- Joined
- Sep 7, 2003
- Messages
- 6,526
- Reaction score
- 108
He's the headlining plastic surgeon on Dr 90210. I think he's brazillian.
That would explain his persistent use of anal sex as contraception.
He's the headlining plastic surgeon on Dr 90210. I think he's brazillian.
a lot of nonsense on this thread. my brother came from nymc and did his residency in internal at mass gen. i believe he would have had the choice of UCSF but ranked mass gen first in the match. it seems you can write your own ticket once you are in at any US Allo. but whatever. believe that those US rankings are the authority on life. just don't get complacent, otherwise your performance at that top school will end up being your crutch.
meanwhile, the truth is somewhere in-between.
can cold hard facts elucidate this "middle area"? the poster had question about getting into good residency from nymc. it has been done and therefore it can be done. the truth doesn't lie somewhere in the middle when its sitting in front of you in the form of residency placement lists. it only remains this intangible truth when you are making so called "left right" statements based only on opinion without having done the research.
The "truth is in the middle" statement comes more from the fact that neither statement [right or left] is really fully true. And people really do make these statements, so it's not like anyone is artificially creating a polarized dicotomy of thought here. People can do anything from any school, but not EVERYONE can do it. Likewise, going to a top school will help, but it certainly isn't a golden ticket.
can cold hard facts elucidate this "middle area"? the poster had question about getting into good residency from nymc. it has been done and therefore it can be done. the truth doesn't lie somewhere in the middle when its sitting in front of you in the form of residency placement lists. it only remains this intangible truth when you are making so called "left right" statements based only on opinion without having done the research.
As for your comment about "No Harvard, No ophthalmology"... well there was a survey given to 1,200 residency program directors of which 793 responded.
(http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/..._uids=9934296&query_hl=2&itool=pubmed_docsum)
The Ophthalmology program directors ranked the relative importance of academic criteria for selecting residents as follows:
1) Grades in required clerkships
2) Number of honors grades
3) Class rank
3) AOA honorary membership
5) Senior specialty elective grades
6) USMLE Step 2 score
7) USMLE Step 1 score
8) Academic awards in medical school
9) Med school's reputation
10) Other senior elective grades
11) Published research
12) Grades in preclinical courses
All of the other specialties (with the exception of psychiatry) gave "med school's reputation" a similarly low ranking.
OP - Sorry you didn't get into the program of your choice. Just do well wherever you go and you can still get into a competitive residency.
I think this might show how little you know. It's pretty common knowledge that reapplicants who have received an acceptance usually have a very difficult time applying. Additionally, looking at match lists from unranked schools, it's obvious that those kids place well when they do well.
As for your comment about "No Harvard, No ophthalmology"... well there was a survey given to 1,200 residency program directors or which 793 responded (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/..._uids=9934296&query_hl=2&itool=pubmed_docsum).
The Ophthamology program directors ranked the relative importance of academic criteria for selecting residents as follows:
1) Grades in required clerkships
2) Number of honors grades
3) Class rank
3) AOA honorary membership
5) Senior specialty elective grades
6) USMLE Step 2 score
7) USMLE Step 1 score
8) Academic awards in medical school
9) Med school's reputation
10) Other senior elective grades
11) Published research
12) Grades in preclinical courses
All of the other specialties (with the exception of psychiatry) gave "med school's reputation" a similarly low ranking.
OP - Sorry you didn't get into the program of your choice. Just do well wherever you go and you can still get into a competitive residency.
It could be. I've spoken with residents involved in picking their successors, and they named third-year grades and board scores as being some of the most important indicators. Additionally, I find it interesting that Step 1 scores are even below Step 2 scores, even though many M4s don't even release their Step 2 scores to the residencies they're applying to (I've usually heard it's done if your step 1 score is low and you anticipate doing well on step 2).It hasn't all been anecdote and SDN statistics with n=1. The following seems like pretty compelling evidence in favor of one position over the other, although the importance of the USMLE leaves me perplexed and wondering if this is an ophthalmology-specific (i.e. peculiar) ranking of factors.
It could be. I've spoken with residents involved in picking their successors, and they named third-year grades and board scores as being some of the most important indicators. Additionally, I find it interesting that Step 1 scores are even below Step 2 scores, even though many M4s don't even release their Step 2 scores to the residencies they're applying to (I've usually heard it's done if your step 1 score is low and you anticipate doing well on step 2).
I hear a lot of people saying that UCSF has the bigger name that is going get people into the better residencies. I wanted to know the answer to this myself when I posted a similarly titled thread a while ago. I wrote to the residency directors of the top programs in ER, OB/GYN, ortho, Medicine, and Neurosurg. I told them that I had been accepted to both and that I was having a hard time choosing between the two. All five of them unanimously said that they placed no weight on the name of the school whatsoever. They said that they might have a little bias if it was between Ross and Harvard, but not at the level of UCSF and UCLA. Name is nothing, they all said it. Nobody's opinion matters more than those of the residency director's because they make the choices of who gets in and who doesn't. I see a lot of people cheerleading for one school or the other without any real reasons. And I see a lot of people saying that UCLA has P/F and that makes for a more relaxed atmosphere. Well, the two grading systems are almost identical. They are P/F the first two years only, both schools. Then they use a grading scale to differentiate people for the purpose of residency. It is reflected in the letters. Here is a list of what I have found in comparing the two schools.
I was curious if where you goes to medical school affects your career in academic medicine. I have heard many times that you should go to the cheapest med school possible, unless you want to go into academics. Is this accurate?
Your advice is a great help!
<snip>
First, as always with unanswerable questions, it's worth giving a couple of personal anecdotes. After all, if the question has no answer and there are no data, what else do we have but experience?
I graduated from a state medical school and a small-program, non-academic residency. When going for fellowship, I recieved a letter from one place that said basically (I'm paraphrasing here) "Tildy, you may be a loyal and good dog, but your breeding line is weak and you can't keep up with the big dogs here." What was interesting about that was that I had never actually applied there, just sent them a letter asking about the program. I've saved that letter and I use it in career talks I give. Everyone has been told they don't belong with the "big dogs" at some point. So, remember these affronts and get even by proving them wrong.
On the other hand, I interviewed at arguably 2 or the 4 most well-known programs in the field, both offered me positions and I accepted one. <snip>
I currently review a lot of applications for grants as well as academic appointmens and promotions. Never, ever have I seen anyone care about someone's medical school. Really. Believe me or not, it doesn't matter, this is the way it is and I review across a fairly wide range of topics, not just my specialty. Some of the best research in certain fields is performed in places you would never think of as academic powerhouses. State schools, small private schools and the like are filled with tremendous academic faculty who contribute to every type of research.
So, bottom line, I can't resolve this endless debate for you or for SDN. This debate will go on forever. I can tell you that there are some academic centers in some fields that care about what medical school you went to. A lot more, however, give it very little if any importance.
So, pick the school that has the program you want in the place you want at the price you can afford. If it is a top academic center, well that won't hurt. If it is a place that has the type of faculty interests and programming that you are interested in - well that's even better. If it's a place that you are comfortable with and leaves you without a massive debt, well, that's the winning school to get your degree at.
He did a fellowship at Harvard, not his med school or residency. According to his online resume, he did med school at Tufts and residencies at Harbor-UCLA and Univ of Tenn.
The Ophthalmology program directors ranked the relative importance of academic criteria for selecting residents as follows:
1) Grades in required clerkships
2) Number of honors grades
3) Class rank
3) AOA honorary membership
5) Senior specialty elective grades
6) USMLE Step 2 score
7) USMLE Step 1 score
8) Academic awards in medical school
9) Med school's reputation
10) Other senior elective grades
11) Published research
12) Grades in preclinical courses
law school pretty much killed your sense of humor, huh?
plus he uses a Harvard mug and wears Harvard clothing periodically on the show
Perhaps premed has killed your sense of comedy.😀
The school really comes into play when comparing one with similar numbers to another.
That's exactly what I've always imagined to be the case. How often would you say that it happens that two applicants are so evenly matched?
That's exactly what I've always imagined to be the case. How often would you say that it happens that two applicants are so evenly matched?
Seems like most med schools adcomm put a lot more emphasis in the applicant's quality (MCAT, GPA, extracurricular activities, LOR, essay and interview) than what undergrad school the applicant comes from - possibly with the exception for a few elite schools like Harvard and Johns Hopkins. Is that the same case when you apply for a residency when you graduate from med school?
As a California pre-med, I have been put on waitlists by my state school and a couple OOS mid tier schools 😡 . Fortunately, I have been accepted by a so called safety school (NYMC), which is unranked by U. S. News. I would like to come back to California to enter a good residency program possibly in internal medicine. How important is it when you apply for residency whether you come from a higher ranked school (e.g. Mount Sinai, UC-San Diego) or from an unranked school (e.g. NYMC, Drexel)? This question does not include the few elite schools like Harvard and Johns Hopkins since they may be at a class by themselves.