questions about transitional year/research year/master's

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Mdude

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For personal reasons, I'm wondering if somebody can enlighten me as to the options available if one wishes to remain in the location of their med school for 5 to 6 years rather than the traditional 4 years?

Here are some options I know about:
a) Take a year off, do research.
Is this paid? If so, roughly how much?​
b) Get a Master's.
I know it's common to do this b/n M2 and M3. How about b/n M3 and M4?​
c) Graduate from med school in four years, and obtain a "transitional year" in the same city/medical institution.
Can one opt to do a transitional year no matter what specialty he/she is choosing, or are they tied to your ultimate residency specialty? For example, a friend of mine is doing a transitional year this year in city A, before moving to city B next year to start his Ophtho residency​
Also, is it similarly impossible to predict where you would get this transitional year the way it's impossible to predict one's residency placement? Or is obtaining a transitional year more straightforward and is there flexibility and choice involved?​
d) Ideas I haven't thought of?

Ultimately, I don't want to shoot for residency in the same city, but I might need to "stall" for a year or two as my wife might need to stay because of her studies. Ideally, I'd like those "extra" years to be money-earning rather than money-spending years (ie, transitional year > master's). Any thoughts?
 
Here are some options I know about:
a) Take a year off, do research.
Is this paid? If so, roughly how much?​

yes you would be paid for this. you appeal/apply directly to specific labs, and the PI would basically "hire" you. i am not 100% confident how much you would make, but a realistic guess would be about the same that a PhD student makes (~$26-28K depending on region). i suppose that if you finish the MD and then do a research year, you might be able to earn a little more (in the low $30k range).

sorry i can't help with your other questions, but i would recommend trying to do the MD in 4 years, though. i say this because i know i would have a hard time watching all my classmates graduate and move on to bigger/better things while i was taking an educational "detour". if you don't view such a decision as a detour, or you are willing to happily make sacrifices for your spouse, then go for it.
 
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