WOW! You obviously completely missed my point in my previous post. You are still using statistics inappropriately and are basing judgements on these... Didn't your medical school require you to take statistics or do case reviews?
Celiac Plexus said:
You're right, they don't tell the whole story. But the fact that >200 US seniors went umatched last year in general surgery, versus 70 for ER, shows that it is significantly more difficult to get a general surgery slot. There were only 2 unfilled cat spots for the scramble. What their qualifications were I don't know.
Again... than according to this logic, General surgery is more competitive than radiology, neurosurgery, ophthamoloy, etc...
NOT TRUE!
However, claiming that the stats of ER applicants are higher than those of general surgery applicants is absurd. You have no way of knowing that information. In fact, at my university, everyone who wanted ER got it, and there were some serious bottom feeders in that group... Again, I have no way of knowing what the overall stats of each group are like... Just my sample of applicants here... I have a feeling that the overall stats are probably similar, though I'd guess surgery is probably somewhat higher.
As stated earlier, I just used my own observations at my school, and realize that there is variability from school-to-school. We can agree to disagree on our opinions. As for my school, we had 2 people who wanted to go into EM but didn't b/c they couldn't get interviews... they ended up matching in other fields b/c they couldn't even start the interview process in EM. These people are NOT included in you statistics from the WUSTL website b/c they matched in other fields after pursuing a back-up plan (just like people who have back-up plans when they apply to derm, neurosurg, ortho)... I don't know of anybody who ever has a backup plan for not matching in GS (besides maybe prelim surg... which is totally non-competitive with many unfilled spots)... Again, just my personal observation.
Another thing to consider is that a lot of people that apply to GS do not actually want to do GS. They use it as a backup plan in case they don't match into surgical subspecialties (ortho, plastics, etc..). Thus, there are many people stealing spots from those who truly want to do GS. Last year I know of an EM applicant that matched into GS as his back-up as well (granted he was picky and city was more important than specialty, so he suicided with EM and GS... didn't match EM, but matched his backup GS).
The bottom line is that compared to ER, it is significantly more difficult to obtain a general surgery residency slot, as demonstrated by the unmatch numbers.
Okay... you're obviously not understanding the fact that % unmatched
does not equate to more competitive specialties... Or you're willing to post on the Neurosurg, Ophtho, and Rads boards that GS is more competitive... I'd like to see your response in there...
Also judging by the number of US seniors applying to both fields, general surgery is a more desirable residency to US medical students...
Hahahah... Are you kidding me??? You have serious logic and reasoning flaws... According to this logic, the most desirable fields in medicine are family practice, internal medicine, and pediatrics... The number of US seniors applying to those fields are MULTITUDES higher than the numbers applying to GS or EM!
I think you just had a big round or oral diarrhea!
