Is there any such thing as a Combined Internal Medicine/ GI Program ??? I know there are Medicine/Peds programs and such others but never heard of a Combined IM/GI program ?? Do they exist ?? Just curious !!! 😀
All GI fellowships are 3 years.IntlMed said:By the way, is GI a 2 or 3 year program ??
IntlMed said:Is there any such thing as a Combined Internal Medicine/ GI Program ??? I know there are Medicine/Peds programs and such others but never heard of a Combined IM/GI program ?? Do they exist ?? Just curious !!! 😀
june015b said:There are a few IM programs with a fast track into GI. These are usually programs with large GI divisions. One of them is U of Pittsburgh (UPMC). You can call and find about the program.
retroviridae said:These accelerated positions exist at most university programs. There are ABIM approved pathways that do 2 years gen med followed by 4-6 years of specialty (most of that time will be in the lab doing research). These are designed for clinician-scientists who know what they want to do with their lives when they enter or shortly after starting residency. Great because it gives you more time in the lab (if that's your thing), bad because you do lose a year of IM training.
Great Replies ... you all !!AJM said:The fast track is a great option for people planning on going into academics/research, and who know early which specialty they want to do. You pretty much have to know before you start residency, because you apply to fellowship programs during internship. For GI, fast trackers would have to apply around August/September of their intern year to get a spot that starts after second year. They pretty much know which program they'll be going to by November/December of that intern year. For other specialties, they can wait until around November of the intern year to start applying, and then will secure a program around the spring.
Most people I know who have fast tracked have started off as clinical fellows right away after their 2nd year, and do the research later, so that their research time can be lumped all together, but I'm sure there's variation between programs. Normally in academic IM subspecialty fellowships, fellows do 1-2 years of research after their clinical training is completed, depending on the subspecialty. Fast trackers get an extra year of research time added on to this. So fast tracking doesn't save you time overall, but you take more research time so that your clinical training is shorter.
IntlMed said:Great Replies ... you all !!
So, from these posts, I gather, that for the average Joe who does not want to get into Academia, the IM(3 yrs) + GI ( 3 yrs) is the fastest route ??
I was on UPMC or UPITTS web site the other day and saw an IM program that was 4 years (Transitional year + 3 years Residency). Is there a special advantage to doing this 4 year program vs the regular 3 yrs?
IntlMed said:Thanks for the response. As far as the residency program that I was referring to, it is http://www.upmc.edu/shadyintmed/Curriculum.htm .
Thanks,
IntlMed
Once again.. Great replies... 👍 Thank you for clarifying that ..AJM said:They make it look a little confusing on that page. It's actually two separate programs listed together -- the transitional program and the categorical program. If you read the text on the site, they mention the categorical program as a 3-year program. As cytoskel said, for IM, you do not need to do a transitional year.