I have been looking into doing specific limb deformity fellowships and searching up on SDN and there appear to be few CPME-approved as well as ACFAS-approved fellowships? And then there are other fellowships out there which do not have any of these two institutional approval and yet people go there. I am a bit confused with all of these. Are there training differences between them? What is the con of going to a fellowship which ACFAS or CPME doesn't recognize? Also, I have been hearing that more places are hiring people with fellowship grads over non fellowship grads, especially West Coast?
I've been pretty vocal about the problems with fellowships in podiatry. There is no standard naming scheme or curriculum (unlike ACGME-accredited fellowships). Most of this is due to CPME's failures.
But doing a fellowship can be life-changing and change the trajectory of your career, especially if you're interested in academics or research.
So, here's my advice for people looking at fellowships now:
First, CPME-approval or ACFAS-recognition doesn't guarantee quality.
The most important consideration is to choose a fellowship with a good mentor(s), regardless of its accreditation.
I did my fellowship with Dr. Armstrong (while he was at Scholl) and it was unaccredited. The UT San Antonio fellowship probably the oldest in the US (31 years) and we just applied for CPME-approval last year.
But there are some other considerations.
CPME-approved fellowships must follow standards in CPME Documents 820/830. That means you have many of protections that you did during residency, like a contract, PTO, health insurance, a grievance policy, no non-compete, etc.
CPME-approved fellowships are eligible for GME funding from CMS. ACFAS fellowships are not. This means your salary and benefits will be similar to other fellows in the same institution (in fact, that's a standard in 820).