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- Podiatry Student
Hey Guys,
How exactly can you rate a residency? How, when your picking out YOUR top program, do you know if the program is say...one of the top ten in the country?
What makes a good residency a good residency? 😀
It depends on what you are looking for. Do you want to have a residency that is clinically strong, surgically strong, or a balance? Do you want a program that is highly academic? Do you want a "country club" program? Different people want different things.
I wanted a program that gave strong and well balanced surgical training in forefoot, rearfoot, and ankle surgery including both trauma and elective so that is what I went for. I'm in the OR 5-7 days a week. Some of my friends would hate this type of program!
Concerning residency "rankings", there is really nothing official but I know there is a thread around here somewhere that discusses it. A consensus seems to have been reached amongst the SDN'ers for what it's worth.
Things change fast. UTHC-SA's longtime director who made the program pretty famous, Dr. Harkless, left the program to be the dean of the new Cali pod school opening this fall. I'm sure they have other great faculty, but you always want to visit if possible.ah, i really want to do residency in texas. SA is the only one that stands out.
I met a resident at west houston, cool guy. Too bad the program is not a PMS 36
Some Cali and Boston area ones appear to pay very well (around 55-60k/yr if I remember right), but cost of living there will also kill you (hence "appear").Aren't there some residencies in big cities that pay in the mid 50's? I didn't think the highest was at 44K.
Salary is not the only thing to look at... health/dent insurance (esp if you have a family by then), uniforms, books/CME allowance, reimbursements for board exams and organization fees, vacation time, etc matter too. A $40k/yr program with great benefits could worth more than a $50k/yr one with little else to offer.
.ah, i really want to do residency in texas. SA is the only one that stands out.
I met a resident at west houston, cool guy. Too bad the program is not a PMS 36
Random question going along with the whole salary debate...do you have to pay back your student loans during this time while you're not making too much plus having to pay for living expenses on top of that? I know loans have different stipulations (whether federal stafford type loans or private loans/loan consolidation), but can anyone comment on this? I guess the best option is to have a rich girlfriend...
Yes, West Houston is a strong program; a good number of my classmates are clerking there later this year. In addition to the points dpmgrad noted, the residents there also do grand rounds and/or journal clubs via teleconference with Presby - StLukes in Denver.If this is true, then I am really looking forward to this program. 😀
Yes, West Houston is a strong program; a good number of my classmates are clerking there later this year. In addition to the points dpmgrad noted, the residents there also do grand rounds and/or journal clubs via teleconference with Presby - StLukes in Denver.
That could be... I don't really know much about the TX programs since I wasn't too interested in going there. Maybe the people I talked to are clerking at Kingwood or just planning on visiting West Houston during their other clerkships or their month off.They must be going to Kingwood because West Houston does not take externs
I'am really disappointed by some residency program's salary compensation. While the top tiers pay around $40-$44k. There are some who are still rotting down at $26-$28K. Thats so bad. there should be some decent minimum salary and then depending upon local expenses it shud be lil bit greater or lesser. but $28K, and one of that residency (24 months i believe) is located in Chi town. That seriously discourages someone from applying. At some places you are being offered $44k and some are paying mere peanuts at $28K. thats really bad!
You will begin to find this out on your own once you start reading podiatry journal articles (should start in 2nd or 3rd year... probably best to really kick into gear after pt1 boards)....who are the big names in podiatry? I remember seeing a post about some of the top surgeons, and I can not find it. I'm not sure what their specialties were, but I remember a post with a bunch of "high-profile" names.
All of the MN residencies are in the twin cities area roughly an hour or less from Mayo clinic in Rochester.I was wondering if some of you could get a little more specific about residencies in a few areas. My boyfriend is a medical student and will be starting his residency a year before I do. I realize personal relationships should not necessarily dictate where you do a residency, but I have to admit I think having someone there to support me will make things less stressful. He is ranking residencies in the Boston, Chicago, and San Jose areas as his top choices. He is also considering Mayo in Minnesota, but from what I can tell there are no pod residencies near there. Are there going to be good options for me in these locations (I am really interested in a residency that focuses on biomechanics, sports medicine and/or surgery), and if so what are they? Thanks for the advice.
I was wondering if some of you could get a little more specific about residencies in a few areas. My boyfriend is a medical student and will be starting his residency a year before I do. I realize personal relationships should not necessarily dictate where you do a residency, but I have to admit I think having someone there to support me will make things less stressful. He is ranking residencies in the Boston, Chicago, and San Jose areas as his top choices. He is also considering Mayo in Minnesota, but from what I can tell there are no pod residencies near there. Are there going to be good options for me in these locations (I am really interested in a residency that focuses on biomechanics, sports medicine and/or surgery), and if so what are they? Thanks for the advice.
. Below are just a few names just to get you started. Again, like a "top residencies" list, it's by no means comprehensive. These guys have authored some of the "classic" journal articles and texts that many other DPMs have read...
Diabetes:
D Armstrong, L Lavery, J Steinberg, L Harkless, many others
Surgery (bone/joint):
ED McGlamry, T Chang, A Catanzariti, M Downey, G Yu, A Banks, R Mendicino, M McGlamry, G Guman, S Kalish, many others
Research:
D Malay, D Armstrong, others
As you know, podiatry has changed greatly and gradually increased residency length and fellowship offerings, so it's really a profession where many very well trained docs are still fairly young. Consequently, there are many up-and-coming DPMs who are well respected yet haven't published or authored very much yet. A couple examples of fairly young DPMs whose rep in the field will continue to grow would be J Grossman and B Lamm for surgery or S Wu, LC Rodgers, and P Kim for diabetes/education/research.
haha, wow a lot of those names are REALLY classic..haha.
It's like Myerson in Orthopaedic F&A. He published a ton of stuff in the 80's so everyone still refers to his stuff. But that was like 20 years ago, haha, but it's what you still read about even in Pod manuals. (Dude, i just met a Gas Station worker who WASN'T even BORN in the 80'S!! Soon, there'll be resident's who don't know what the 80's are... dude, i'm getting old.)
Classic is great, but we read those to understand where we are now and respect the ppl who made strides for higher patient care standards. make sure to understand the thinking and evolution of where treatments have changed.
"mcglamry"... wow, really classic, haha.
What's the word on the street about the three year program at HCMC in Minneapolis? Has anybody rotated through there on this forum? I find it hard to believe that regions is a better program, as HCMC is one of a few regional centers of excellence in the midwest and sees more of the trauma in the twin cities. How are the programs in Denver? Why is the program in Greely so highly rated?
That does sound like a flaw. What about HCMC's program? From a podiatrist I've been shadowing, he said that it's a good program, it just had at the time a relatively low surgical volume for his taste. He was a resident at Kaiser's program in Portland, which is a very solid program.
Well, the guy asked for top podiatrists and big names in the field. Coughlin, Myerson, Paley, Mann, etc aren't podiatrists, now are they? They're ortho F&A.haha, wow a lot of those names are REALLY classic..haha...
...Classic is great, but we read those to understand where we are now and respect the ppl who made strides for higher patient care standards. make sure to understand the thinking and evolution of where treatments have changed.
"mcglamry"... wow, really classic, haha.
What's the word on the street about the three year program at HCMC in Minneapolis? Has anybody rotated through there on this forum? I find it hard to believe that regions is a better program, as HCMC is one of a few regional centers of excellence in the midwest and sees more of the trauma in the twin cities. How are the programs in Denver? Why is the program in Greely so highly rated?
HCMC is a good program, but I thought that Mercy and Regions were better, more well rounded programs. There is a great deal of trauma at HCMC, but there is also an excellen ortho residency which gets the majority of it. I would rather not be double or triple scrubbed for most of my cases. Dr Bofelli at Regions is amazing and he goes out of his way to help his residents find high paying jobs in the midwest after residency. Mercy Hospital in Coon Rapids is another good program for a motivated person. If you are looking at MN residencies I would check them out first. Just my two cents though.

What is your deal?
A student wanted names in the profession to look for. It is pretty rude to laugh at others opinions. I wouldn't argue with any of those names as big in podiatry. There might be better foot and ankle studies published by other people but as for big names those are a good start. Some are for text books and others for articles. Would you laugh if some one said big names in orthopedics were Weber, Danis, Lauge, Hanson?
Myerson still publishes in the 2000's and he still practices so he is not just an old name.
Some more names are...
Shuberth and Malay
Can;t think of anymore big ones now.
I want to play the name game.
DPMs
Jeff Christensen
Patrick Burns
Thomas Zgonis
Shannon Rush
Vincent Mandracchia
Harvey Lamont
Warren Joseph
Al Ng
Mike Lee
Graham Hamilton
Alan Catanzariti
Jordan Grossman
Amol Sexana
Richard Bouche
Donald Green
William Grant
Robert Frykberg
Jeffrey Jensen
MDs
Sigvard T Hansen Jr (How can you forget Sig Hansen???)
Dane Wukich
Bruce Sangeorzan
Stephen Benirschke
Christopher E. Attinger
George Andros
I could go on and on but I think I'll stop there.
Well, the guy asked for top podiatrists and big names in the field. Coughlin, Myerson, Paley, Mann, etc aren't podiatrists, now are they? They're ortho F&A.
I'm beginning to really dislike the "us" (pod) and "them" (ortho) vibe with regard to literature preference. Some pods want to pretend they're an MD who did an ortho F&A fellowship, and others want to stick to "our" literature and fight ortho. To me, if you can put the egos aside, it's all useful info. At the end of the day, we are treating the same pathologies.
I realize that it's becoming increasing prevalent in modern podiatry to want to act superior to other lesser trained DPMs or dismiss classic DPM literature and texts in favor of ortho F&A material. However, I think you still have to respect where the profession came from and the guys who got us where we are today. At the end of the day, there's probably not a DPM residency director out there who hasn't read McGlamry's, Chang's, etc texts and a lot of JFAS and JAPMA articles to get himself a good body of knowledge. If they now prefer ortho textbooks, JBJS, and FAI, that's fine, but I see no reason not to also read the podiatry classics as a student. McGlamry's is still the required surgery text in most pod schools, and I would venture to say that they've trained nearly half of the "big names" in the profession.
whoa, my bad... the "haha" was not a mean "haha" like a simpson's character haha. It was just "grinning haha".
Nah, not laughing at Feli or anyone, but it just needed to be pointed out that what is read in school may be out of date or older. i think McGlamry's Textbook was last updated in 98', though i may be wrong. Chang has a newer book out, but it's not about being rude, just thought it was funny, what "students" consider big names compared to what residents actually read.
my bad if ppl got the wrong impression. No i wouldn't laugh at those Ortho names, but those guys are dead... i'd kinda be like "wow....", but a silent wow. Myerson is significant in the Ortho world, but is still widely cited for his work in the 80's, but again, there's been a whole lot more stuff that is recent that should be pointed out.
Shuberth, Malay, great names and great programs.
*btw, i think Lauge-Hansen is one person, "Neil Lauge-Hansen", He's european (not that there's anything wrong with that) like Essex-Lopressi (British dude)
These are especially popular pimp questions at "classic" programs. Linked is a paper on these historical eponyms for the DPM's that love to pimp externing students on, or at least from my experience in the 06's
http://radiographics.rsnajnls.org/cgi/content/full/20/3/819
HCMC anyone?
Question...is their any sort of residency feedback forum/database? I'm bored at work and was interested in maybe creating a database where people could post information about a residency/externship that they've done (with hopes of having information on most all of them), answering some common questions like daily routine, case-load, where to live (either for residency or housing options for externship stay), costs, etc., as well as giving their view on the program. Maybe something similar to the interview feedback forum already on SDN. Just ideas going through my head as I have been sitting at my computer since 7:30 doing nothing. Any suggestions? If its a bad idea, let me know too. Just throwing this idea out there. It may be beneficial to students as a reference instead of posting all the time. Thanks
Good link👍...These are especially popular pimp questions at "classic" programs. Linked is a paper on these historical eponyms for the DPM's that love to pimp externing students on, or at least from my experience in the 06's
http://radiographics.rsnajnls.org/cgi/reprint/20/3/819
There's a survery the APMA has the residents of each program complete annually. It's a good source of info, but it's in each resident's own best interest to promote his/her program. Also, chances are a lot of the numbers are just estimated (or embellished)...Question...is their any sort of residency feedback forum/database? I'm bored at work and was interested in maybe creating a database where people could post information about a residency/externship that they've done (with hopes of having information on most all of them), answering some common questions like daily routine, case-load, where to live (either for residency or housing options for externship stay), costs, etc., as well as giving their view on the program. Maybe something similar to the interview feedback forum already on SDN. Just ideas going through my head as I have been sitting at my computer since 7:30 doing nothing. Any suggestions? If its a bad idea, let me know too. Just throwing this idea out there. It may be beneficial to students as a reference instead of posting all the time. Thanks
Question...is their any sort of residency feedback forum/database? I'm bored at work and was interested in maybe creating a database where people could post information about a residency/externship that they've done (with hopes of having information on most all of them), answering some common questions like daily routine, case-load, where to live (either for residency or housing options for externship stay), costs, etc., as well as giving their view on the program. Maybe something similar to the interview feedback forum already on SDN. Just ideas going through my head as I have been sitting at my computer since 7:30 doing nothing. Any suggestions? If its a bad idea, let me know too. Just throwing this idea out there. It may be beneficial to students as a reference instead of posting all the time. Thanks
His 2007 JFAS article on IM angle correction maintenance of CBWO vs Lapidus is still one of the best and most clinically relevant I have read. We need more literature like that.I want to play the name game.
DPMs
...Graham Hamilton...
Although I have not even started school yet, I have been looking at the various residency programs and gathering an idea of which ones I would be interested in. I would eventually like to come back to CA to practice, and was wondering if it was essential that one go to a residency in the state in which they wish to practice. I do understand the whole networking aspect, but what if there was a great residency out of state that I wanted to attend? How easy would it be for me to come back and practice in a group/hospital setting?