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If I go to medical school for 4 years of the hpsp and do a military neurosurgery residency which is 7 years, what is my payback commitment
Why would it not be 4 years?7 years after residency
If I go to medical school for 4 years of the hpsp and do a military neurosurgery residency which is 7 years, what is my payback commitment
Heed the advice that you're getting above. This is a common misconception that most applicants and recruiters don't understand.If I go to medical school for 4 years of the hpsp and do a military neurosurgery residency which is 7 years, what is my payback commitment
The above isn't completely true. For many years the Army has been sponsoring Neurosurgery Residents at both University of Florida and University of Texas Health Science Center San Antonio. The spots are fully funded and the commitment is the same as for completing your residency at Walter Reed.
Additionally, the acuity and case numbers are going up because they are pulling in everyone who has Tricare Prime and under age 65. They are also starting to take over some VA patients also. All of these led SAMMC to have over 800 Neurosurgical cases last year.
The above isn't completely true. For many years the Army has been sponsoring Neurosurgery Residents at both University of Florida and University of Texas Health Science Center San Antonio. The spots are fully funded and the commitment is the same as for completing your residency at Walter Reed.
Additionally, the acuity and case numbers are going up because they are pulling in everyone who has Tricare Prime and under age 65. They are also starting to take over some VA patients also. All of these led SAMMC to have over 800 Neurosurgical cases last year.
I recall back in my residency days I had to do a month of a neurosurgery rotation. After rounds, I was forced to go to the cafeteria and eat breakfast with the team, which consisted of myself, a surgery intern, an active duty neurosurgeon, and a reservist neurosurgeon that was actived on a backfill, but happened to work as an attending at a university program. The breakfast conversation went something like this:The above isn't completely true. For many years the Army has been sponsoring Neurosurgery Residents at both University of Florida and University of Texas Health Science Center San Antonio. The spots are fully funded and the commitment is the same as for completing your residency at Walter Reed.
Additionally, the acuity and case numbers are going up because they are pulling in everyone who has Tricare Prime and under age 65. They are also starting to take over some VA patients also. All of these led SAMMC to have over 800 Neurosurgical cases last year.
#3 is only ever trotted out by low volume programs.
No procedural service will compete with the real world. I don't think NS is any different.