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anyone know anything about the two new programs that opened in Brooklyn?
Any other good DO general surgery residencies in Ohio?
Any other good DO general surgery residencies in Ohio?
anyone know anything about the two new programs that opened in Brooklyn?
http://opportunities.osteopathic.org/
Here's the link for all osteo residencies.
If you do an osteo residency, there may be problems doing an acgme fellowship due to the fact that they want a graduating fellow to be eligible to be able to be board certified in that sub specialty. If your program was not acgme approved, many sub specialty boards will not let you sit for their exam. If you want to got to an allopathic fellowship I suggest you do an allopathic residency, but it isn't impossible to get an allo fellowship from an osteo residency, its just harder.
I have a question. If you complete an osteopathic surgery program, are you eligible for allopathic fellowships?
Example:
- DO -> Osteopathic Plastic surgery program -> ACGME Craniofacial fellowship?
- DO -> Osteopathic Orthopedic Surg -> ACGME Hand Fellowship
Thanks that's a great resource. I was also interested to find out if anyone trained in one of these AOA programs has ever had difficulty getting hospital privileges, or been told that they could not practice in a particular area or hospital because their training was not ACGME certified.
I was wondering if anyone here could help me. I want to go into surgery and possible specialize in trauma surgery. I am debating between attending NOVA or AZCOM. Ive asked several times in the pre-med forum and all they say is to choose the one who's climate you liked best. Does anyone know which of these two schools would offer me the best connections/clinical rotations for getting into a good surgical residency. Please reply or pm me, I need to put down a deposit soon.
While you may be able to get into a good surgery program going anywhere, as long as you really want it and work really hard, I would say that with all the new changes at AZCOM, including restrictions on out of state rotations and difficulty in getting local ward-based rotations as well as the increase in class size from 140 to 250, it is best to not go there if you really want surgery. Now, I don't know much about NOVA, but in general you want to go to a school that is facilitates your learning and will give you every opportunity to succeed. That place will not be AZCOM. Having said this, it is a lot easier to get into a DO surgery program, so if DO residency is what you want and you really really want to go to AZCOM, you can probably make it happen there.
I've been out of the game for some time but I was once upon a time gung-ho on getting allo surgery....until I did my anesthesia rotation. Never looked back.
As for the school It doesn't matter. What matters is that you schedule 3-4 back to back surgery rotations early 4th year if you wanna match at a allo place.
1-2 surgical SUB-I's, a trauma surg, and one SICU month will do it. Smoke em. You'll be incredibly studly after this run. That'll give you enough time to get a couple of decent surgical letters by the time October/November rolls around and when your letters will be read (during interviews).
Take the USMLE and CRUSH IT.
If you REALLY are serious then do a month or two of research at an academic gen-surg program between 1st and 2nd years of med school. Look through the NIH or something. Trust me, if you want it, there is plenty of research out there.
Do those things and then you'll have a shot at an academic allo gensurg program. So I don't think the school has a damn thing to do with it. The thing that sucks is that you're dedicating your self to one path early 4th year This removes the opportunity to see what other fields have to offer before the ERAS apps have to be in.
As for DO surgery, just rotate somewhere. Act like you care. You'll get in. Ask when you are there if those guys match into trauma fellowships. I would imagine they would. Its not "that" competitive from what I understand. Plus the lifestyle is good for a surgeon in that field.
I was wondering if anyone here could help me. I want to go into surgery and possible specialize in trauma surgery. I am debating between attending NOVA or AZCOM. Ive asked several times in the pre-med forum and all they say is to choose the one who's climate you liked best. Does anyone know which of these two schools would offer me the best connections/clinical rotations for getting into a good surgical residency. Please reply or pm me, I need to put down a deposit soon.
I have a question. If you complete an osteopathic surgery program, are you eligible for allopathic fellowships?
Example:
- DO -> Osteopathic Plastic surgery program -> ACGME Craniofacial fellowship?
- DO -> Osteopathic Orthopedic Surg -> ACGME Hand Fellowship
Thanks.
Also... Are there (any/many) Osteopathic fellowship programs (Hand, Craniofacial, Head/Neck, Breast, etc) available? ...And how are these viewed by the Allopathic community?
what i don't understand is, why cant as many osteopathic students match into allopathic programs when many allopathic programs report not being filled, i forget where i read it but i think it was some like 20% of gs allopathic residencies were vacant last year or something, never filled up....why couldnt any DO get into them? (assuming they didnt care about location, etc.)
Well that's one of the advantages of being a DO you got dual paths. However, it would be a tough road if you want to do an allo fellowship following a DO residency. Esp plastics..its hard for both MD's and DO's.
You're at Rush? do you know Sandeep Krishnan? I went to undergrad with him. Tell him Raj said what's up. Also, one of your interns, Fritz Disque, was a med school classmate of mine. Whoop his ass. j/k he's a buddy as well.
Eligible, yes...
Likelihood of matching into an extremely competitive fellowship (i.e. Hand or Craniofacial) from an osteopathic residency...I'm a betting man, and I'd bet against you, no matter how good, smart, hard working, etc, you are.
That being said, I do know of one person who matched into Trauma/Critical Care at UPenn after doing general surgery at PCOM. As far as others matching into fellowship, I don't know anyone.
One of my biochem profs who taught at a USMD school said the comlex was more advanced because it was mostly clinical. Whereas the USMLE was more of "what enzyme is in this random obscure pathway". Anyhow, if you know your stuff you should do well on both.
that guy is freakin hilarious. You ever party with the rest of the philly crew (Kiran, Kinjal, etc.) We used to tear it up at Penn State.
It is BY FAR the best DO surgery program out there, and also the most competetive.
Do you carry the same case load as the "home" residents? Do you get to scrub on the really interesting/complicated cases? Speaking from my 6 months of rotating as an osteopathic student without a home-institution, I have found when I go to a hospital that has primary affiliation with other medical colleges that the osteopathic students often get pushed to the side and are not given preference.
Quick question/comment on those stellar rotation sites at PCOM. Some of these hospitals (UPENN, Geisinger, Cooper) have their own General Surgery Programs. I'm interested to know how your operative experience is at such institutions. Do you carry the same case load as the "home" residents? Do you get to scrub on the really interesting/complicated cases? Speaking from my 6 months of rotating as an osteopathic student without a home-institution, I have found when I go to a hospital that has primary affiliation with other medical colleges that the osteopathic students often get pushed to the side and are not given preference. Fortunately, I've realized this and I go above and beyond to make sure I'm getting the absolute most out of my education and I am not being made a second-rate medical student. But anyway, I would be interested to hear about the experience at those hospitals. Thanks!
P.S. - Why PCOM affiliated with Sloan and not Fox Chase given Fox's location?
This is a great point that applicants need to consider when looking at DO surgery programs. Why would this program need to send me out so much? How can my program director actually direct my education when I'm at the mercy of outside rotators so often?
As a disclaimer, I'm not knocking PCOM. I know little about their program. I'm speaking generally here.
Being farmed out to a bunch of other hospitals implies that the training at the base hospital isn't up to snuff. Sounds like a real pain to me.
Your concern is a valid one.
There are 2 things to look at.
NEED to send out and DESIRE to send out.
We dont NEED to go to Sloan Kettering for Surgical Oncology, but you bet your ass people WANT to.
You said yourself that PCOM doesn't have a base hospital.
Well, we dont have a "base" hospital to speak of. PCOM doesnt have a hospital at all. But the 2 hospital systems that we are primary surgical house staff (total of 5 hospitals all within 20 minutes of PCOM) allows us to get all of the cases we need except for Pediatrics and Transplant. They offer General, Trauma, MIS, Colorectal, Vascular, Burn and Thoracic.
As said above, its not about the NEED to go elsewhere but the opportunity to do so.
Youre telling me that a surgical resident wouldnt want the opportunity to train at Memorial Sloan Kettering for Surg Onc? Or how about UPENN for Trauma/Surgical Critical Care? You would be crazy to turn down the opportunity to spend time on those services.
So other than the few dozen cases needed for Peds and Transplant, we have more than enough cases at our 5 primary sites.
But I suppose there are lots of programs that must not be "up to snuff" as they send their residents elsewhere too...many programs are based in more than one primary institution. Take a look at the rotation schedule for the other major surgical residency programs in Philadelphia and you will see what I mean.
Now, bobo, you of course knew that...youve been around long enough. But being who you are Im not surprised you decided to ask something like that in an attempt to discredit an osteopathic education...hoping someone would read your comments and not investigate for themselves that the way the PCOM GS program is set up is in line with other large surgical programs. Remember...we have more than 30 residents (or will come next year). When youre program is that big, you need to find the best opportunities for your people. And if that means "sacrificing" so that you can rotate at one of the top cancer hospitals in the world or at an away hospital so that you can easily obtain all the cases needed for a specific defined category in just one month, then I am willing to do that...especially when the "away" hospitals we are "farmed" to have FELLOWSHIPS. Hmmm...what better way to interview for a fellowship at an away place than to work there for a month as a resident...rather than relying on just LOR and board scores.
But once again, one of us has the facts and the other just has the cynicism. 😉
Anecdotally, when I was rotating through MCP one of the surgery residents commented that while MSK was a big name, she had heard that the PCOM residents were treated like crap up there.