adamj61 said:
You need to be educated beotch. I work there right now, and I wouldn't go there if they paid me. The town is boring, the people are stuck up and rude (look at you), and they don't have a teaching network set up...there is a reason there are 42 people, the med school is in a small brick building the size of my house.
adamj61 said:
You need to be educated beotch. I work there right now, and I wouldn't go there if they paid me. The town is boring, the people are stuck up and rude (look at you), and they don't have a teaching network set up...there is a reason there are 42 people, the med school is in a small brick building the size of my house.
yeah, the medical school is a small brick building .... attached to one of the largest and greatest hospitals in the WORLD. the medical school building is just where the med school offices/student lounge, etc are located - d**khead. classes aren?t held there. classes (which are usually taught by the world's leading experts) are held all in Guggenheim, the gonda building, and other places.
they probably wouldn?t take you anyway - so that works out for everybody
don?t have a teaching network? Ok??. we are taught by world leaders in just about every field imaginable. i don?t know what you are talking about.
there are only 42 students because they only take the best. and give each a scholarship. thats why j**kass!
furthermore, i am neither stuck up nor rude. just want everybody to apply to mayo, just getting the word out. not many people know about the financial aid package even though they know its one of the greatest medical centers in the WORLD.
The Honor Roll
When U.S. News identifies the top hospitals in 17 specialties every year, a handful (only 14 this year) are singled out as Honor Roll centers?hospitals that excelled not in one or two specialties but in six or more. Rank in the Honor Roll is based on total points: Hospitals got 2 points for ranking at or near the top in a specialty and 1 point for the next rung down (details below)
Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore
32 points in 16 specialties
Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn. <<-----------------
28 points in 14 specialties
Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston
24 points in 13 specialties
Cleveland Clinic
24 points in 12 specialties
UCLA Medical Center, Los Angeles
23 points in 14 specialties
(TIE) Duke University Medical Center, Durham, N.C.
18 points in 10 specialties
(TIE) University of California, San Francisco Medical Center
18 points in 10 specialties
Barnes-Jewish Hospital, St. Louis
17 points in 11 specialties
(TIE) New York-Presbyterian Hospital
17 points in 10 specialties
(TIE) University of Washington Medical Center, Seattle
17 points in 10 specialties
University of Michigan Medical Center, Ann Arbor
13 points in 9 specialties
Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston
12 points in 8 specialties
Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia
11 points in 6 specialties
Stanford Hospital and Clinics, Stanford, Calif.
10 points in 7 specialties
Specifically, Mayo Ranked
#5 in Cancer
#2 in Heart and heart surgery
#1 in Hormonal disorders
#1 in Digestive disorders
#7 in Geriatrics
#2 in Gynecology
#3 in Kidney disease
#1 in Neurology and neurosurgery
#1 in Orthopedics
#4 in Ear, nose, and throat
#2 in Respiratory disorders
#3 in Urology
#10 in Ophthalmology
#10 in Psychiatry
#1 in Rheumatology
#18 in Pediatrics
#5 in Rehabilitation
http://www.usnews.com/usnews/health...l/honorroll.htm
http://www.usnews.com/usnews/health...osp_6611490.htm
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check out mayo medical school
http://www.mayo.edu/mms/