The orthopedic department at your school will have faculty members looking to recruit for projects. Start by emailing these individuals with your CV and interest in Orthopedic Surgery.
I first recommend (for your success with research) that you resist the urge to be part of the “first wave fever” of people scrambling for research on day 1. It’s infeasible because you’re cashing checks and making commitments before you even know how medical school’s going to work. Keep your ears open and don’t turn down a golden/unicorn opportunity, but it’s very doubtful they present themselves. Take at least a solid 2-3 months to get adjusted to the pace and rigor of your curriculum, make friends/network, etc., and do all that stuff. There will come a point where you’ll realize that 1-3 hours of your day can be spent doing something else (ie -chart review) if you stay focused throughout the day. At that point, reach out to these department chairs/ortho research faculty.
Be flexible. If one person says no, ask if they can link you to someone else. They often can. The easiest thing is getting the first project. The most important thing though is following up and meeting the deadlines expected of that faculty and his lackeys (often other medical students/residents) so that you can get more research. That’s basically how it works.
You could/should have merged these threads together:
Hello everyone, so in undergrad I was able to get 7-8 publications (as contributing author rather than first author) in neurology/epilepsy. I was wondering if currently I am interested in ortho and neurology, should I do research in ortho during medical school and if I decide to go with the...
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