Hello everyone! I have been grateful to have been accepted into a DO school and was wondering how DO friendly Neurology is and whether or not how worried I should be as a DO matching into Neuro. Ty in advance!
Agreed, stay away 🤝Neurology is a terrible specialty and nobody should apply to it until the 2026-2027 match, after which it turns into a great specialty.
would you say step 1 is necessary for neuro? or only COMLEXI matched last cycle, and I only had a 425 Level 1 and 435 Level 2 (pass is 400 for both). I actually failed Level 2 on my first attempt with a 384. Only had Step 1 of 204 (pass is 196) and not Step 2. So I'd say very friendly at the moment. Of course, some people with similar stats or even slightly better probably didn't match as well, but I mean, it's very doable as long you don't flunk anything. I anticipate it will get slightly more competitive every year though.
Not necessary, but it would help a tone if you have both step 1 and 2. I sincerely believe that I got at least half of my interviews because I had a Step 1.would you say step 1 is necessary for neuro? or only COMLEX
appreciate your help, congrats on your match again!!Not necessary, but it would help a tone if you have both step 1 and 2. I sincerely believe that I got at least half of my interviews because I had a Step 1.
See my original thread below that cycle. I had interviews at some pretty impressive places despite my low stats. And I match at very good program.
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What are my chances applying neurology this year?
So I am at one of the newer DO schools and also URM/black (if that makes a difference) applying Neuro this year. Step 1 and Level 1 didn't turn out great with a 204 and 425 (on first attempt). Still working on Step 2 and Level 2, and my scores won't come out until 2 weeks into the cycle...forums.studentdoctor.net
I matched last cycle, and I only had a 425 Level 1 and 435 Level 2 (pass is 400 for both). I actually failed Level 2 on my first attempt with a 384. Only had Step 1 of 204 (pass is 196) and not Step 2. So I'd say very friendly at the moment. Of course, some people with similar stats or even slightly better probably didn't match as well, but I mean, it's very doable as long you don't flunk anything. I anticipate it will get slightly more competitive every year though.
Seems like maybe not step 2 however?This is probably another example of why every DO should take at least USMLE Step 1. It seems passing it has benefited you greatly, and programs don't really GAF about COMLEX scores.
Seems like maybe not step 2 however?
The field does feel terrible at times but when you apply for jobs and realize that everyone is begging you to choose them, you realize how fortunate you are for choosing this specialty.
Please, you're an M1. Let's focus on the facts that Neurology has always been a DO-friendly specialty.currently, very friendly but with rapid school expansion, it’s impossible to predict. Look at radiology. Used to be very easy for DOs to match..now will have a DO match rate lower than surgery
Lazy consults, functional patients you can do nothing about, stroke alerts for things that aren't strokes, very long hours in residency. Just to name a few.Can you comment on what aspects feel terrible at times?
Lazy consults, functional patients you can do nothing about, stroke alerts for things that aren't strokes, very long hours in residency. Just to name a few.
Like mentioned above, poorly differentiated consults makes me feel that neurology is a dumping ground.
Any loss of consciousness (including due to having a plasma EtOH level of 400)? consult neurology
Generalized weakness (including chronic deconditioning and failing to thrive)? consult neurology
Woke up in the morning feeling "strange"? consult neurology
At times, I feel that my job is to basically an accurate history.
The above is compounded by a great deal of unease among other physicians when confronted with anything brain related. Suddenly, everything becomes a STAT/ASAP. Understandable and I would probably act the same way if I didn't do a neurology training, but it still takes toll on us.
Also don't get me started on the psychogenic presentations...
+1 but I was a neuroscience majorOutside of the job market, what are some things that make you glad you picked the specialty? I am strongly interested in the specialty simply based on the fact that I really enjoyed neuroscience at a premed level, and I'm curious how much of that translates to appreciating neurology as a medical specialty.
It’s happening to gas and rads (two specialties that have been DO friendly for about a decade). Why assume it couldn’t happen in neurology as well. It would almost certainly happen if neurologists begin to make a significant premium over hospitalistsPlease, you're an M1. Let's focus on the facts that Neurology has always been a DO-friendly specialty.
0% of it translates. The day-to-day of Neurology in 2022 is closer to being a Social Worker than it is to being a Neuroscience PhD. I'd venture that 5% of my fellow Neurologists (or less) can explain the Hodgkin-Huxley model. However, I am certain that 100% of my fellow Neurologists have a go-to list of exam tasks to detect conversion disorder.+1 but I was a neuroscience major
It’s happening to gas and rads (two specialties that have been DO friendly for about a decade). Why assume it couldn’t happen in neurology as well. It would almost certainly happen if neurologists begin to make a significant premium over hospitalists
It’s happening to gas and rads (two specialties that have been DO friendly for about a decade). Why assume it couldn’t happen in neurology as well. It would almost certainly happen if neurologists begin to make a significant premium over hospitalists
My COMLEX 1 is in the low 400s, no step and I'm sitting at 8 interviews. It's not necessary but having a pass would probably help. My Step 2 is 24x so a good Step 2 score is probably more important.would you say step 1 is necessary for neuro? or only COMLEX
I concur. Please wait until 2028.Neurology is a terrible specialty and nobody should apply to it until the 2026-2027 match, after which it turns into a great specialty.
Can you comment on what aspects feel terrible at times?
Neurologists have done an excellent job of keeping their compensation to themselves. Neurohospitalists already make a significant premium over medicine hospitalists. That hasn't been enough to tip the needle sufficiently.It would almost certainly happen if neurologists begin to make a significant premium over hospitalists
Regret choosing it over Opthalmology or Dermatology? Sure, but then I didn’t have the drive to put in the work to match these fieldsSo what are the good parts? You guys regret choosing neuro?
That last part is not true. The salary difference between IM and Neurology grads fresh off residency with no fellowship is actually pretty significant. Like 100K or more difference.Anesthesia and Rads are more competitive because 1) they uniformly start at 400-450k 2) they let you escape medicine for the most part
Neuro does neither, usually has a brutal residency and salary isn’t so far off of general IM that people will debate IM+fellowship vs neurology. I doubt it’ll become like Rads/anesthesia anytime soon
Then as a 4th year applying to neuro, can I infer that most residencies will train us to be a competent neurology with good job prospects? I ask this as someone who is looking into community programs and just to be a decent general neurologist with maybe a fellowship in vascular.The field does feel terrible at times but when you apply for jobs and realize that everyone is begging you to choose them, you realize how fortunate you are for choosing this specialty.
Yes, most programs should provide you with the bread and better training to handle 90% of general neuro stuff as well as neurologic emergenciesThen as a 4th year applying to neuro, can I infer that most residencies will train us to be a competent neurology with good job prospects? I ask this as someone who is looking into community programs and just to be a decent general neurologist with maybe a fellowship in vascular.