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Hi there,
Firstly, sorry for the obscenely long post. Now, on with the show!
I've been interested in child neuro for a while now and I want to start getting ready for residency applications, which I realize are a bit of a ways away (I'm a third year at a U.S. allo school and I promise I'm not a gunner 😀). I was hoping to get some guidance/advice from recent applicants about what I should expect when applying to programs since most of the administration at my school can't help me much and my mentor graduated from med school over 20 years ago.
1. From what I've seen around the forums, in general, this is not a super competitive specialty. I've looked at the stats from the NRMP for the 2012 Match and there were a large number of unfilled positions (I believe 17 or something), but I'm not sure if that's because those positions were advanced only or there really just wasn't much interest.
2. How important is it to do an away rotation at the program you want to go to? I honestly don't know enough about what I want in a program to be able to make a decision about my "top choice" at the moment, but let's say it's Boston Children's for now (which is admittedly on my radar and likely out of my reach). I've heard mixed opinions about doing rotations at very prestigious hospitals that take medical students from top-tier schools because it could just make you look bad. I have no idea if this is sound logic or not. Can anyone provide any advice/info on this?
3. How difficult is it to find prelim peds programs for advanced positions? I haven't done my homework on this one as much, but is it generally difficult to find these 2-year programs that aren't associated with an advanced program?
4. Is it at all beneficial to do a whole 3-year pediatrics residency and do the child neuro Match a year after you graduate? To clarify: Is it helpful for getting into a better child neuro program? Is it helpful for your actual practice once you're done with residency? Does it give you an increase in pay? Is it easier to match in general because you don't have to find prelim programs?
I'm sure there are a lot of questions I don't know to ask yet at this point, but any and all advice (as a reply to this thread or a PM) would be GREATLY appreciated! 🙂
Thank you!
Firstly, sorry for the obscenely long post. Now, on with the show!
I've been interested in child neuro for a while now and I want to start getting ready for residency applications, which I realize are a bit of a ways away (I'm a third year at a U.S. allo school and I promise I'm not a gunner 😀). I was hoping to get some guidance/advice from recent applicants about what I should expect when applying to programs since most of the administration at my school can't help me much and my mentor graduated from med school over 20 years ago.
1. From what I've seen around the forums, in general, this is not a super competitive specialty. I've looked at the stats from the NRMP for the 2012 Match and there were a large number of unfilled positions (I believe 17 or something), but I'm not sure if that's because those positions were advanced only or there really just wasn't much interest.
If possible, I would like some clarification on what competitive means for pedi neuro. I realize that Step 1/2 scores can be a touchy subject with some people, but what's the average Step scores at a top tier program (I'm thinking Boston Children's, CHOP, Seattle)? What about a middle-of-the-road program? I cannot find any of this information online (at least, none that's recent), so I was wondering if anyone could comment on it. I will probably call programs once I am on a less busy rotation schedule... good idea?
2. How important is it to do an away rotation at the program you want to go to? I honestly don't know enough about what I want in a program to be able to make a decision about my "top choice" at the moment, but let's say it's Boston Children's for now (which is admittedly on my radar and likely out of my reach). I've heard mixed opinions about doing rotations at very prestigious hospitals that take medical students from top-tier schools because it could just make you look bad. I have no idea if this is sound logic or not. Can anyone provide any advice/info on this?
3. How difficult is it to find prelim peds programs for advanced positions? I haven't done my homework on this one as much, but is it generally difficult to find these 2-year programs that aren't associated with an advanced program?
4. Is it at all beneficial to do a whole 3-year pediatrics residency and do the child neuro Match a year after you graduate? To clarify: Is it helpful for getting into a better child neuro program? Is it helpful for your actual practice once you're done with residency? Does it give you an increase in pay? Is it easier to match in general because you don't have to find prelim programs?
I'm sure there are a lot of questions I don't know to ask yet at this point, but any and all advice (as a reply to this thread or a PM) would be GREATLY appreciated! 🙂
Thank you!