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the search bar is your friend. I'm sure you'll find out the questions you have faster than people answering. Peds isn't super competitive; it all comes down to what you value. Prestige v location etcWhich specialties are considered the most competitive for residency? I am interested in peds. Is this considered competitive? I am fortunate to have several acceptances. Would it be wise to go to the most prestigious school I have been accepted to?
Which specialties are considered the most competitive for residency? I am interested in peds. Is this considered competitive? I am fortunate to have several acceptances. Would it be wise to go to the most prestigious school I have been accepted to?
Spot on and I would further say that, NSG, ENT and Plastics are probably the hyper-completive of the bunch.Google is is your friend if you want data but in general of the top of my head:
Most Competitive: Surgical Subspecialties (NSG, ENT, Ortho, Plastics, Urology, Vascular, Cardiothoracic), Dermatology, IR
Middle of the Road: Radiology, Psychiatry, Anesthesiology, General Surgery, Internal Medicine (academic), Emergency (for now), Peds (academic)
Less Competitive: Family Medicine, Pathology, PM&R, IM (anywhere), Peds (anywhere).
For me it would have boiled down to specifics. If you're talking about paying a little more to attend a top 10 or 20 med school, then absolutely. If it's the difference between to middle-of-the-road places, I'd let the cost/location factor much much more.Which specialties are considered the most competitive for residency? I am interested in peds. Is this considered competitive? I am fortunate to have several acceptances. Would it be wise to go to the most prestigious school I have been accepted to?
For now, it seems like urology is also part of that group.Spot on and I would further say that, NSG, ENT and Plastics are probably the hyper-completive of the bunch.
What do you mean “ your accepted to Harvard attend Harvard “ like you’ll go to their residency? 100% of the time go to Harvard if you get in ?For me it would have boiled down to specifics. If you're talking about paying a little more to attend a top 10 or 20 med school, then absolutely. If it's the difference between to middle-of-the-road places, I'd let the cost/location factor much much more.
I read on here a long time ago that if you get accepted to Harvard you attend Harvard, but the rest is various shades
I think what he's saying is that, if you get into Harvard, go, because it will open many doors, including helping getting into a competitive residency.What do you mean “ your accepted to Harvard attend Harvard “ like you’ll go to their residency? 100% of the time go to Harvard if you get in ?
What do you mean “ your accepted to Harvard attend Harvard “ like you’ll go to their residency? 100% of the time go to Harvard if you get in ?
Interesting, why do you think radiation oncology is so unpopular?And don't forget radiation oncology, which in 2020 was the overall least competitive specialty, with a 99.2% match rate and the only specialty to receive fewer applications than positions. How the times have changed.
Other than rad onc, pathology and FM are in a league of their own in terms of lack of competitiveness.
For now, it seems like urology is also part of that group.
No job marketInteresting, why do you think radiation oncology is so unpopular?
Because it requires a massive investment in equipment (guessing tens of millions of dollars) and staffing (dozen or more people) to treat a relatively small, set number of people per year in the united states; it's also a laid-back, non-technical job that people can do into their 70s. There are only so many jobs, and once those are full, you get a situation similar to what rad onc is experiencing right now, where residency graduates are finding that there's no open positions and won't be any time soon. Just a few years ago it was one of the most competitive specialties; now people are walking out in the middle of their residency programs for other specialties.Interesting, why do you think radiation oncology is so unpopular?
If you were so worried about primary care, what made you enter a sub-surgical speciality? And no, the system is not broken because the "best and brightest" want to become "super-specialized." Do you want a person that sits near the bottom of the class or as you have referred to yourself as a "slacker" in medical school, performing complex brain surgery, I think not, but hey, just my humble opinion?The weakness of this whole system is that the “best and brightest” mostly become super-specialized…. when in fact the reality is (in my opinion) that the best and brightest are needed in the primary care fields. The breadth of knowledge needed for FM is huge. And I believe that general surgery is the hardest field in medicine, because it requires great knowledge of both surgery and medicine.
(I myself am a surgical sub-specialist. It’s not that hard. Way easier intellectually than general surgery).
If you were so worried about primary care, what made you enter a sub-surgical speciality? And no, the system is not broken because the "best and brightest" want to become "super-specialized." Do you want a person that sits near the bottom of the class or as you have referred to yourself as a "slacker" in medical school, performing complex brain surgery, I think not, but hey, just my humble opinion?
I will agree with you that, we certainly need some of the best and brightest people entering primary care fields, which you do find, especially when they have a passion for primary care.
For me it would have boiled down to specifics. If you're talking about paying a little more to attend a top 10 or 20 med school, then absolutely. If it's the difference between to middle-of-the-road places, I'd let the cost/location factor much much more.
I read on here a long time ago that if you get accepted to Harvard you attend Harvard, but the rest is various shades
Which specialties are considered the most competitive for residency? I am interested in peds. Is this considered competitive? I am fortunate to have several acceptances. Would it be wise to go to the most prestigious school I have been accepted to?
Which specialties are considered the most competitive for residency? I am interested in peds. Is this considered competitive? I am fortunate to have several acceptances. Would it be wise to go to the most prestigious school I have been accepted to?
Which specialties are considered the most competitive for residency? I am interested in peds. Is this considered competitive? I am fortunate to have several acceptances. Would it be wise to go to the most prestigious school I have been accepted to?
What are the biggest differences (both day to day and post opportunities) between academic and non academic residencies?Google is is your friend if you want data but in general of the top of my head:
Most Competitive: Surgical Subspecialties (NSG, ENT, Ortho, Plastics, Urology, Vascular, Cardiothoracic), Dermatology, IR
Middle of the Road: Radiology, Psychiatry, Anesthesiology, General Surgery, Internal Medicine (academic), Emergency (for now), Peds (academic)
Less Competitive: Family Medicine, Pathology, PM&R, IM (anywhere), Peds (anywhere).
If you want an academic job an academic residency makes that easier, also a difference with research. If you want to join private practice it matters very little where you trained as long as you are competent.What are the biggest differences (both day to day and post opportunities) between academic and non academic residencies?
based on what you said if one wants a PP career, it would be wise to join a community program as you would not be doing complex/advanced cases in PP (as you would refer them to academic centers)If you want an academic job an academic residency makes that easier, also a difference with research. If you want to join private practice it matters very little where you trained as long as you are competent.
As for day to day I can speak to general surgery: typically the big academic centers see the more rare, complex cases, think complex polytrauma, advanced vascular, complex surgical oncology, etc. Many community places do more bread and butter, (example, I know academic programs where the 5s can do whipples solo but would struggle with a lap Nissen, as well as community places where the 5s can do advanced MIS at an elite level but might have only seen 1 open gallbladder their entire residency and aren’t comfortable with big open surgery). Obviously not a hard and fast rule but a broad generalization.
Programs are just different, and what is the best program for you will depend greatly on what you want your career to look like.
Thank you!If you want an academic job an academic residency makes that easier, also a difference with research. If you want to join private practice it matters very little where you trained as long as you are competent.
As for day to day I can speak to general surgery: typically the big academic centers see the more rare, complex cases, think complex polytrauma, advanced vascular, complex surgical oncology, etc. Many community places do more bread and butter, (example, I know academic programs where the 5s can do whipples solo but would struggle with a lap Nissen, as well as community places where the 5s can do advanced MIS at an elite level but might have only seen 1 open gallbladder their entire residency and aren’t comfortable with big open surgery). Obviously not a hard and fast rule but a broad generalization.
Programs are just different, and what is the best program for you will depend greatly on what you want your career to look like.
It’s not black and white like that.based on what you said if one wants a PP career, it would be wise to join a community program as you would not be doing complex/advanced cases in PP (as you would refer them to academic centers)
YesWould you all say that for competitive specialties ( Derm particular ), it is easier to match if one is aiming for and applying to more small community programs rather than large famous academic institutions?
As a midwesterner who isn’t opposed to the Nebraska country life this is of great interest to me.