Official 2019-2020 Allergy/Immunology Fellowship Match Cycle

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Wow! Thanks so much for the thorough and comprehensive response. I will definitely review my CV in detail, with particular emphasis on research projects. The group interview sounds intimidating, but I will as prepared as possible. Thanks so much!!!

Hey. Yep I interviewed at a couple places that held group interviews (like three interviewers vs you). I actually liked it more than having 10+ individual interviews on a single day. I was very intimidated going into the days but each interview experience I had was very friendly and less awkward in general than one on one interviews. In general A/I is a very friendly atmosphere and I very rarely felt that someone was condescending. I will say that the group interviews seemed to be more "thought out" than individual interviews. Like 90% of my one on one interviews were like "... okay so tell me about yourself..." where as the group interview questions seemed to be planned out more carefully amongst the interviewers, but that could just be my experience.

Another recommendation I have is to know your CV inside and out. Anything you put on your application is fair game, even if it's some random research project you haven't thought about in a decade, I would anticipate being asked relatively detailed questions if the interviewer is interested. No one will be grilling you about basic immunology, etc but they will be unimpressed if you can't speak fluently about your research experiences.

Hope this helps! Good luck!

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AMG
Wisconsin - 7/15 (Peds)
USF- 7/18 (IM)
Vanderbilt 7/19
Mayo - MN 7/19 (IM)
Mayo Phoenix - 07/23 (IM)
U Washington 7/22 (IM, Peds)
NYU Winthrop 7/22 (IM)
Hopkins 7/22 (Peds)
Boston Children’s 7/22 (Peds), 8/7 (Peds)
UVA- 7/23 (IM)
UTenn - 7/23 (Peds)
Northwestern (Med Peds - Med track) 7/23
Rush - 7/25 (Peds), 7/29 (IM)
Colorado/National Jewish Health - 7/25 (Peds), 08/2 (IM)
Children's Hospital of Michigan - 7/25 (Peds)
Colorado Children's 7/25 (Med/Peds, Peds)
Cincinnati 7/26 (Peds, Med-Peds), 7/25 (IM)
Duke 7/26 (Med-Peds)
NIH 7/30 (Peds)
OSU 7/30 (Peds), 7/29 (IM)
UCSF 7/30 (IM)
LSU 8/1 (Peds)
UCSD 8/1 (Peds) (IM)
Penn state 08/01 (IM)
UPMC 08/01 (IM)
Northwestern/Lurie Track 8/2 (Peds)
Henry Ford 8/5 (Peds)
Mayo - MN 8/5 (Peds)
Tulane 8/5 (Peds) (IM)
Brigham & Women’s 8/6 (Peds) - email to arrange phone conversation
University of Kansas 08/7 (IM, Peds)
Thomas Jefferson 8/7 (IM) 8/11 (Peds; IM)
Cleveland Clinic 8/8 (Peds)
UAB 8/8 (Peds) (IM)
CHOP 8/8 (Peds)
Boston U 8/9 (IM)
USF/JH All Children’s 8/9 (Peds)
VAGLA 8/11 (IM)
Baylor/Peds Track 8/12 (Peds)
UNC 8/12 (Peds)
Kaiser LA 8/13 (IM)
MGH 8/15 (Peds)
U Michigan 8/20 (Peds)
Emory 8/21 (IM)

IMG (Requiring Visa)

US-IMG

UBuffalo- 7/22 (IM, peds)
Albany Med- 7/26 (IM)
WashU- 7/29 (IM)
Emory- 7/30 (IM)
Rush- 7/30 (IM)
UAB- 8/8 (IM)
Henry Ford- 8/9 (IM)
UNC- 8/12 (IM)
Stanford
Penn State Hershey
Baylor (IM) 8/13
UCLA- 8/13 (IM)
UPenn- 8/15 (IM)
Mayo Clinic (Rochester)- 8/15 (IM)
Rutgers/NJMS- 8/19 (IM)
UTMB 8/23 (peds)
 
Anyone still waiting for Boston programs? I see a few dates, but wondering if they will do a second wave. Anyone with thoughts? Are we at the end for A/I?
 
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Anyone still waiting for Boston programs? I see a few dates, but wondering if they will do a second wave. Anyone with thoughts? Are we at the end for A/I?

Waiting on Boston also. As well as most NYC programs.
 
Anyone interviewing at Uof Iowa, I am looking to switch interview dates with someone, please message me if you can help!
Ty
 
I am guessing we are done with invites this season...if anyone cancels their Boston University 10/25 date please PM me.
 
Haven’t heard from BWH or Penn yet.
 
AMG
Wisconsin - 7/15 (Peds)
USF- 7/18 (IM)
Vanderbilt 7/19
Mayo - MN 7/19 (IM)
Mayo Phoenix - 07/23 (IM)
U Washington 7/22 (IM, Peds)
NYU Winthrop 7/22 (IM)
Hopkins 7/22 (Peds)
Boston Children’s 7/22 (Peds), 8/7 (Peds)
UVA- 7/23 (IM)
UTenn - 7/23 (Peds)
Northwestern (Med Peds - Med track) 7/23
Rush - 7/25 (Peds), 7/29 (IM)
Colorado/National Jewish Health - 7/25 (Peds), 08/2 (IM)
Children's Hospital of Michigan - 7/25 (Peds)
Colorado Children's 7/25 (Med/Peds, Peds)
Cincinnati 7/26 (Peds, Med-Peds), 7/25 (IM)
Duke 7/26 (Med-Peds)
NIH 7/30 (Peds)
OSU 7/30 (Peds), 7/29 (IM)
UCSF 7/30 (IM)
LSU 8/1 (Peds)
UCSD 8/1 (Peds) (IM)
Penn state 08/01 (IM)
UPMC 08/01 (IM)
Northwestern/Lurie Track 8/2 (Peds)
Henry Ford 8/5 (Peds)
Mayo - MN 8/5 (Peds)
Tulane 8/5 (Peds) (IM)
Brigham & Women’s 8/6 (Peds) - email to arrange phone conversation
University of Kansas 08/7 (IM, Peds)
Thomas Jefferson 8/7 (IM) 8/11 (Peds; IM)
Cleveland Clinic 8/8 (Peds)
UAB 8/8 (Peds) (IM)
CHOP 8/8 (Peds)
Boston U 8/9 (IM)
USF/JH All Children’s 8/9 (Peds)
VAGLA 8/11 (IM)
Baylor/Peds Track 8/12 (Peds)
UNC 8/12 (Peds)
Kaiser LA 8/13 (IM)
MGH 8/15 (Peds)
U Michigan 8/20 (Peds)
Emory 8/21 (IM)

IMG (Requiring Visa)

US-IMG

UBuffalo- 7/22 (IM, peds)
Albany Med- 7/26 (IM)
WashU- 7/29 (IM)
Emory- 7/30 (IM)
Rush- 7/30 (IM)
UAB- 8/8 (IM)
Henry Ford- 8/9 (IM)
UNC- 8/12 (IM)
Stanford
Penn State Hershey
Baylor (IM) 8/13
UCLA- 8/13 (IM)
UPenn- 8/15 (IM)
Mayo Clinic (Rochester)- 8/15 (IM)
Rutgers/NJMS- 8/19 (IM)
UTMB 8/23 (peds)
Case Western- 8/30 (IM)
Wake Forest- 9/3 (IM)
 
AMG
Wisconsin - 7/15 (Peds)
USF- 7/18 (IM)
Vanderbilt 7/19
Mayo - MN 7/19 (IM)
Mayo Phoenix - 07/23 (IM)
U Washington 7/22 (IM, Peds)
NYU Winthrop 7/22 (IM)
Hopkins 7/22 (Peds)
Boston Children’s 7/22 (Peds), 8/7 (Peds)
UVA- 7/23 (IM)
UTenn - 7/23 (Peds)
Northwestern (Med Peds - Med track) 7/23
Rush - 7/25 (Peds), 7/29 (IM)
Colorado/National Jewish Health - 7/25 (Peds), 08/2 (IM)
Children's Hospital of Michigan - 7/25 (Peds)
Colorado Children's 7/25 (Med/Peds, Peds)
Cincinnati 7/26 (Peds, Med-Peds), 7/25 (IM)
Duke 7/26 (Med-Peds)
NIH 7/30 (Peds)
OSU 7/30 (Peds), 7/29 (IM)
UCSF 7/30 (IM)
LSU 8/1 (Peds)
UCSD 8/1 (Peds) (IM)
Penn state 08/01 (IM)
UPMC 08/01 (IM)
Northwestern/Lurie Track 8/2 (Peds)
Henry Ford 8/5 (Peds)
Mayo - MN 8/5 (Peds)
Tulane 8/5 (Peds) (IM)
Brigham & Women’s 8/6 (Peds) - email to arrange phone conversation
University of Kansas 08/7 (IM, Peds)
Thomas Jefferson 8/7 (IM) 8/11 (Peds; IM)
Cleveland Clinic 8/8 (Peds)
UAB 8/8 (Peds) (IM)
CHOP 8/8 (Peds)
Boston U 8/9 (IM)
USF/JH All Children’s 8/9 (Peds)
VAGLA 8/11 (IM)
Baylor/Peds Track 8/12 (Peds)
UNC 8/12 (Peds)
Kaiser LA 8/13 (IM)
MGH 8/15 (Peds)
U Michigan 8/20 (Peds)
Emory 8/21 (IM)
UC Davis 8/22 (IM)

IMG (Requiring Visa)

US-IMG

UBuffalo- 7/22 (IM, peds)
Albany Med- 7/26 (IM)
WashU- 7/29 (IM)
Emory- 7/30 (IM)
Rush- 7/30 (IM)
UAB- 8/8 (IM)
Henry Ford- 8/9 (IM)
UNC- 8/12 (IM)
Stanford
Penn State Hershey
Baylor (IM) 8/13
UCLA- 8/13 (IM)
UPenn- 8/15 (IM)
Mayo Clinic (Rochester)- 8/15 (IM)
Rutgers/NJMS- 8/19 (IM)
UTMB 8/23 (peds)
Case Western- 8/30 (IM)
Wake Forest- 9/3 (IM)
 
Penn rejection today after I emailed asking why I hadn’t heard back. Strangely though got a CHOP interview weeks ago (Med Peds applicant).
 
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I just received an email that Pitt will not be interviewing Peds candidates this year because they had two internal "fast-track" residents going directly into the fellowship. I guess that's like a rejection?
 
I just received an email that Pitt will not be interviewing Peds candidates this year because they had two internal "fast-track" residents going directly into the fellowship. I guess that's like a rejection?
Yes, but because they don’t have any spots.
 
I just received an email that Pitt will not be interviewing Peds candidates this year because they had two internal "fast-track" residents going directly into the fellowship. I guess that's like a rejection?
I got that too. They should not participate in eras/nrmp if they already have dedicated guaranteed candidates. Isn't that a match violation?
 
Whats the average starting salary for A&I? I heard different numbers from different ppl ranging from 160k to 300k. Is it true that they really make less than primary care ?
I have anecdotally heard 250-300k as starting salary with sky being the limit when you're a partner (n=2 and private practice). I have heard 180k as starting salary for a part time position.
 
Any body wanna switch interview date For Indiana university? Please PM me
 
Anybody wanna switch interview date for Wayne state.please pm me
 
Can someone who got invited to Childrens hospital of michigan please ping me. Thanks
 
Missouri..I booked it on eras about 2 weeks ago. Havnt gotten a confirmation. Anyone e heard from the PC
 
anyone have thoughts on the amount of immunology in A/I fellowship? I'm peds, so I went to programs ranging from "yes we manage them after their transplants" to "we refer them to xxx other hospital for transplant". I think I'm a "big A" type of person and definitely don't see myself as being the "immunology person" wherever I end up working, but I don't know as a pediatrician if I should be looking for a certain level of immunology training (obviously the programs that don't transplant still prepare you for the boards).
 
anyone have thoughts on the amount of immunology in A/I fellowship? I'm peds, so I went to programs ranging from "yes we manage them after their transplants" to "we refer them to xxx other hospital for transplant". I think I'm a "big A" type of person and definitely don't see myself as being the "immunology person" wherever I end up working, but I don't know as a pediatrician if I should be looking for a certain level of immunology training (obviously the programs that don't transplant still prepare you for the boards).

I've also seen a range, and the main difference I've seen is that the programs based at children's hospitals tend to have at least one dedicated immunology/immunodeficiency clinic. I'm not really worried about it either way because like you said, all the programs will get you ready for boards in both allergy and immunology, so you can really base your decision on what you find most interesting or useful to your future career.

And not to hijack here, but most of the programs I've seen say they use Abbas for their immunology didactics. I'm assuming that's "Cellular and Molecular Immunology" and not "Basic Immunology", right? The latter seems more geared toward med students I think, but I want to confirm before I make any purchases!

edit: I guess those links don't work but you guys can google
 
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I've also seen a range, and the main difference I've seen is that the programs based at children's hospitals tend to have at least one dedicated immunology/immunodeficiency clinic. I'm not really worried about it either way because like you said, all the programs will get you ready for boards in both allergy and immunology, so you can really base your decision on what you find most interesting or useful to your future career.

And not to hijack here, but most of the programs I've seen say they use Abbas for their immunology didactics. I'm assuming that's "Cellular and Molecular Immunology" and not "Basic Immunology", right? The latter seems more geared toward med students I think, but I want to confirm before I make any purchases!

edit: I guess those links don't work but you guys can google
Don’t a lot of them buy you the books?
 
Don’t a lot of them buy you the books?

I wouldn't worry too much about learning immunology ahead of time. I'm a first year fellow and didn't really get serious about it until after I had finished boards. The caveat is that I'm mostly on the medicine side of things.
 
I wouldn't worry too much about learning immunology ahead of time. I'm a first year fellow and didn't really get serious about it until after I had finished boards. The caveat is that I'm mostly on the medicine side of things.
Oh yeah definitely, if I have time to read (haha that has NEVER happened in my residency) I am doing PREP questions
 
Already board certified and have a bit of extra time on my hands, so why not?
Makes total sense! That was more in response to the person that quoted me
 
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Will any be any more interviews. Did anyone certify the rank list?
 
anyone else like questioning their entire rank list right now? eek!
 
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OK, I channeled my general nervousness about the rank list being done into writing down my impressions of programs (because this is what I was always looking for in previous years' threads--hopefully others can add their 2 cents as well). This is from the perspective of a pediatrician looking for an academic career. Honestly, the programs were A LOT more different from each other that I was expecting!

Interview Impressions (in alphabetical order)
Boston Children’s: Peds >> Adults. Big children's hospital.
Lots of immunodeficiency, also lots of inpatient (and ED?) consults for allergy. They have separate Allergy and Immunology inpatient services. There are blocks of covering the Allergy pager + service and the Immunology pager + service. Fellows also cover pediatric Rheumatology, including the inpatient service and call, for 3 months a year. This includes a “Kawasaki Disease” pager. I think this could be interesting if you are someone interested in those immunodeficiency/rheum overlap “immune dysregulation” patients. If I remember correctly, fellows had a lot of involvement in peri- and post-BMT patients. This was one of the places where I wondered if you were being trained to be “an A/I at this particular institution” rather than a general Allergist/Immunologist. Research opportunities (basic, translational, clinical) plentiful with clear funding for 3rd year. Strengths seem to be immunodeficiency and food allergy. Some fellows were also doing research at other institutions in Boston.

CHOP: Peds >> Adults. Big children's hospital.
First year heavy clinically, third year is a “pretending” along with research. Similar to Boston, lots of immunodeficiency in addition to allergy. They have inpatient services—seemed like mostly immunodeficiency but also could admit asthma patients/anaphylaxis obs patients known to the department. Seriously beautiful outpatient facilities. Fellows seemed happy and attendings were friendly. Third year funding seemed guaranteed. Many different research opportunities in immunodeficiency and food allergy (+related conditions), or in collaboration with departments outside A/I. Multiple young faculty who either have K’s or are close to K’s from who graduated from the fellowship.

Children’s Colorado: Peds >> Adults. Big children's hospital.
Due to large catchment area, see pretty good amount of immunodeficiency in addition to doing tons of allergy/food challenges. I don’t think they have an inpatient service. It was unclear from their website whether a third year was even an option but once there at the interview it was clear that this would be an option for folks interested in academic careers. They seem to still be building their research program but it seems like a matter of combining the many resources and patient populations already available. Active/growing programs in food allergy, EoE (with peds GI), immunodeficiency, clinical laboratory A/I. They referenced their “divorce” from NJH a lot, and I think this was not necessary – a lot of folks interviewing probably aren’t super aware of it and I think they could just play to their strengths. Faculty generally friendly and welcoming, program coordinator is awesome, fellows seemed happy.

Cincinnati Children’s: Peds >> Adults. Big children's hospital.
Good at basically everything, but areas of particular expertise/exposure include eosinophilic disease, food allergy, asthma, HLH, immunodeficiencies. I don’t think they have an inpatient team. Consult service seemed active but manageable. Excited about building careers of future fellows. Spend time in a very established, academic-minded private practice. Moving towards having the fellowship be structured as either A) a 2-year experience for people looking for private practice/clinician educator careers B) a 3-4+ year experience for people looking for research-driven careers. Have research programs in areas listed above in addition to an Immunobiology department fellows can work/collaborate with. Fellows seemed happy, faculty were friendly and approachable. Dinner was fun. Paid for hotel.

MGH: Peds = or slightly < Adults? Smaller children's hospital.
One fellow estimated their inpatient consults were probably 20% pediatrics, 80% medicine (with like ½ of the medicine consults being drug allergy). Do >600 drug desensitizations a year but have hired APPs to help with this. Also described having “e-consults” that are handled by 2nd years, 3rd years, and faculty. Said they had implemented these things partly to optimize/improve learning for actual in-person consults. No inpatient service, get NICU/abnormal TRECs consults but no transplants. Tons of opportunities for research, additional degrees that are well-supported by the department. Third year funding essentially guaranteed. Strengths include drug allergy, HAE, food allergy, mechanistic/translational allergy. Working on building the immunodeficiency program. Many (most?) junior faculty members come from the fellowship and it they were well-supported by the department while bridging from fellowship to first grants. Everyone was friendly and fun to meet with – this is a place that does 2 “panel” interviews with you + 3 faculty members in addition to a 1-on-1 interview. Lunch with fellows had 4 out of the 6 in the program in attendance and was a blast.

NIH: Peds* = Adults. Work at some larger children's hospitals.
Exposure to bread-and-butter A/I outside the NIH, crazy weird stuff at the NIH. Clinical training is split between GW (adult), Children’s National (pediatrics—A/I and an NIH attending has an immunodeficiency clinic there), Johns Hopkins (pediatrics—lots of food allergy), and the NIH. At the NIH, you spend 6 weeks on their inpatient service first year and second year supervising a resident team taking care of patients with rare immunologic diagnoses. Spend time in clinic seeing patients on “protocols”. As a pediatrician, one *caveat is that they don’t admit kids under the age of 2-3 (due to the lack of a PICU or Peds ED I think?)—hence the pediatrics experience elsewhere. This was the other place where I wondered if you were being trained to be “an A/I at this particular institution” rather than a general Allergist/Immunologist. There’s been some faculty turnover recently and some of the personalities seem pretty big, but there are awesome opportunities in many areas of A/I including immunodeficiency (duh), eosinophilic disease, mast cell disease, food allergy. The resources for research and clinical work (because you don’t have to worry about insurance) are incredible. Over a three-year fellowship, $60,000 of loans (+taxes) are paid off by the NIH/government.

Northwestern (Lurie/Peds): Peds >>Adults. Big children's hospital.
Strong clinical allergy and immunodeficiency. Good support for fellows who would like research careers through a pretty structured T32. I’m not sure if it’s because it was awkward that several people had not read my application, or because the interviews were in a building far away from the hospital, but this one didn’t stand out as much as I expected it to. I don’t remember a ton of specific things that made it stand out. A fellow specifically mentioned it could be hard to get into translational projects and some are being mentored by faculty who were previously at Northwestern but have moved to other institutions. Most of the labs are on the adult side.

San Diego: Peds = Adults. Big children's hospital.
Strong clinical program, strengths are in HAE, clinical food allergy, eosinophilic esophagitis. Clinical experiences at the University Hospital, the VA, the Children’s Hospital (Rady), I think another adult hospital, an academically-affiliated practice, and Kaiser (sometimes with the editors of JACI: In Practice). I don’t think there’s an inpatient service. Because of the number of NICUs in San Diego and the size of Rady, see plenty of immunodeficiency. Have capability to get WES results in <7 days, don’t transplant yet (send to UCLA) but looking to start a program. Major HAE referral center. Recently have had a lapse in T32 funding – fellows mentioned that more of their clinic time has shifted to the VA due to funding changes. Did seem like with the right project/mentor third year funding was very available. Most active research seemed to be in the areas mentioned above in addition to basic/translational work with allergic effector cells. Faculty were friendly and approachable, fellows seemed happy.

UNC: Peds = Adults. Smaller children's hospital.
Really well-balanced clinical program in terms of adult and peds. Strengths include food allergy (including major clinical trials/translational work and alpha-gal), asthma, environmental effects on lung health. Just hired new faculty member to help immunology program continue to grow. Spend time both in Chapel Hill and in Raleigh (like 20-30 min away) for clinic. No inpatient service. Optional 3-year program with funding for third year. Supportive of fellows running with new ideas for research projects. In addition to the allergy/asthma/lung work above, there are also opportunities to work on A/I projects with GI (one of the fellows was in a GI lab). Collaborative environment. Everyone at UNC was friendly and approachable, fellows seemed happy.

Wisconsin: Peds = Adults. Smaller children's hospital.
Another really well-balanced program age-wise – was pretty neat that the adult and peds clinics are literally next to each other on different hallways in the same building. No inpatient service. Clinically, strong asthma and allergy, less immunodeficiency (one fellow commented that they might not see enough but I’m not sure if I agree after talking to faculty). Strong research in terms of birth cohorts, longitudinal biobanks, resources within the university to do translational work. Fellows attend/are involved in clinical trial meetings. Infrastructure/resources strong enough that fellows (including first year) have posters at AAAAI every year of fellowship. Again, strong research opportunities in large cohort studies of asthma, eosinophils, some mechanistic immunodeficiency and allergy, food allergy. Third year funded by T32. Faculty were great, fellows seemed happy. Paid for hotel.
 
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Crickets...

OK I’ll go. I hope everyone is happy with their matches. I applied to 11 programs, got 7 invites, ranked all 7, and matched at #2. Very happy with that. It’s probably the best program for me. I ranked my #1 because it’s closer to home but it might not have been a good fit, so I trust the match! I also matched #2 for my residency and loved it.

I’m Peds trained, AMG, not AOA. Very good board scores, no significant research experience. I’ve been working in primary care for 6 years. I am not planning for an academic career.

Saw on match data that one of the places lower on my list didn’t fill either of their spots, which is nuts, right?
 
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Thanks @MHYDE , I felt funny being the only person writing anything.

I’m an AMG finishing peds residency this year. AOA. Very good board scores. Significant laboratory-based and clinical research experience. I want an academic career with a research component.

I applied to 14, got 14 invites, went on 10 interviews, ranked 10. With the specific programs I looked at, this meant I was technically ranking 21 open positions. I matched at my #1 choice and am really excited! Ranked largely based on research opportunities and places I felt young faculty were supported, followed by gut feeling and location.

I generally ended up liking places that had more of a balanced adult/peds experience, which surprised me given that I want to be a pediatric allergist. At multiple of the children’s hospitals I was a little surprised at the level of some of the consults (things that would be managed as an outpatient or by general pediatrics at my institution—which is a well-regarded place but not one of the big three), but I also think that at some of the larger children’s hospitals things are pretty fellow-run.

Edited: to include # of positions
 
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Saw on match data that one of the places lower on my list didn’t fill either of their spots, which is nuts, right?

My general understanding is that of the two programs that didn’t match anyone at all:

- one is an IM program that i think is trying to become more separate from the Peds program that has traditionally managed it (this was kind of mentioned at the Peds interview)
- the other did <5 interviews and would rather go unmatched than have multiple days of interviews
 
Matched to one of the programs a bit lower down on my list, but happy to have matched at a solid program! To all those looking at these posts next cycle: I'd advise ranking at least 12-15 programs. A friend matched at their #11.
 
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Hi! I have been following this thread for a while. Here are my 2 cents...

IMG, good board scores, med peds trained, chief resident year. Some clinical research and bench work with publications prior to residency.

Matched number #1. Ranked based on location. Super happy. Had 15 interviews- cancelled 4. Ranked 10. Feel free to DM if any advice needed.
 
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Hi all!

AMG, IM resident, AOA, very good USMLEs, no bench research but decent amount of clinical research and publications. Applied to way too many, 36 to be exact. Received a bunch of invites early on and immediately withdrew over a dozen of my applications, ended up declining quite a few invites (never accepted and later cancelled, however). Went on 10, ranked 10. My intention is to go into private practice but not totally against academics, definitely no desire for research career. I wanted a place that would give me strong, balanced clinical training without requiring me to do too much research. Ended up very happy with my match.


I'll try and post my reviews of programs soon.
 
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Hey guys! PGY1 here at AOA community program. Just seeking some advice out there regarding what I can do over the next 2 years to be a good applicant. Any idea how heavily programs focus on COMLEX/USMLE scores? Thank you for your help!
 
Loooooonnnng time reader (like college years creeping since medical school application long) and finally created an account after all of these years. Hopefully its helpful to someone searching in the application seasons to come! I am a DO, IM resident, no A/I program at home institution. I did clinical immunology research but published an abstract prior to applying as well as some poster presentation of clinical cases during residency. I applied to probably way too many programs but was a COMLEX only applicant and wanted to give myself the best chance I had. I applied to around ~45 programs, received about half of those as interview invitations, interviewed at 15, and matched in my top 3! So excited to be a fellow in the next 6 months!

Thanks to all those who posted throughout the application season!
 
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Probably more that rheum and endo due to fewer number of spots, less than hem/onc

I know that I’ll probably be hated bc of this term usage...but is it IMG friendly? Do non US IMG, who had done IM residency, get in?
 
Long-time lurker, wanted to post some impressions of programs. These impressions were very subjective and things that were important to me. I am not heavily research oriented, so I relied more on vibes the people gave me and the schedules.

Boston U: Very impressed with the program. The PD especially was very welcoming and the residents were a happy bunch. You can tell it was one big family. The schedule was pretty light, first year is on call all year with no weekends. The pulm fellow takes call on weekends which I found funny. Second year you take very infrequent call. Overall, solid research opportunities. The clinics were flexible on which ones you want to do in first year and second year.

Buffalo: I wasn't a big fan of Buffalo as a city in general. They have separate Peds and Medicine call, so for this years class they were taking two fellows, meaning you'll be on call all year. Second years took weekend call, so schedule gets easier. The residents were pretty happy and welcoming.

Rutgers/ NJMS: I did not like this program very much. You do all the skin testing, spirometry and you reconstitute biologics, mix serum etc. in afternoons (seriously?). This tells me they don't have much support staff, clinic can get hectic. The fellows also do skin biopsies and take all derm consults because NJMS doesn't have a Derm service.

UVA: Impressive faculty with big names in the field. Even with that, there wasn't a big push for basic research. Lots of sub-speciality clinics incorporated into the weekly clinics. The faculty was friendly and engaging. Fellows were very happy. They do 4 half day clinics and q4week call which is very doable. Charlottesville is a smaller college town so this might be a deal breaker for others.

Emory University: Another amazing program. The PD is big into education and would be an amazing mentor for anyone who wants an academic career. Emory will be a great place for anyone interested in food allergies with Dr. Vickery in their department. The schedule was doable and fellows were very happy.

Can someone please comment on Children's Michigan? I heard pretty negative things on the interview trail from at least 5 different people. I do not want to post what was said as I did not experience this first hand. The future applicants should know this to make an informed decision.
 
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I was referring to allergy and immunology ( my bad that I didn’t mention it).
I do not think it is very IMG friendly. From what I have heard, it is just starting to be more DO friendly. AI applicants are relatively strong applicants with good scores and have research under their belt. The statistics don't do justice to its competitiveness because it's a small applicant pool. You're competing for 1 or 2 spots with IM and Peds applying to it. In addition, all the programs are at big research university programs which are relatively harder for IMGs to land at. I hope this culture changes in the near future because I have met great IMG candidates on the interview trail who are more qualified than me. One of them did not match even after ranking >10 programs which is very unfortunate.
 
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Unfortunately, I am IMG, i did not match. I had publications and research experience.
 
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