I was a resident there...had to leave because it was so horrible. I rotated there as a student, thought it was a good enough place (wanted to be in SoCal with friends and family) and they promised that things were getting better. Ended up staying only one year, and left for another program because I absolutely hated it. I kept in contact with some of the residents who decided to "stick it out," and according to them, it hasn't changed much.
Where do I begin? First and foremost the attendings seem to be mostly FMG who couldn't get jobs anywhere but there, and are very....incompetent (in general). Lots of Indian attendings who seemed to favor the FMG Indian residents. The chairman, Dr. Lumb is a nice guy...but he's from Duke and has no idea how to "deal with" unionized County employees. He can't fire anyone, and without that power, how can he really be in control? Their attendings would openly demean groups of people based on their own biases. They seem to dislike America, and spoke very negatively about American whites, blacks, and women. There were actually a couple of female residents that had a lawsuit pending against the department for sexism - and (the icing on the cake) the attending turned around and filed a lawsuit against the residents. Talk about hostile environment!!
The morning lectures were a joke. Residents would give cases/lectures - so that meant the residents were working even harder, and the attending were doing nothing. I mean, if they aren't in the OR, aren't teaching, and sitting around demeaning groups of people, how is that a conducive learning environment. No wonder the pass rate isn't as good as you'd expect from a USC program.
I heard they changed the call schedule...now they have a night float. However, the residents I've spoke with don't like this "new" system. But I guess it beats random, unscheduled call. Let me add, as a first year (or an "unfavored" second year) you do nothing but ortho cases. And, best believe you'll be unfavored if you're American (white or black). Ask them how many residents have left the program in the last, say 4-5 years. I know (personally) of 10 people who left. That's quite a bit. Something is wrong.
Positives? USC (the institution). The County - has a lot to offer in terms of pathology and number/types of cases available. The location - Southern California. And the trauma. There are a few "sane" attendings who actually do teach, and teach well. You do rotate out to various hospitals, so you do (ultimately) get good training. Jobs are plenty to a USC grad - despite the reputation of the anesthesia department among peers. And the patients really need you.
Any specific questions? I could go on and on...but I think you get the gist of what I'm saying.