class. That's crazy.
I know there is a lot of doom and gloom on this site and I sincerely hope everyone gets a spot this year. But many will not, and it is not because they sat through four years of school playing on their smart phones. People get unlucky. Maybe the powers that be should discourage anyone who is a re applicant from applying again. But that would take away the achievements of those residents who did re apply and obtained a spot. But none of that will solve the issue. People will continue to apply, and residencies Need to be created to meet that demand. The ones that never truly cared about the profession were weeded out early as evidenced by the drop in class sizes after the first year. But weeding out after four years after successfully going through the curriculum and passing boards? And then telling us students tough luck? Find another profession? Not a solution to the shortage, IMHO.
Much respect to the opinions of those that posted on this thread, BTW.
You guys realize that almost every year the MD's end up with hundreds of residency spots unfilled whereas we don't have enough residency spots for our qualified applicants.
That's a misleading statement. A generalization like that does not account for the different specialties. For example: last year Emergency Medicine had no unfilled spots. Every EM spot was taken. Whereas Family Med, Psych, Internal Med, every year will have many unfilled spots both due to their sheer number of spots and due to their less competitive nature.
Also, with regard to "hundreds of residency spots unfilled" ...keep in mind there are many many thousands of MD medical students that apply for residency every year (not counting the additional thousands of DO's and IMG/FMG's that face an uphill battle).
PS: I'm not disputing that podiatry needs to step its game up with the residency spots, I certainly hope it happens, especially when it becomes my time to apply! I'm just adding some clarification. Hope you don't mind.