This forum made possible through the generous support of SDN members, donors, and sponsors. Thank you.
I should have been more specific. By night float I meant no cross covering. When you're on nights you generally cover and admit to only one team. There are roughly 16 patients per team and as an intern you can admit up to 4 new patients
So it is night float, but one person per team? Does every team have somebody on every night? Just curious as this is a system I haven't encountered before...unless I'm completely misunderstanding you, which is totally possible.
 
So it is night float, but one person per team? Does every team have somebody on every night? Just curious as this is a system I haven't encountered before...unless I'm completely misunderstanding you, which is totally possible.

I'm probably just not explaining it well. I'll give an example. At our main hospital we have 6 big teams (capped at 16 patients) and 2 small teams (capped at 8 patients)

Big team 1-intern a
Big team 2-intern b
Resident a which supervises both interns

Big team 3 and small team 1-intern c
Resident b supervises one intern

Big team 4-intern d
Big team 5-intern e
Resident c supervises both interns

Big team 6 and small team 2-intern f
Resident d supervises one intern

There are 6 interns and 4 residents responsible for covering the medicine service at night as compared to 8 residents and 14 interns during the day. So there is about half the coverage at night as compared to many other programs where there is probably only about 25% of the coverage at night. This makes the nights go way more smoothly. But the big caveat is there are more of them. Most interns are nearly all residents are able to get some sleep at night. (Anywhere from 1-5hrs depending on how busy)

No matter if you are covering a small team and a big team or just one big team as an intern you are capped at 4 admissions. It used to be that all teams (small or big) were covered by 1 intern but this was changed to decrease the amount of nights intern year by 2 weeks.

This is a unique night system that to my knowledge is not used at many other programs (if any?)

The above applies for Monday night through Friday night. Weekend coverage (sat night/sun night) are either 1 resident per team OR 1 resident and 1 intern for 2 teams depending on the weekend. When interns or residents are on their clinic blocks one of the 2 (or sometimes 3) weekends off you have a wknd coverage. It totals to about 4-6 weekend coverages per year for residents and 4 per year for interns.

So in the long winded answer to your question there is always no matter what at least 1 body (intern or resident) per team at all times
 
Wow thank you so much for that incredibly detailed response whoknows! From my interview day at Montefiore moses/weiler I felt like the program had so, so much going for it and it was really making great strides to rid itself of that old "work yourself to death" reputation that Monte's had in the past. The fellowship match was absolutely spectacular (really, it was one of the best I've seen at any program) and it seems that the benefits were incredible (lots of free food and subsidized housing)! Thanks for the answer, as my one trepidation was that it seemed from the interview day that some of the residents there (namely one or two) gave off the "I'm overworked and tired don't come near me" vibe. Glad to see the program is definitely trying to address this issue! And thanks again for your response. Really trying hard to wrestle between Monte and Brown in the ol' top 5.
 
one trepidation was that it seemed from the interview day that some of the residents there (namely one or two) gave off the "I'm overworked and tired don't come near me" vibe

I interviewed 3 years ago at this point but I remember having this same feeling. I went to the applicant social (they only had 3 for the whole season) and was trying so hard to get any resident to tell me they were happy but couldn't. I also found that residents weren't particularly eager to talk to applicants like at other programs and generally looked/seemed despondent. I ended up knocking it down from #2 to #3 on my list and am SO glad that I did.

That being said if you are deciding between putting it #5 or #6 it likely won't matter. In terms of location compared to brown at least you'd be in NYC instead of being in the middle of nowhere.

EDIT: just saw your WAMC post and would be interested to see what you're deciding between. Feel free to PM me if you'd prefer.
 
I interviewed 3 years ago at this point but I remember having this same feeling. I went to the applicant social (they only had 3 for the whole season) and was trying so hard to get any resident to tell me they were happy but couldn't. I also found that residents weren't particularly eager to talk to applicants like at other programs and generally looked/seemed despondent. I ended up knocking it down from #2 to #3 on my list and am SO glad that I did.

That being said if you are deciding between putting it #5 or #6 it likely won't matter. In terms of location compared to brown at least you'd be in NYC instead of being in the middle of nowhere.

EDIT: just saw your WAMC post and would be interested to see what you're deciding between. Feel free to PM me if you'd prefer.

I would hardly say Brown is in the middle of nowhere. 😛

Now Indy that strikes me as the middle of nowhere. Nearest big city is 2.5 hours away!
 
I would hardly say Brown is in the middle of nowhere. 😛

Now Indy that strikes me as the middle of nowhere. Nearest big city is 2.5 hours away!
I'm no defender of Indiancrapolis, but, it's got about a million people so I don't think you could say it's "the middle of nowhere".
 
I'm no defender of Indiancrapolis, but, it's got about a million people so I don't think you could say it's "the middle of nowhere".

My apologies, I mixed up my words. ****hole and middle of nowhere are spelled so much alike that I must have just misplaced one for the other.
 
Hey there everyone. Just wondering if there are any current residents at either USC or Cedars Sinai who wouldn't mind if I PMed them with a question or two. Thanks!
 
Hi. Anyone have info about the IM residency program Steward St. Elizabeth's Medical Center, Brighton/Boston? I read some reviews on Scutwork that the teaching is not that good. Also the program was placed on probation in 2014 (the probation was removed the following year however). Anyone know why? Thanks!
 
Probation was for some continuity clinic stuff. Hospital is nice. Teaching was poor from what I heard. They also went from 18 Categorical to 6? Or maybe it was 12 to 6. Nice location though.
 
Probation was for some continuity clinic stuff. Hospital is nice. Teaching was poor from what I heard. They also went from 18 Categorical to 6? Or maybe it was 12 to 6. Nice location though.
Thank you!
 
18 to 15...they lost 3
Thanks. Any reason for this? The hospital was not doing financially well, according to a news article a few years ago. Do you know if this is still the case? Will it affect the residency program in any way?
 
Can someone shed some light on Brown's match list? The match locations is very consolidated geographically. It seems like most people match in the NE and very few outside that region. Is this because most residents want to stay at Brown or near Boston? I think I may want to do Pulm/CC and may want to come back to the west coast for fellowship later on.
 
Hello,

I was wondering if anybody had University of Utah's fellowship match list? I've looked on their webpage as well as throughout SDN and can't find any info. Any help is appreciated!

Thanks!
 
Hello,

I was wondering if anybody had University of Utah's fellowship match list? I've looked on their webpage as well as throughout SDN and can't find any info. Any help is appreciated!

Thanks!

Hmm I looked through my interview materials and couldn't find it, so it must have just been in a powerpoint presentation. I remember the program director saying that they had like 5 or 6 people match in GI the same year at respectable programs but I wish I could remember specifics :/
 
Last edited:
Hello,

I was wondering if anybody had University of Utah's fellowship match list? I've looked on their webpage as well as throughout SDN and can't find any info. Any help is appreciated!

Thanks!

I think they updated their website recently, and now I can't find any fellowship data. Through the magic of internet archiving, you can still see their old fellowship placement website here. They don't specify how many years' worth of data this represents, though.

I think they showed their recent matches in the interview day presentation--if anyone has that, I'd love to see it again. Otherwise all I have are a couple notes:
- No in-house Allergy & Immunology fellowship, but they said they've placed 3 in the last 5 years
- Seemed to me to have less Pulm/CC matches over the last few years
 
I think they updated their website recently, and now I can't find any fellowship data. Through the magic of internet archiving, you can still see their old fellowship placement website here. They don't specify how many years' worth of data this represents, though.

I think they showed their recent matches in the interview day presentation--if anyone has that, I'd love to see it again. Otherwise all I have are a couple notes:
- No in-house Allergy & Immunology fellowship, but they said they've placed 3 in the last 5 years
- Seemed to me to have less Pulm/CC matches over the last few years

I have no specific recommendations regarding Utah specifically but I just wanted to point out a couple things. If an institution has a track record of poor placement within a specific specialty that spans multiple years then it's more significant. There's always an ebb and flow in terms of which fellowships are more popular in a particular year so having "only" a few people go into a particular specialty is not necessarily some sort of red flag. It has also become increasingly popular to take a year off after residency to work as a hospitalist so that factors in. Also A&I is a weird one as the fellowship is open to peds, medicine, and med-peds so the competition is fiercer than you might expect - if you are interested in it as a career you need to make sure you go to a program where there's an in house fellowship or adult A&I available. My two cents.
 
Are there any mount Sinai residents that can speak about how the program has changed with the new PD a couple years ago. I liked the morning report a lot and liked the PD but I've heard there is less autonomy for residents now. Can anyone speak to this? Have there been other changes good or bad that have happened as well? In addition, how many months are spent in the other hospitals (elmhurst and the VA). Lastly, is there a reason the salary is lower (like 5-10 grand) compared to the other nyc schools and is this something that may be changing?!
Thanks so much!
 
Hey guys! Really wondered about where to post this one but I have a question about the NYU Primary Care program. I actually really, really liked the primary care track and am struggling as to where I want to rank it (probably within top 3 and maybe top 1). I was wondering who exactly got an invite for a primary care gathering at an attending's house in Manhattan / who is going to it? I really want to go (just for myself, to learn about the program) but am uncertain whether I want to spend the money, especially if the event will be so crowded that I won't be able to even talk for long with people (some of the interview dinners were pretty darn crowded).
 
Are there any mount Sinai residents that can speak about how the program has changed with the new PD a couple years ago. I liked the morning report a lot and liked the PD but I've heard there is less autonomy for residents now. Can anyone speak to this? Have there been other changes good or bad that have happened as well? In addition, how many months are spent in the other hospitals (elmhurst and the VA). Lastly, is there a reason the salary is lower (like 5-10 grand) compared to the other nyc schools and is this something that may be changing?!
Thanks so much!

Well, one change is that med-peds is gone!
 
Hi, Does anyone know about the UConn IM program? How would it compare to U of Tennessee and U of Louisville? I'm a foreign grad and I do not have much insight about these programs beyond my interview day. I would appreciate your inputs.
 
Any idea about the future of Steward St. Elizabeth's Medical Center in Brighton, Boston? The hospital did not do well financially last year, and there are rumors of St. E's being shut down. How true is this? Is it a good idea to begin residency at a hospital that has an uncertain future? Any thoughts/help would be appreciated. Thanks.

http://runningahospital.blogspot.com/2014/11/whats-up-with-residency-programs-at-st.html

https://www.bostonglobe.com/busines...health-care/xEPWzDaSGC047Il4zqxamI/story.html

http://www.bizjournals.com/boston/b...althcare-sells-brighton-buildings-to-pay.html
 
Is it a good idea to begin residency at a hospital that has an uncertain future?

The answer is obviously not. You don't want to be scrambling to find a spot in the middle of your residency. The experience at St. Vincent in nyc is a good example.


Sent from my iPhone using SDN mobile app
 
I've had a lot of people pm asking me for montefiore's (Moses/weiler campus) fellowship match list. I have the complete list and can pm it to anyone who is interested
 
I've had a lot of people pm asking me for montefiore's (Moses/weiler campus) fellowship match list. I have the complete list and can pm it to anyone who is interested

Do you mind posting it here for others and future readers? Thanks!
 
Monte 2015 match list

ID
Yale

Onc
NYU
Yale
Cornell

Allergy
Hopkins
Columbia

Rheum
Cornell x 2
Mount Sinai
Columbia

Endocrine
Cornell
Ucla
Monte

Renal
Cornell

GI
Yale
Monte
Einstein Philly
Elmhurst (queens)
NY hosp of queens

Cards
NYU
Monte x 3
UC-Irvine
NSLIJ x 2
Methodist Brooklyn
 
Any recent information about the Geisinger IM program? How is the quality of education? Do they do well in fellowship placement, outside of their own in house fellowships?

Thanks in advance!
 
Hey guys,

What are the best prelims in NYC based on education, prestige, and best life:

Beth Israel
St. Luke's-Roosevelt
Lenox Hill
Downstate
LIJ
 
Any information on some Southeast schools:
U of Kentucky
Carolinas Medical Center
UAB
Mayo Jacksonville

career aspirations: hospitalist
thanks
 
Anyone else heard about Dr. Zimmer leaving Pitt for Colorado? Any idea who will replace her?
 
Anyone able to give us a review or experience with Brandon Regional Hospital IM Residency?

I'll accept friend of a friend recounts.
 
Hey Everyone:
Wanted to put down my notes/impressions on some specific programs I interviewed at this cycle. Searching on SDN for program specific information often didn't yield much, so I hope next year's applicants can find this information useful. As context, I go to a medical school in Southern California with 229 Step1/251 Step2, 1 honors, mostly passed, one red flag with me repeating one rotation. I applied to about 30 programs. Here are my impressions:

Montefiore Internal Medicine Program
-Overall the program is really big. There are three firms or mini-colleges, each with 54~ housestaff in each. So each entering class is around 54 Interns, with a few them being Neurology and Anesthesia. The prelim program will eventually be absorbed by the Neuro/Anes categorical programs.
-The Moses Weiler Program is separate from the Wakefield and Jacobi Program (somewhat confused me). Most of the rotations are done at the Moses hospital, with a few done at the Weiler Hospital, which is shared among the two other programs.
-The hospital is main tertiary hospital for the Bronx. Doesn't have to compete with the Manhattan Hospitals for patients. Also very strong focus for the undeserved community. Lots of interesting pathology, with patients being more sick at Moses and more chronic diseases at Weiler.
-Transitioning to EPIC to both inpatient and outpatient soon.
-It's a 6+2 system, with 2 weeks of the 6 weeks being nightfloat. There are 8 teams at Moses, 6 teams at Weiler. Some are large (normal 1 attending, 2 interns, 1 resident with hella medical students), some are small teams with just an intern, resident and attending with just 1 MS3/1MS4. Caps around 8 per intern + 2 if Subi also there.
-Drip system of admissions. No call schedule, just short/long days with nights.
-Condensed 3 month research block that you apply during Intern year.
-New Hospitalist Track Coming Soon
-There seems to be a really strong fellowship match, lots of research opportunities with the fellowship research director.
-MICU/CCU getting new additions, more beds in future.
-I thought the PD was very friendly and seem to enjoy engaging with us while we waited to be interviewed. Everyone spoke very highly of her.
-Lottery for Subsidized Housing. 650$ FOR OWN STUDIO. Internet extra. 60$ Extra parking. Can stay for all three years. Housing is right next to Moses Hospital. Some people do take the train from Upper East Side of Manhattan.


UCI Internal Medicine Residency Program
-Program's has new PD a few years back that really seemed to have raised the quality of the program and made it more resident focused.
-3+1 system that seems pretty awesome. (Lot of residents said this was a big plus)
-22 Categoricals with 25 prelims
-Residents do rotations at three different hospitals, West LA VA, Long Beach Memorial and UCI Medical Center. (One VA population, one mix of private/public patients and other is like county as there is no county hospital). However this does mean you'll have to drive everywhere, but at the same time, residents live in a lot of different places.
-ICU and CCU heavy (9 weeks total)
-There's a formalized curriculum that teaches business, ultrasound, teaching skills (not sure about the quality)
-Large percentage of residents went into fellowship (14/22 the last year). It seemed like there was a lot of resources for people who wanted to do research.
-Overall, I got the sense that residents were generally happy and enjoyed living in Eastern parts of LA and that teaching was overall good, but of course can be a miss with some attendings.
CPMC Internal Medicine Residency Program
-Basically Sutter Health's Internal Medicine Program. Main hospital is the referral site for all the other campuses with things that they can't figure out. New hospital is being built, but it wont' open until 2020.
-Morning report was the best I've seen. The chefs seemed to have really good structure and teaching. It was heavily staffed by faculty and they all went around one by one to ask questions, but didn't seem to get too into the weeds between attendings.
-Dartmouth 3rd years, UCSF 4th years and other school Subis were there. Dartmouth Students seemed to really enjoy their rotations there especially.
-Seems like the pathology is pretty varied, even though UCSF was there.
-ED is not level 1 trauma, but whatever not important right?
-They have a GI/Pulm/CC and a large Cards fellowship program.
-Residents seemed pretty happy. Mostly US Grads from all over.
-Many people live in the city, but some live even as far as Berkeley. If you don't get parking, you get 360$ back each quarter. Overall, San Francisco seems like a really expensive city to live in, even more than NY.
-Food was pretty good.
-Hospital seems a little dated, slightly tiny, but seemed to have all the services.
-Seems like residents do a lot of research/presentations (Lots of posters, and many go to ACP etc etc.) Was told people do research with UCSF or Stanford given the proxmity.
-Alumni have almost even breakdown of fellowships, primary care and hospitalists.
-Many of the graduates end up staying working at the Sutter Health System if they want to stay there.
-1/2 Day Longitudinal Weekly Clinic close by, shuttle takes you there.
-5 medical teams, 1 ICU team with team caps of ~18 patients. Not sure how often they cap, but seemed like they were busy.
-5 day call cycle with short, medium, pre, long, post.
-1 Month SFGH ER Rotation. Additional optional rotations you can do SFGH or Highland.

Cedar Sinai Internal Medicine Residency Program
-The hospital located in West LA. It was pretty nice and huge. Program itself is very large, with about 32 categorical positions. There used to be 44, but the programs' relationship with West LA VA is now cut down to 25% total time spent there rather than 50% of the time so they had to cut back on the positions.
-There are 4 wards team, 4 ICU teams. 6 Months of ICU/MICU/CCU throughout the 3 years. Cardiology teaching of course is considered very strong. MICU teaching was known to be strong from what a prelim told me.
-You do 1 month Wards at VA and a few other rotations, consult services there as well.
-4+1 model with various different options for continuity clinic (depending on your interest)
-Morning report was really meh, especially compared to the other programs I've seen. People didn't seem that engaged.
-Apparently lots of opportunity to do research. Fellowship match was really impressive, with lots of GI and Cards and Pulm/CC within and at other decent programs.
-There's a new Primary Care Track that you can apply into which trades inpatient time and ICU time for more outpatient related training. Can apply anytime 1st year.
-UCLA Medical Students do their rotations at CS, 3rd and 4th years with away SUBIs as well.
-Talking to the Residents, it seems like the big pluses about this program is the wide variety of different research opportunities as well as the location of being in West LA. Since the ACA, it seems like the patient load for CS has really increased.

Santa Clara Valley Medical Center Internal Medicine Residency Program
-Community Hospital Affiliated with Stanford (2 SCVMC Interns each month go to VA and Stanford and there's always 1 stanford team at SCVMC). The R2s lament hating going to stanford since it's often very far away from SCVMC and doesn't add much to training?
-Morning Reports seemed sparsely attended, was so so.
-New Program director from CPMC (6 months ago). He was really friendly, took 5 minutes of his day and got to talk to all of us.
-New Hospital to open around 2017, but has some litigation and residents doubtful it will open on time.
-There are 8 medical teams, Intern Cap of 10 and frequently Caps (Interns work hard since ACA)
-Strong ICU Training: Closed, integrated with CCU. Step down unit also there, taken care of by medicine teams, good for hospitalist training. (SCVM grads are known to be highly prepared for Pulm/CC fellowship)
-Level 1 Trauma, Burn Unit in Hospital and Community Hospital for large region of Santa Clara
-Subspeciality teaching strong apparently.
-Breakdown of Graduates
-30% Fellowship with strong at PulmCC at Stanford. Nephrology and GI.
-40% Hospitalist
-30% Primary Care
-No specialist service, so medicine in charge for a lot of stuff.
-Interns have cont. clinic. Able to have 2ndary Clinic based on interest (Injection Clinic, FNA Clinic, Transition of Care Clinic, Saboxone Clinic, Backpack Clinic, Homeless Clinic, TB Refugee Clinic and HIV Clinic.)
-4 Pathways Interns can go into (research, ambulatory, global health and hospitalist, soon medical education) - According to R3, doesn't really matter that much.
-Generally high cost of living.
-Lots of Posters and Publications. Strong association with Stanford.
-Patient populatoin 60 languages used in translator.
-Good Anxilary Staff, social worker on weekends, pharmacy student/resident on each time.

UCLA Harbor Internal Medicine Program
-Level 1 trauma ER in the County, County Hospital with 6 teams.
-Half Day once a weekly continuity clinic (versus 4+1)
-UCLA medical students rotate through here.
-Morning Report was well organized. Noon conference was decent. Nothing out of the ordinary
-65% do fellowship with remaining staying academic Internal Medicine, Hospitalist and Private Internal Medicine.
-Program known to have strong clinical training with lots of autonomy.
-Affiliation with LA BioMed Research Institute, ability to do some research there. Mainly clinical and some industry affiliation, especially with Rheumatology.
-Bilingual Bonus? (pass some language test and you can get 120$ a month?!)
-Rosetta Stone Spanish in all the computers.
-off the 110 highway, with many people living more on the West Side of LA
-Residents required to do scholarly projects and QI, but most people will publish.
-PGY 3 Spends 1 Month at Kaiser Outpatient
-You will spend 1 month at Ronald Reagan UCLA, though most people don't like going to this rotation because it's a primarily tertiary referral center and it's also very far away.
-17 Categoricals with 5 prelim spots -> extending to 14 prelims next year because they are the TYs. Now all teams will have 1 R with 2 Interns, instead of some having 1/1 teams (which I heard was pretty exhausting for the team). Ward months down to 4 months.
-Fellowship match was really impressive, bunch of GI, CV, Pulm/CC.
-Out of all of the programs I've been to, I felt the residents there were the most tight knit. Talking to a R3, it seemed like the program was really toxic a few years ago.
-Program has a large number of in-house fellows that end up taking a significant portion of their own residents, especially pulm/cc and cardiology
-Cerner EHR.
Olive View Internal Medicine Residency Program
-4+1 Program (21 Categoricals, 12 prelims)
-Community with large hispanic population, strong emphasis on teaching.
-New Hospital rotations as R2/R3 for 1.5 months with admissions, med consults and procedure service that is being rolled out.
-You are a UCLA Affiliate -> UCLA Graduate Housing, and benefits.
-Breakfast Burritos are apparently legendary (confirmed by various sources)
-Outpatient Clinic rotations at Van Nuys and Olive View.
-Location: About a 30 minute drive from West LA Proper. Many people live at various different places since you are always against traffic. Parking isn't an issue.
-Hospital is a large community hospital with 8 medicine teams. Categorical Residents will do 1.5-2 months at Ronald Regan UCLA for MICU, CCU and Wards. No one really minds heading to UCLA proper to do a rotation there. UCLA residents also do their residency here as well, though, the IM Olive View Program is the only dedicated residency at Olive View.
-60% of people do fellowships in socal, with 40% do general.
-Teaching is a very strong aspect of the program with it winning tons of awards from medical students from UCLA.
-Morning report was well organized with an interesting case, taught well. Decently attended by everyone. Noon Conferences and Morning report is mandatory for all residents.
-Recently got Cerner EHR.

University of Illinois Chicago Internal Medicine Program
-Being Employees of UIC, you can take any classes, with some residents getting free MPH's aparently?
-Morning Report was really well run with a friendly PD that has been there for quite some time.
-Large program with 145ish residents in IM, EM/IM, Med/Peds, Prelims with 30 categorical positions.
-You do rotations at UIC, Jessse Brown VA (50/50 split). You share the Jesse Brown ICU with Northwestern Residents.
-Teams have PGY2 Running team and dedicated PGY3 for teaching.
-12+2 schedule as a PGY2/3.
-People seem to be able to live everywhere in Chicago, with a large majority of residents driving. I did see some faculty and residents take the metro home.
-Cerner EHR
-Large proportion of Categorical Residents are from out of state. 70% go on to do fellowships with 40% Staying at UIC
-Emphasized residents being involved in research, seems like very fellowship focused program.


University of Hawaii Internal Medicine Program
-This program involves rotations at several hospitals throughout Oahu/Honolulu. Wards/ICU rotations at Kaiku Hospital and Queens Hospital. Kaiku Hospital is more of a private setting with private attendings overseeing and residents teaching/leading the teams. Queens hospital is the main academic center. About 4 teams at each hospital, cap of 10 patients per intern. You'll also do another 1 month ICU rotation at another third hospital (which I can't remember)
-There's a lot of poverty and health disparities that you see at Queens hospital. In addition, Queens hospital apparently serves as a tertiary referral center for many of the other populations at US Territories and Islands. For example, people who got exposed to US Nuclear testing back in the 50s get their care here at Queens. So you see lots of crazy tropical and nuclear related pathologies.
-EPIC EHR
-Rest of the rotations are at various outpatient clinics throughout Honolulu, including VA sties and private practices.
-I got a good vibe from all of the residents, with a majority of them being originally from there (I wasn't). There is a significant portion of residents that are international (Thailand, Japan, Philipines). Often, these are people with extensive clinical experience in their home country under their belt). Working with international residents would have been a plus for me.
-There seemed to be a strong emphasis for geriatics and cardiology fellowships for the Alumni (I think they recently started a new cards fellowship) and a lot of people from Hawaii end up staying for those two programs.
-I applied here on a whim and I found myself REALLY liking the program and all that it has to offer. Some concerns I had of course was the fact that Oahu is small and can be expensive. It was a tough choice not to rank this number 1 given the location/hospital system/residents but when talking to my advisors, Hawaii didn't seem to garner a reputation for better clinical training compared to the mainland programs I applied to.
 
I have a few questions! Is Baylor IM a top 30 program or top 40? And does anyone have any more info/insight on it? Also, is the main Montefiore program in the Bronx? There are a couple of Albert Einstein programs so just confused about that

The university program of Albert Einstein college of medicine is montefiore Moses/weiler campus which is in the Bronx. Jacobi, monte new Rochelle, Wakefield are the other montefiore/aecom affiliated programs which are considered community programs. (Although of the 3 "community" hospitals Jacobi is most like a university program).
 
Top