Help me rank my forensic fellowship programs

This forum made possible through the generous support of SDN members, donors, and sponsors. Thank you.

Rank your top 3!

  • University of Virginia

    Votes: 1 14.3%
  • Case Western Reserve University/ University Hospitals

    Votes: 4 57.1%
  • Yale University

    Votes: 3 42.9%
  • University of Rochester

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • University of South Carolina (USC)

    Votes: 1 14.3%
  • Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC)

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Tulane University

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • University of Maryland

    Votes: 1 14.3%
  • University of Colorado

    Votes: 1 14.3%
  • University of Michigan

    Votes: 1 14.3%
  • SUNY Upstate

    Votes: 2 28.6%
  • UCSF

    Votes: 2 28.6%
  • Ohio State University

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    7
  • This poll will close: .

Beedoc

Shrink in training
7+ Year Member
Joined
Oct 21, 2017
Messages
21
Reaction score
17
Borrowed from an old thread:

Hey, PGY-3 in psych and currently trying to learn as much as I can about forensic psychiatry programs. The programs are very difficult to distinguish based on their websites.

I have a checklist of the things I should look for: quality and quantity of evaluations (including insanity cases), shorter commutes, different types of supervision, evaluation of malingering training, etc. Ideally I would like to work on criminal and civil evaluations after I complete my training.

I'd appreciate your participation in the poll, and I'd love to hear your rationale(s)!
 
A lot of forensics fellowship is not just about exposure, but about supervision and accessibility to the real experts. Talking to some of our former residents who went into forensics, some big name programs (like Case) have some big names but those individuals apparently have been more hands off with supervision. Meanwhile apparently Dr. Knoll at SUNY Upstate supposedly still works closely with fellows. So something worth considering when you apply and interview.

I know people that interviewed or went to several of the programs listed. I've heard very good things about MUSC and Michigan in addition to SUNY as I mentioned. If you're looking in CA, I'd also look into UC Davis as one of my former residents who interviewed at 4-5 of your listed programs felt UC Davis was one of the more impressive programs they looked at.
 
I'd also look into UC Davis as one of my former residents who interviewed at 4-5 of your listed programs felt UC Davis was one of the more impressive programs they looked at.

lol, UC Davis is almost universally considered to be the top forensic fellowship in the country, especially after Resnick retired from Case Western. They pretty much have their pick of the top applicants in the country.
 
Shouldn't you be basing this off geography and where you want to live for the rest of your life, particularly considering the importance of understanding state specific laws and local networking? I only know UCD and the University of Southern California. I genuinely didn't know UCSF had a forensic fellowship. The rest of the country would personally not be worth it for me, even for a year
 
Geography probably says something about what type of forensic stuff you get exposed to. If you're interested in severe criminal work, NOLA and Detroit suburbs have to be pretty high up there. If you're interested in high end custody cases, I'm guessing that UCSF sees a lot of wealthy nerds arguing about stuff. If I was a non-minority, I wouldn't touch Yale's program.

*Psychologist, and I don't know much about your fellowships.
 
Geography probably says something about what type of forensic stuff you get exposed to. If you're interested in severe criminal work, NOLA and Detroit suburbs have to be pretty high up there. If you're interested in high end custody cases, I'm guessing that UCSF sees a lot of wealthy nerds arguing about stuff. If I was a non-minority, I wouldn't touch Yale's program.

*Psychologist, and I don't know much about your fellowships.
UCSF is a pretty strong program, just a hair below UC Davis. Draws from the same applicant pool and has the advantage of being in the Bay Area rather than Sacramento. They rotate through San Quentin (used to be death row prison for California until recently).

Curious as to your comment about Yale? My impression there was the opposite, quite a few racial comments made in passing.
 
UCSF is a pretty strong program, just a hair below UC Davis. Draws from the same applicant pool and has the advantage of being in the Bay Area rather than Sacramento. They rotate through San Quentin (used to be death row prison for California until recently).

Curious as to your comment about Yale? My impression there was the opposite, quite a few racial comments made in passing.
 
A private practice doctor with no Yale affiliation?

Worse. If it was a Yale employee, Yale could have argued that the behavior was against institutional policy and terminated the employee. Instead Yale reviewed the topic and speaker and thought such a talk would be appropriate for the whole department to learn something.
 
lol, UC Davis is almost universally considered to be the top forensic fellowship in the country, especially after Resnick retired from Case Western. They pretty much have their pick of the top applicants in the country.
From the few forensics docs I've talked to UC Davis is not named with the programs they consider the top couple of programs, so saying it's consensus seems like this may be personal opinion of people in your locale. Not saying it's not a great program, my former resident thought it was, but I haven't seen it named with programs like Case or SUNY.

Curious as to your comment about Yale? My impression there was the opposite, quite a few racial comments made in passing.
Not to derail too much or pile on, but one of my former co-residents did a non-forensics fellowship there. They are a minority and said they felt pretty uncomfortable there due to the culture. Apparently spent a lot of their time there keeping their head down and not voicing their opinion in certain areas because they were worried about being alienated. They're a pretty moderate but slightly left leaning individual and they didn't feel their views were tolerated. I wouldn't put much weight in a single individual, but there's plenty of other examples. Apparently a few years ago they had an NP interview forensic psych applicants:
 
From the few forensics docs I've talked to UC Davis is not named with the programs they consider the top couple of programs, so saying it's consensus seems like this may be personal opinion of people in your locale. Not saying it's not a great program, my former resident thought it was, but I haven't seen it named with programs like Case or SUNY.


Not to derail too much or pile on, but one of my former co-residents did a non-forensics fellowship there. They are a minority and said they felt pretty uncomfortable there due to the culture. Apparently spent a lot of their time there keeping their head down and not voicing their opinion in certain areas because they were worried about being alienated. They're a pretty moderate but slightly left leaning individual and they didn't feel their views were tolerated. I wouldn't put much weight in a single individual, but there's plenty of other examples. Apparently a few years ago they had an NP interview forensic psych applicants:


Friends could be outdated or have a different niche. I’m child in Texas. If I did a forensics fellowship, it would be UC Davis or bust for me. No where else can match them from a child forensic position.
 
From the few forensics docs I've talked to UC Davis is not named with the programs they consider the top couple of programs, so saying it's consensus seems like this may be personal opinion of people in your locale. Not saying it's not a great program, my former resident thought it was, but I haven't seen it named with programs like Case or SUNY.
Nah, UC Davis has been one of the top three programs for quite some time now. Forensics is a personality driven field and Charles Scott is a big name. UC Davis and Case have historically been the two biggest names. SUNY, while great under Knoll's leadership, doesn't have the same cachet as UC Davis or Case.
 
Third for UCD being the absolute top. It's definitely not a localized opinion.
 
From the few forensics docs I've talked to UC Davis is not named with the programs they consider the top couple of programs, so saying it's consensus seems like this may be personal opinion of people in your locale. Not saying it's not a great program, my former resident thought it was, but I haven't seen it named with programs like Case or SUNY.

I'm currently wrapping up with interviews for the forensic fellowship match this season. I think that UC Davis is a glaring omission from your list -- I was extremely impressed by the program on interview day and recommend you consider applying next year. If you look at the old thread that inspired you to make this one, several folks commented that it was surprising that UC Davis was not on the poster's list either and that it was considered one of the top programs nationally.

Splik, a longtime forum contributor and forensic psychiatrist, also listed UC Davis along with Case Western and Yale as one of the most highly-regarded programs nationally back in 2016.
 
Top