stat!! said:
Me! I would love to discuss UW. For the sake of my marriage, I will probably end up ranking it #1 (if they get off probation!) and I think it's a strong program. I have, however, seen a few things that bother me after doing a month-long rotation there and attending the interview day. Here are my thoughts:
Strengths:
-Amazing faculty who love to teach
-Diverse patient population
-Diverse hospital settings - university vs. VA vs. county vs. community
-Very smart, motivated residents who have fun working together and have fun outside of work
-Harborview - offers unusual combination of county pt population, great ancillary services and strong nursing support
-Hospitalist attendings on nearly all services, so you don't have to spend all day calling privates and you get more autonomy
-Large number of residents ensures that you will be able to find those with whom you can relate (i.e. less likely to find that you don't fit in with the group compared to smaller programs)
-Top-notch fellowship placement
-Strong subspecialty departments and research opportunities (esp in pulm/cc, id, heme/onc)
-Great international and rural health rotations
-Seattle is beautiful and fun, with all the amenities of a large city as well as the opportunity to get out and hike, bike, ski, etc
Weaknesses
-Not a very close-knit group of residents. Many have never even met one another, and you may work with someone once and never see them again
-Work schedules are chaotic - seem to be different on each rotation and are constantly undergoing change in an effort to meet work hours regulations
-On certain electives (e.g. renal at the univ hosp) residents are first call on evenings and weekends, possibly increasing your total # of call months
-PD is distant (though Dr. Wipf, assoc PD, is great), and administration seems less responsive to resident concerns than at other places
-No computerized order entry. Multiple separate computer systems are in use for tracking patient records, each with a different type of information - a pain for prerounding
-Only 3 weeks of vacation, and no guaranteed time off around the holidays as at some programs. Most residents told me they were either on call, pre-call, or post-call on Thanksgiving, Christmas, AND New Year's for at least the first 2 years (one person ended up on call for all 3 holidays all 3 years)
-No free lunch every day
-Parking costs
-Seattle is rainy and gray for much of the winter, traffic can be problematic, and cost of living is high (but not as bad as LA, NYC, etc.)
I think the laid-back vibe at UW can be a strength or weakness depending on your perspective. People at UW are very polite and will not tell you if you are doing something poorly. So, you are not going to receive as much outward pressure to perform as you might at some more hard-core places. This makes for a less stressful environment, which I like. However, this also means that the quality of the training you get depends on how self-motivated you are. You also won't see the formal type of AM report that you do on the east coast - the quality varies depending on which residents are a part of it. It's usually good, but I've seen some bad ones. UW tends to attract very intelligent and driven residents, so overall I think the training is solid. However, I don't know if the environment is for everyone (I don't even know if it's for me!).
As for residents being happy, I know quite a few (interns and R2's mostly) and they are very happy. I think people just need to know what they are getting into. There seems to be much less hand-holding than at many programs I've visited, and the program administration is not particularly responsive or progressive. They are not going to take care of all the little things for you. (probably d/t the bureaucracy and financial challenges of being a public institution, the size of the program, and the fact that the PD has been in place for a very long time.) However, if you are OK with this in exchange for getting great training at a top-notch academic institution, then you will likely be happy.
Would love to hear more input from others as well!