- Joined
- Mar 17, 2002
- Messages
- 26
- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 0

Originally posted by nodiggity
This is a previous poster's take on "top programs":
********************************************
********************************************
Academic anesthesiologists I have spoken to generally seem to stratify the outstanding programs into 3 tiers...
1) Best of the best: JHU, MGH, UCSF
2) Considered to be Elite programs: Alabama, Brigham, Columbia, Duke, Mayo, Michigan, Penn, Stanford, Wake Forest, U. Washington
3) Other excellent academic programs: Beth Israel, Cornell, Dartmouth, MC Wisconsin, Mt. Sinai, Northwestern, Penn State, UC Irvine, UCLA, UCSD, U. Chicago, U. Colorado, U. Florida, U. Iowa, UNC Chapel Hill, U. Pittsburgh, U. Rochester, U. Texas Galveston, Utah, UVA, Vanderbilt, Wash U, Yale
********************************************
******************************************
I think this list is pretty good overall for good programs nationwide. One could argue that some of these programs should be taken off while other could argue that some should be added.
Where you stratify the programs should be based on your experiences when you interview there. My "preseason" idealistic rank list has changed substantially since I started interviewing at the top programs. I would have easily ranked JH, MGH, BW in some order at the top of my list but after interviewing; Only 1 of these programs even cracked the top 3 and one I'm not even ranking at ALL. (please don't ask which one; I don't want to bad mouth any programs. Everyone experience is different)
In the end, research money is nice, but its all about how you fit when you go there and how happy you will be.
Med4ever said:Can anybody update this thread with new rankings after being on the interview trail. Also, what really defines that these programs as good?
Med4ever, I have the same question!Med4ever said:Is cleveland clinic a top program? It is missing form the list I was wondering if there ws a reason for this? Is the training, research subpar?
johncunningham said:I rarely post, but here is my take. I'm also all for full disclosure... I'm a prelim medicine intern in Boston, off to Beth Israel Deaconess next year.
I agree with most of what has been said, and would like to emphasize the considerations of one's spouse. I was seperated from my fiancee, now wife for the last two years of medical school. She in Boston, me in Philadelphia. When it came time to interview, I had ok numbers/grades/letters, and part of me wanted to apply to all the "big names". But, in reality I could only justify Philly, Boston, and perhaps New York. I, like most, cast a wide net, and when the interviews came in I decided against New York all together. I realize the above seems like a waste of time, but it helps to explain my two city application. Philly and Boston are the only places I interviewed.
Now, for my take, having seen Penn, Jeff, Temple, Brigham, (no MGH interview), BID, Tufts, BU, and UMass.
Penn: If my wife was out of the equation, Penn would have been my number one choice. peds at CHOP, Great hours, great attendings, great chair from Hopkins, lots of trauma, lots of pathology. Moreover, I love Philly, and I think the city is underrated. You can live in a great neighborhood, like Rittenhouse, and walk to work. The rent is fairly cheap, and there are tons of things to do. I think most would agree that Penn is a "great" program, likely "top tier", but my wife is an attorney in Boston, so I had to rank it second.
BID: Loved the program. Residents were super cool. Lots of good cases. Peds at Childrens. Stellar pain fellowship. Harvard affiliate. The list goes on.
Brigham: My pre-interview favorite. I can't describe the feeling I got there. It isn't fair to say that I felt intimidated, more like, I am just not that intense. I think of myself as a hard worker, but some of the residents were really really into what they do. I'm all for reading, and I know I will have to read on an almost daily basis to be adequately prepared, but these guys were reading articles on the T, reading at lunch, reading on coffee break...
BU: Very charismatic leadership. Clearly a program on the upswing. To review their recruiting is to see a big trend toward less FMGs. Lots of cases. Lots of Pathology, it is a city hospital. Great trauma. Almost no transplant. Also to Childrens for Peds. In the end, a good program that is training very skilled anesthesiologists. I was honestly unsure about the program being run by a private practice, and got the feeling that the residents were "worked" very hard without a great deal of "teaching".
Tufts: the leadership seemd weak. The peds seemed weak, even though they have the Floating Hospital. The attendings seemed disinterested. No Trauma. ?Neuro. Unsure of how they place for fellowship, but not a frontrunner in Boston.
UMass: "Worcester" case closed.
So... Whats the point? The "best" program for me was BID. It doesn't have the biggest name, the best location, the most patholgy, trauma, or the most well known attendings. But, having had the chance to see a number of well known programs, and a couple of "top tier" programs, it had the best fit for me, and also my wife. I have no regrets, and feel like I have made a good choice. Is it "top tier"? No. Is it a good solid program? Absolutely. Will it ensure that I become an "excellent" anesthesiologist? No, but it will give me all the opportunity I need. For me, Opportunity plus effort should yield success; professionally, academically, and financially.
Good luck to all the MS4's
John
Idiopathic said:I would be interested in hearing any new additions to the top tiers. Has anyone's opinion changed?
For what it's worth check out some of these Southern programs: UVA, Alabama, Duke, Wake Forest, Florida. I have alot of friends and attendings who did their residency/fellowship in these places and are very well trained/good doctors. These were all at the top of my rank list. Good luck on the interview trail.
Here's the 2002 Top 25 NIH award rankings among Anesthesiology Departments:
A previous post on the anti-midwest bias has me wondering what people from the coasts feel about Chicago programs, particularly PDs/chairs on this forum. I would say that those listed below do have quite a caseload compared to coastal programs minus UCSF, MGH, or JHU. However, people seem to blow them off. I'm thinking people's fear of cold weather, which happens to be just about as bad in NY and Boston, rather than the programs themselves. Wind is there, but certainly overrated.
Rush
Loyola
U of Chicago
Northwestern
UIC
Also, U of Washington (not STL) is considered good. Is it more their research or clinical learning? Three have told me that their interview experience emphasizes the former and nothing unique is brought up about the clinical portion (in comparison to midwest places). Plus, fellowship opportunities and placements are not so clear. Correct me if I'm wrong.
does anyone know the relative difficulty of applying to each of the individual programs in nyc, i mean mt sinai is up there on the heap from what i have heard but can anyone gimme a ball park ranking? living in manhattan is my dream and doing anesthesia there would be a dream come true. so basically i wanna know where to aim and which schools i may not have "as hard" of a time as with others...