How competitive is Army OB/GYN

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Not competitive at all.
 
Does that mean there's not much chance of civilian deferment? I know an AFer who got one last year...
 
Does that mean there's not much chance of civilian deferment? I know an AFer who got one last year...

It depends on who else will be applying your year and how good of a student you are. The ARMY will want to keep the best applicants for themselves. If you want a deferment, the trick is to be slightly below average. If you are too great, the ARMY will want you. If you are awful, they won't want you to match into ob/gyn at all. If you are average or slightly below, you might end up with a civilian deferment.

AF is much, much more competitive for ob/gyn. Not sure why there is this difference. There are people every year who are unable to match at all into the specialty. Your friend who got a deferment was likely a pretty good student.
 
On a slightly unrelated note, does anyone know where or know how I can find out where there are any REIs in the Army? I saw a mention of one at Tripler. For something like that, I'm guessing you do Army OBGYN and get civillian deferment for the fellowship? Does this require a contract extension?
Thanks!
 
On a slightly unrelated note, does anyone know where or know how I can find out where there are any REIs in the Army? I saw a mention of one at Tripler. For something like that, I'm guessing you do Army OBGYN and get civillian deferment for the fellowship? Does this require a contract extension?
Thanks!

There should be one at each of the residency programs. I knew one at Tripler and Walter Reed has a big infertility clinic. Yes, you would either do deferment for FTOS for fellowship.
 
We have REIs at SAUSHEC (San Antonio's military program). REI is extremely competitive to get into. If you got a slot, you would add on 3 additional years to your payback.
 
Yeah, I'm not exactly holding my breath for REI, but I would like to check it out. So fellowship payback is year-for-year?

Back to the OP's question, I want to make sure I'm reading the MODS ppt right. It says that for the past several years, it has had between 25 and 50% more applicants than people who got spots, which makes it seem pretty competitive to me. Meanwhile, Gen Surg and EM, which I thought were both competitive in the Army, have had higher match likelihoods for their applicants. Am I misinterpreting or misinformed?
 
Yeah, I'm not exactly holding my breath for REI, but I would like to check it out. So fellowship payback is year-for-year?

Back to the OP's question, I want to make sure I'm reading the MODS ppt right. It says that for the past several years, it has had between 25 and 50% more applicants than people who got spots, which makes it seem pretty competitive to me. Meanwhile, Gen Surg and EM, which I thought were both competitive in the Army, have had higher match likelihoods for their applicants. Am I misinterpreting or misinformed?

Yes, payback is year-for-year.

It is definitely possible that there may be more applicants than spots. The question is... how good are those applicants? To be a competitive applicant in ARMY ob/gyn, you pretty much only need to have passed your boards and not have failed any classes. To be a competitive applicant for EM, you need to have good board scores/grades, etc. Same thing for Air Force ob/gyn. So, competitiveness has to do with number of applicants per spot AND the quality of the applicants you are up against.
 
sorry to bring this up from the grave

perhaps this is a dumb question, but does one have to be in the army (or a military branch) to apply to tripler for residency?

thanks for the info
 
Yeah, pretty much. The only exception is the internal medicine program, who took some civilian residents through the VA a few years ago because I don't think they filled with military applicants. Now, I think they're trying to make it a semi-permanent thing. The only other non-Army residents there in the recent past have been Air Force docs displaced because of hurricane Katrina.
 
Yeah, pretty much. The only exception is the internal medicine program, who took some civilian residents through the VA a few years ago because I don't think they filled with military applicants. Now, I think they're trying to make it a semi-permanent thing. The only other non-Army residents there in the recent past have been Air Force docs displaced because of hurricane Katrina.
That's correct. TAMC is taking 2-3 VA IM residents each year now.
 
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