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Can someone please explain the diff to me? I am interested in doing Internal Medicine...if a program has both should I apply to both? Please help...thanks!!
axm397 said:Preliminary is 1 yr - usually for ppl going into other field which require a year of internal medicine internship. (i.e. derm, anesthesia, PM&R, neurology, radiology, etc. etc.) Categorical is what you want if you want to go into internal medicine and complete a 3 yr residency.
If you are doing a residency in IM, the first year is an intern year. For all intensive purposes, this is equivalent to a preliminary year. However, typically you will complete your intern year at the same place where you will do the rest of your IM residency program. So basically if you will be applying to IM, you only apply to IM. You don't apply to separate prelim year programs like those folks who apply to let's say rads, opthy, derm, rad onc, etc.tool said:So if I want to do IM is it pointless to apply for preliminary? Or say I can do my prelim year somewhere and then do 2 more years at another program??? Basically will it count as my intern year??
tool said:So if I want to do IM is it pointless to apply for preliminary? Or say I can do my prelim year somewhere and then do 2 more years at another program??? Basically will it count as my intern year??
tool said:So if I want to do IM is it pointless to apply for preliminary? Or say I can do my prelim year somewhere and then do 2 more years at another program??? Basically will it count as my intern year??
AJM said:To sum up what everyone is saying in more basic terms, if you want to do IM you should apply to categorical programs. It is pointless to apply to prelim programs, especially since it can raise a red flag -- the only people who apply to IM prelim programs are those people who are going into other specialties that happen to require a prelim year. So programs will think that you are not committed to IM if you apply to both categorical and prelim positions.
So apply categorical. Don't worry about the prelim stuff -- those are for folks doing derm, ophtho, anesthesia, etc.
zeloc said:Reviving an old thread. So do all residency programs get a list of every program that the student has applied to? Otherwise how would they know if you were applying to both categorical and prelim, unless you are applying to both at the same institution. I am just trying to figure out how the application process works.
I think it would be interesting to be able to do residency at more than one institution because each will have its own intellectual flavor and atmosphere, as well as a different patient population, etc, but I guess there's no real way to do this for a person going into IM? My current plan is to do a 3 year internal medicine program (I think this is required) and then do a fellowship in nephrology. If someone did a prelim or a categorical and then tried to transfer after the first year, how would this work in terms of spots open at other programs? Would you just do 2 years at a place that had a 3 year categorical program? Thanks for any info.
zeloc said:Reviving an old thread. So do all residency programs get a list of every program that the student has applied to? Otherwise how would they know if you were applying to both categorical and prelim, unless you are applying to both at the same institution. I am just trying to figure out how the application process works.
axm397 said:Preliminary is 1 yr - usually for ppl going into other field which require a year of internal medicine internship. (i.e. derm, anesthesia, PM&R, neurology, radiology, etc. etc.) Categorical is what you want if you want to go into internal medicine and complete a 3 yr residency.
AwesomeO-DO said:If i want to go into IM but really want to be a hospitalist, which would be better: prelim or categorical?