UMich
Iowa
Indiana
UPMC
U MN
OSU
CWRU
Wisconsin
Sorry, in every list, someone has to be last.
Note of course that my list is my personal opinion and if you use my opinion to rank your own preferences that would be ill advised, especially because I have not personally seen the path departments at 75% of these choices. All of these programs, however, are good programs which will train you to be a good pathologist. It is mostly up to you in how you use their training.
Somehow I could have predicted this. 😉
UMich
Iowa
Indiana
UPMC
U MN
OSU
CWRU
Wisconsin
Sorry, in every list, someone has to be last.
Note of course that my list is my personal opinion and if you use my opinion to rank your own preferences that would be ill advised, especially because I have not personally seen the path departments at 75% of these choices. All of these programs, however, are good programs which will train you to be a good pathologist. It is mostly up to you in how you use their training.
I am in agreement with yaah with Michigan being way ahead of the pack. But I have experience with that department and know that it's quite strong. The others are hard for me to rank in any specific order since I haven't had exposure to those programs and my knowledge of some of them rests solely based on stuff said on this forum.
Iowa and Indiana are both very strong in education especially when it comes to diagnostics. There are a number of well known and respected faculty. Indiana is pretty much the center of testicle pathology, or at least it seems to be. Indiana would rank #1 for testicles.

I'll defer to your opinions on that one. You probably know much more about Iowa than I would ever know since you interviewed there and I didn't apply there. Indiana, I know little about, except for the fact that they have the king on testicle-pathology. Although, I don't know how the rest of their surgical pathology training is there (remember, testicle pathology constitutes a very small portion of pathology in general).Iowa and Indiana are both very strong in education especially when it comes to diagnostics. There are a number of well known and respected faculty. Indiana is pretty much the center of testicle pathology, or at least it seems to be. Indiana would rank #1 for testicles. UPMC is a large program and seems to be growing extraordinarily fast, and they have a lot of experts in many fields and have one of the highest volumes in the country. UPMC would be top of this list for head and neck. Hence why I rank them 1-4.
Never knew about their expertise about H&N though...that's news to me.
Leon Barnes.
I'm still surprised how many people gloss over the CCF. It's got to be one of the most underrated programs out there.
His fellowship is massively popular, but he'll be retiring soon, and his protege (Jennifer Hunt) is at the Cleveland Clinic now.
I'm still surprised how many people gloss over the CCF. It's got to be one of the most underrated programs out there.
His fellowship is massively popular, but he'll be retiring soon, and his protege (Jennifer Hunt) is at the Cleveland Clinic now.
I'm still surprised how many people gloss over the CCF. It's got to be one of the most underrated programs out there.
His fellowship is massively popular, but he'll be retiring soon, and his protege (Jennifer Hunt) is at the Cleveland Clinic now.
I'm still surprised how many people gloss over the CCF. It's got to be one of the most underrated programs out there.
I think you're in the minority on CCF being underrated. When I found out they interviewed a total slacker from my school my view of them sunk even lower!
Most people don't poo-poo it, especially for diagnostics. But the residency program does get a bit looked down on. Not sure why. Perhaps because they don't have many fellowships, or because the residents are less important to day to day work than at other programs (rumor, not sure if it's that true). They definitely have some great staff their, Goldblum I hear is a great teacher and strongly interested in resident education, and he runs AP.
It's probably not underrated though by most in the know.
Or based on who they interview, which has got to be one of the silliest reasons I've heard so far.
*well, living in Cleveland maybe. Damn snowbelt.
I think the fellowship thing is a little weird. Why not have a lot of fellows? Or do they? I would think it would be a fantastic place for a general surg path fellowship but there isn't one.
Who they interview is a silly reason to dismiss a program? Hmmm...I want my coworkers to be hardworking and intelligent. I guess I MUST be crazy to want that.
good response 👍
Hi Roach!
"Musical chairs" probably refers to moving from sign out to sign out each day. It sounds more turbulent than it actually is. The advantage is that we have a subspecialized system and see each subspecialty 6 times (minimum) during the course of our training. So you can look at the cases with the experts and still get a lot of repetition.
I have been very happy with my training here and think that if you got a bad vibe from the residents (sorry that you did, cameron) it was just an off day. There are 30+ residents and you may have just had a bad mix. Generally we are a pretty relaxed group and get along well. We really are minimally scutted while not being shortchanged on important things like grossing. As Roach said, one of the best parts of this program is that you can make of it what you want. If you want to be a hard core academic, the opportunities are available to do research with some very accomplished pathologists. But if you are like many of us and just want to push glass for the rest of your life and be really good at it, you just say no to doing projects. The staff are really accessible and we get great training. I think we are underrated, but it's good because it keeps the psycho gunners away!
Just because they interview them doesn't mean they get in, and there is not a 1:1 correlation between strong medical student and good pathologist (and path resident)
👎
And if you need more proof, get the USMLE scores of strong well know pathologist... I bet the average is below the 190-220 that is concidered a path cut off score, or whatever it is...
your whole response is pure conjecture. at least throw in some facts.
And I definitely understand that it's hard to get a real good impression of the residents over one lunch. Here, each resident class has a completely different personality, so each candidate probably comes away from lunch with a completely different impression of the residents depending on if they ate lunch with a 1st year, a 2nd year, a 5th year, etc....
And in defense of the CCF residents that day, the other guy interviewing was kind of an ass-clown, so I think everyone was feeling awkward.
That being said, if the person you know (Villin) that we interviewed is truly worthless and we match them, I won't argue with you if you think we are "less than" other places. But in a place with this many residents, there are always going to be a couple of questionable people (some of them looked great on paper, I'm sure), I just happen to think most of them are great to work with.
No your premise is based on a single random fact. (they interviewed a slacker)
I know multiple pathology attendings who are excellent pathologist who say "I wouldn't be able to get into pathology with these cut offs"
I'm not naming names and no I don't have their USMLE scores on hand.