cabrillo said:
UAG offers me everything in Guadalajara for the first 4 years but is longer than the caribean specifically Ross and SGU which I am planning to apply to.
Again, I'd strongly reconsider UAG. Just my $0.02.
cabrillo said:
my questions are:
how often do you have to travel to different states to do you rotations or electives?
Well, remember that I chose to come to New York. In the case of New York students, to be honest, I think Ross (if we're talking only about Ross, which I assume we are) needs to keep students in those rotations they've set-up in other states in order for the hospital to justify the contract. While I don't think they'd ever come out and explicitly admit it, they tend to create situations where a student may feel "forced" to go to Cape Cod or Ohio in order to get done on time. I think this is one of the downsides of Ross.
Personally, I was quite clear that I did not want to leave New York or be forced to break my lease. So, I didn't have to. As a result, though, I was forced to take a core surgery rotation that I did not want.
Overall, I get the general impression, although many of their students complain as well, that SGU has a more stable and better organized clinical clerkship program.
cabrillo said:
isnt this very expensive?
Yes, it can be. A lot of students try to find temporary housing through Craigslist or the like. Not a good situation if you are married. Another option would be to go to Chicago, which will provide you much more stability and where you won't have to move, but where (I believe) the clinical rotations are not as good.
cabrillo said:
is this program a better than what UAG offers in terms of stability and money?
Your
primary worry should not be about stability and money if you go this route. It should be about what program is going to give you the best chance to
most quickly get into the residency you want when you finish. Some of the concerns you express are why, in part, going this route is not for everyone (as they find out after investing a lot of time and money) and at least partly helps to explain the high attrition rate at these schools. It can indeed be very stressful.
But, if you go to UAG (or any other Mexican school), you will have to do a "fifth-pathway" year, a complete waste of time IMHO. Using Anesthesiology (my field) as an example, this year 58 U.S. IMGs (from Carib and other schools) matched into programs whereas only one "fifth-pathway" graduate did. I'm sure a lot more than "one" medical grad coming out of Mexico last year wanted anesthesiology (and, yes, fifth-pathway's are a separate type of U.S. IMG and are not lumped together with the other U.S. IMGs).
cabrillo said:
thanks again for all the input
No problem. Just my opinion, though. You have to decide what's right for you and your family.
Good luck with your decision.
-Skip