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The first part of my question: I am a US citizen who is interested in attending a Canadian medical school. If was to be accepted at and attend a Canadian medical school, how difficult would it be to obtain a Canadian residency?
What about a US residency?
And the second part: where in Canada would you suggest someone such as myself apply?
Thank you for the response! Very detailed even if it wasn't quite what I hoped to hear!
Ultimately all I know if that I do not want to live in the US. I have lived here my whole life and the mentality is not something I could bring myself to raise kids around. I have been to Canada a few times and obviously I'd visit some more before living there, but I like it a lot more than the US from my experiences.
I'm actually interested in family or internal medicine, would that give me any shot at a Canadian residency? I hear it'd make getting a US residency a cinch, though I am really not looking to return to the States if I can avoid it.
Thanks again for the response! 🙂
^can you provide sources for these numbers you quoted? I don't believe its that stark. The immigrants to U.S. are quite educated as well. In fact, its much more difficult to migrate to states than to Canada since Canada has an immigrant quota of around 250K just to sustain the population!
If you can provide me sources for the numbers you quoted...i'll be glad to look into them as I do not believe that they are true.
The reason American Medical schools may appear to be 'not as competitive' is multifold: College education is expensive. There are many other career opportunities for students pursuing bachelor's in sciences. There are more dental school, more vet schools, pharmacy schools. There are amazing Masters and PhD programs. The breadth of opportunities takes away from the pool of medical school applicants. Which is good for those who are only interested in medicine.
lol you can be as arrogant as you want. Who cares? American docs are the best on this planet. We have the best research, best institutions, best technology. For one University of Toronto, there are 5 Umich, Harvard, Stanford and UCLA, UPenn, Duke, U Texas, OSU and others...Its true that American life expectancy is not as high as it should be, but that's very disputed and not the only criteria to adjudge the cross sectional quality of health care. That's another topic. But to give you an example, do you know which city performs the most number of total knee replacements for Canadians??
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..
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Its Rochester, NY 🙂. Yes. Cdns travel to states to get their knees done (an outpatient procedure), because the healthcare systems deprives them of a good quality of life.
I was just saying that I notice this a lot from undergrad kids who have no clue what it requires to get through medical school and survive the physical, emotional and psychological turmoil that is called residency!
This arrogance is more stupidity and lack of knowledge, IMO. Memorizing and regurgitating Kreb's cycle or miosis meisos does not mean anything. I certainly would not want any stuck-up CDN doctor with a superiority complex treating me what that attitude!
i would be interested in seeing the competence of a Cdn med student taking USMLE Step 1 and comparing to an average American grad. USMLE Step 1 is an 8 hour exam. Step 2 has two days. Day 1 - CK is a 9 hour exam. CS is 7-8 hours long. Step 3 is also a 2 day exam (9+6). Most students take these BEFORE matching. Preparation of these exams takes months...so it is at that time, I say to any Cdn student...before you judge...try to see if you can perform well on these exams.
By the way, score on USMLEs correlates quite well with performance in residency...
As for myself, I am in fact quite grateful. I already made it. I'll be finishing my residency in Anesthesiology next summer, and a fellowship in Interventional Pain medicine next. I'll do an MBA from a really good program at the same time, and after a couple of years of academic medicine...I'm going to start a nice private practice or partner up down South near the beaches...far far far away from Canada.
So...There is more to this world than Canada. You just need to get out of your hole to see it.
^can you provide sources for these numbers you quoted? I don't believe its that stark. The immigrants to U.S. are quite educated as well. In fact, its much more difficult to migrate to states than to Canada since Canada has an immigrant quota of around 250K just to sustain the population!
If you can provide me sources for the numbers you quoted...i'll be glad to look into them as I do not believe that they are true.
The reason American Medical schools may appear to be 'not as competitive' is multifold: College education is expensive. There are many other career opportunities for students pursuing bachelor's in sciences. There are more dental school, more vet schools, pharmacy schools. There are amazing Masters and PhD programs. The breadth of opportunities takes away from the pool of medical school applicants. Which is good for those who are only interested in medicine.
lol you can be as arrogant as you want. Who cares? American docs are the best on this planet. We have the best research, best institutions, best technology. For one University of Toronto, there are 5 Umich, Harvard, Stanford and UCLA, UPenn, Duke, U Texas, OSU and others...Its true that American life expectancy is not as high as it should be, but that's very disputed and not the only criteria to adjudge the cross sectional quality of health care. That's another topic. But to give you an example, do you know which city performs the most number of total knee replacements for Canadians??
...
..
.
Its Rochester, NY 🙂. Yes. Cdns travel to states to get their knees done (an outpatient procedure), because the healthcare systems deprives them of a good quality of life.
I was just saying that I notice this a lot from undergrad kids who have no clue what it requires to get through medical school and survive the physical, emotional and psychological turmoil that is called residency!
This arrogance is more stupidity and lack of knowledge, IMO. Memorizing and regurgitating Kreb's cycle or miosis meisos does not mean anything. I certainly would not want any stuck-up CDN doctor with a superiority complex treating me what that attitude!
i would be interested in seeing the competence of a Cdn med student taking USMLE Step 1 and comparing to an average American grad. USMLE Step 1 is an 8 hour exam. Step 2 has two days. Day 1 - CK is a 9 hour exam. CS is 7-8 hours long. Step 3 is also a 2 day exam (9+6). Most students take these BEFORE matching. Preparation of these exams takes months...so it is at that time, I say to any Cdn student...before you judge...try to see if you can perform well on these exams.
By the way, score on USMLEs correlates quite well with performance in residency...
As for myself, I am in fact quite grateful. I already made it. I'll be finishing my residency in Anesthesiology next summer, and a fellowship in Interventional Pain medicine next. I'll do an MBA from a really good program at the same time, and after a couple of years of academic medicine...I'm going to start a nice private practice or partner up down South near the beaches...far far far away from Canada.
So...There is more to this world than Canada. You just need to get out of your hole to see it.
So...There is more to this world than Canada. You just need to get out of your hole to see it.
you are making it seem like CDN schools are impossible to get into vs. states. :S
as if American college students are less hard working and less competent and don't deserve to be doctors as much as their CDN couterparts. its a common perception and tone i gather from many cdn med students and residents...its arrogant.
the number of schools: population ratio is similar between countries...
You mentioned that schools in Cali are more competitive than Ontario. Ontario, particularly people from GTA (Toronto), are the most disadvantaged due to location discrimination. Every med school not in Ontario allows only 10% of their spots out of province. Every med school in Ontario allows equal competition between provincial and out of province applicants. At least schools in Cali prefer instate applicants.
2 Medical schools in Ontario, have their own preference for applicants from their own region (you have to go to high school there, Northern Ontario and South-Western Ontario). That leaves the GTA just about the only region in Canada where wherever they apply, they need to compete on equal grounds with other Canadians, but they have nothing reserved for them. Which is why the applicant to place ration is about 10:1. We are talking about people who have spent 4 years on a likely useless biology degree (think about the sheer number of biology premed wannabe grads looking for a job vs the number of jobs that require a bio or biochem degree)
Well, I don't think that's a fair comment. The reason Canadian schools are almost impossible to get into for non-citizens/permanent residents is simple - they're not even eligible to apply. Only a few schools accept non-Canadians and it's something on the order of 10 or fewer spaces across the country.
Ottawa gives preference to locals and McMaster gives 90% of interview slots to Ontario applicants. In fact, the only schools that don't have any kind of location preference are UofT and Queen's.