Right - I am unaware of any Longwood grad who went to Children's in the past 7+ years.
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Sounds like you're saying because no Longwood resident has gone to Children's the past several years this means it's a 'poorer' quality program. So if no HMS grads in recent years have chosen to come to Longwood and instead choose Cambridge or Columbia/Cornell, does this mean this is a poor program? Absolutely not as Longwood is a quality program.
MGH is undoubtedly the research powerhouse in the area, if not the country, and one can not really go wrong with either of the 3 programs. But to say the clinical experiences at Cambridge and/or MGH are superior to places like Children's Boston based on secondary sources or perhaps outdated infomation is incorrect and a disservice to future trainees.
Didn't say a single thing about the clinical experience (vs your claim of only "adequate" psychotherapy training at MGH/McLean, or your questioning "clinical exposure" at MGH/McLean). Only said that the widely held perception of program strength ranks MGH/McLean way ahead of Children's. Nonetheless, I don't think you can fault the clinical experience at MGH/McLean given the clinical exposure to the pediatric populations of MGH, McLean, and Franciscan's Hospitals.
I have no direct investment in MGH/McLean CAP being "better" than anyone else - but I think it's disingenuous to claim that it is not broadly held by the community at large as the strongest CAP fellowship.
And, in the interests of full disclosure of potential bias - since you're listed as a fellow in Boston, can we assume that you're a current Children's fellow?
To the OP: as you can see from this discussion - no, it doesn't matter whether you go to residency at a program with a CAP fellowship since strong fellowships take applicants from strong residencies, not necessarily from in house.