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How is this possible? Are they claiming to place more residents in the US than two thirds of any single US med school?
Well, they do place a large amount of people into US residencies each year than any other school. According to their residency placements for PGY1 for 2011, there were 790 placements. But that would mean that they place more residents than 100% of schools, since no US school comes close to 790 each year.
just saw a tv ad for St georges university on discovery channel and they claimed to "place more doctors into the US healthcare system than 2/3 of US med schools."
How is this possible? Are they claiming to place more residents in the US than two thirds of any single US med school?
That is A LOT of placement. No wonder the mainland allopathic schools are scared.
They may also be saying that they have place more mds in residencys total since they were formed than 2/3 of US universities.
Where did you get that US schools are scared? Just pullin that out of your ass?
Btw I can't say I'm too impressed with a school that's still having people match at PGY-8. Look at how many people are matching at PGY-3,4,5 and 6 even...not an awesome sign.
https://baysgu35.sgu.edu/ERD/2011/ResidPost.nsf/BYPGY?OpenView&RestrictToCategory=PGY1&Count=-1
SGU, Ross, and AUA have ads all over our campus billboards. One ad they ran was a picture of this guy who matched into neurosurgery. They made the link clear: go to Ross, match NS.
just saw a tv ad for St georges university on discovery channel and they claimed to "place more doctors into the US healthcare system than 2/3 of US med schools."
How is this possible? Are they claiming to place more residents in the US than two thirds of any single US med school?
Caribbean schools have much larger class sizes.Normally I play devil's advocate for the Caribbean. Just cuz there needs to be some impartiality to the debates.
However... that is just plain false.
Caribbean schools are a sham and the the fact that they need viral/television/youtube advertisements is proof of that fact.
Many New York medical schools hate that NYC hospitals have Caribbean students rotating.Where did you get that US schools are scared? Just pullin that out of your ass?
true but as long as hospitals want more money, they'll take the carribbean studentsMany New York medical schools hate that NYC hospitals have Caribbean students rotating.
Citation needed. You tried to defend something someone pulled out their ass by something you pulled out your ass.Many New York medical schools hate that NYC hospitals have Caribbean students rotating.
There is a link that CodeBlu posted about this very issue.Citation needed. You tried to defend something someone pulled out their ass by something you pulled out your ass.
Citation needed. You tried to defend something someone pulled out their ass by something you pulled out your ass.
No one pulled anything out of their ass.
No need for snarky comments. Thanks.
Caribbean schools have produced some great doctors. Stop being so pretentious.
Yeah they were definitely better off not putting that commercial out. It looks like a commercial for a community college or something.
Yep. These grumpy people (NY med school deans) can't compete so they want to use the government to enforce their wishes.
NY schools are not enrolling students in droves to make enormous profits off of them, rather, they are taking the most qualified, competent applicants and trying to train them. SGU is a diploma mill.
No it isn't. They give a good medical education and actually want their students to be doctors. Stop lumping SGU with the other 50 crappy Caribbean schools.NY schools are not enrolling students in droves to make enormous profits off of them, rather, they are taking the most qualified, competent applicants and trying to train them. SGU is a diploma mill.
No it isn't. They give a good medical education and actually want their students to be doctors. Stop lumping SGU with the other 50 crappy Caribbean schools.
It may be a top tier Caribbean school, but its still a Caribbean school. Statistics don't lie...their grads don't place as easily as US MD and DO grads.
oh CWRU, no one should apply there based on the fact that you had a TV ad (on MTV, of all places)Caribbean schools are a sham and the the fact that they need viral/television/youtube advertisements is proof of that fact.
Most Caribbean schools cost as much as private med schools, last I looked. Atleast for SGU, you can still get US government loans to attend.Is Caribbean schools that much more expensive than domestic schools? How can they afford to pay for spots like that?
Think about it this way...if St. George's was so awesome, why would it need to have TV ads and advertising banners on SDN/random websites/facebook? Don't think I've ever seen a US MD or DO school do that lately...
Undergrad schools in general are diploma mills. They give out degrees to anyone who can maintain a 2.0. Most of these degrees by themselves without a graduate degree, unless its an engineering or architecture or a few others, are about as useful as a bag full of rocks. Most of the jobs that these bachelors get you can be attained by working at the job site and working your way up.NY schools are not enrolling students in droves to make enormous profits off of them, rather, they are taking the most qualified, competent applicants and trying to train them. SGU is a diploma mill.
True, and that is due to limited residency spots for FMGs. But they do educate their students well, so to say that it is a sham or diploma mill is very arrogant.
This isn't true. The big 4 Caribbean schools are fine - atleast, I know SGU is fine since I have done research into the school. More students drop out because they were less academically qualified to actually be a physician - hence why they weren't accepted into US schools. But, it still gives an individual a shot at being an MD and you shouldn't take that chance away from people (We're Americans - if we have a dream, we are going after it even if the risks are high!).It is a sham and it is a diploma mill. Its naive to think it isn't. Foreign education is crap, especially when its from the Caribbean. Study abroad and you'll see. Ask a caribbeaner grad and he'll tell you the first two years were on par, but year 3 and 4 are total bs. How would a school in a third world nation attract world class faculty?
No it isn't. They give a good medical education and actually want their students to be doctors. Stop lumping SGU with the other 50 crappy Caribbean schools.
This isn't true. The big 4 Caribbean schools are fine - atleast, I know SGU is fine since I have done research into the school. More students drop out because they were less academically qualified to actually be a physician - hence why they weren't accepted into US schools. But, it still gives an individual a shot at being an MD and you shouldn't take that chance away from people (We're Americans - if we have a dream, we are going after it even if the risks are high!).
e 3rd and 4th year at SGU, you are trained in US hospital. How can that not be on par? It is similar to many DO schools (even MD-schools that lack an hospital associated with it) -- where you just move hospitals every month or two or three. In some respects, I considered SGU superior to US schools as you change locations alot and learn more about international med too... but I want a residency.
The risk of going to the Carib, is 1. You might drop out because there is a reason you didn't get into US schools (your academic skills aren't good enough) and 2. And this is a big one! Even if you are great, you are going to have a harder time getting a residency - especially a specialty residency. But it can happen. You just will have to work harder at it than US graduates.
Ross, it is unfortunately that you think international education is a sham as many of the physicians you will be working with in the future are international trained.