Hi Guys,
I intend to do my medical degree at Trinity College Dublin, which is the number one university in Ireland (and in the top 60 in the world).
I then want to do a combined residency in Neurology/Psychiatry (and would settle for either if these programs have all died out by 2019). At current, I'm looking at Columbia or NYU for my combined residency or Cornell or similar if I need to do either Neurology or Psychiatry on their own.
My question is
Trinity offers an intercalated MSc in Biomedical Sciences at the end of the third year, full-time, and part-time in the fourth year of the medical degree. I would pick the neuroscience 'track'.
Is this worth it? Would it increase my chances of getting a residency by much? I'm aware that the USMLE scores are the primary factor. Other than this, is there anything else I can do?
So should I bother with the extra year it would take me? Or just the normal degree (which is equivalent to an MD) and then do very well in the USMLE? If it has no effect on my residency, would the extra research skills I learn be very beneficial? It doesn't look like a particularly impressive program to me.
Thanks.
Ed.
I intend to do my medical degree at Trinity College Dublin, which is the number one university in Ireland (and in the top 60 in the world).
I then want to do a combined residency in Neurology/Psychiatry (and would settle for either if these programs have all died out by 2019). At current, I'm looking at Columbia or NYU for my combined residency or Cornell or similar if I need to do either Neurology or Psychiatry on their own.
My question is
Trinity offers an intercalated MSc in Biomedical Sciences at the end of the third year, full-time, and part-time in the fourth year of the medical degree. I would pick the neuroscience 'track'.
Is this worth it? Would it increase my chances of getting a residency by much? I'm aware that the USMLE scores are the primary factor. Other than this, is there anything else I can do?
So should I bother with the extra year it would take me? Or just the normal degree (which is equivalent to an MD) and then do very well in the USMLE? If it has no effect on my residency, would the extra research skills I learn be very beneficial? It doesn't look like a particularly impressive program to me.
Thanks.
Ed.