unecom vs. sgu 1/3 tuition off

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I'm interested in IM, but would like to stay in the NY/NJ for family/personal reasons (e.g. fiance has a good career there). It's not the debt that concerns me, because I'd rather spend the effort and make the sacrifices paying off debt to do something I enjoy than what I do now. I have a "good" job now (secure enough/make enough), but if you have a passion for something else- every e-mail, phone call, meeting, will just frustrate you...

I'm leaning this way because of the residency options. I realize that dermatology is not likely (not impossible either) from any of the Big 4, but I'm concerned about not getting IM where I want it (geographically speaking). I've researched it, seen the numbers posted here on studentdoc and it just seems that with the increase of DO and MD students in the US, it could really difficult, if not impossible by 2015. Although I hate losing the time, I think waiting 1-2 years may dividends (for me) in the long run.

You are very perceptive. At present, there are over 4000 thousand graduates from DO programs in the US, matching into about 1400 ACGME residency spots at a rate about 35%. A few years ago, there were fewer DO graduates getting about 1300 ACGME residency spots, with a match rate was in the mid 40s for DOs securing ACGME residency positions.

It is currently projected that there will be over 5000 DOs graduating per year by 2015, with the rate of growth for DO programs far far outpacing the number of ACGME residency placement spots. Given projections derived from looking at past ACGME residency numbers for DO graduates, there will be about 1500 ACGME DO spots in 2015, so 1500/5000 means there will be a less than 30% match rate for DO graduates into ACGME residencies in 2015.

1300/3000 (2005)
1400/4000+ (current)
1500/5000 + (2015)

Approximately 2/3 of DO grads going into ACGME redidency programs go into either FM, Psych, IM, or Peds, which is consistant with most alternative pathways, so the notion that better specialty oportunities exist for DO students who match into ACGME residencies is not valid for the vast majority of the DO graduates who match into ACGME residencies.

If the OP is concerned about saving money, I would recommend that he/she looks at tuition for Saba, AUC, and Ross as well. They are a little less expensive.
 
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Approximately 2/3 of DO grads going into ACGME redidency programs go into either FM, Psych, IM, or Peds, which is consistant with most alternative pathways, so the notion that better specialty oportunities exist for DO students who match into ACGME residencies is not valid for the vast majority of the 4000-5000 DO graduates every year.

Please stop making it sound like DO's have 35% match rate
And its ~50% primary care, not 2/3
And DO's fair much better in specialization match, even more so in combination with AOA match.

Note: Not trying to argue with Drfraud, just looking out for gullible premeds.
 
Reposting this to preemptively end any argument.

As I have said, for those graduates without a red flag from my school, the rate for securing ACGME residency positions is likely over 95-99%. For the entire class, including those with Red flags, the rate of securing ACGME spots is likely > 88%. I dont have anything more concret to give you, this is my best approximation, but this really isn't too far off from the actual number.

The big take away point is that for someone who wants an ACGME residency, and is confident that they can graduate without any Red flags, they have a virtural sure thing of matching into an ACGME residency if they attend and graduate from the school that I attended.

The 47% rate that members are floating around here simply is not an accurate number.

and for those wanting to specialize......the take home point is that the best way to have a good chance at specializing is to go to an LCME U.S. MD program. Alternative programs, such as DO, U.S. IMG, etc are always going to be much more of a crap shoot. Sure, DOs will say they have a better shot, but there have been many IMG MDs who also landed great specialties too, so someone interested in specializing is much much better off using their precious brain energy to devote to rocking the MCAT vs. trying to figure out if DO or IMG MD offers the better probability of getting a specialty.

This is going to be a LONG post, and I will be updating my first post with much of the data I am about to include. I would really appreciate (it took me awhile to write this) EVERYONE considering between DO schools or Caribbean schools to read this post in its entirety and to view the statistics as objectively as possible.



This debate is about which pathway (Caribbean or DO) offers you a better chance at landing a residency, and becoming a board certified physician.

First, we will start with all DO schools vs all Caribbean Schools (US-IMG'S in some of these stats). Then, we will take a look at AUC (Upper level Caribbean) vs a specific DO school (DMU, Upper Level DO)


All DO vs Caribbean

I have taken the time to compile data directly from the NRMP and from the AOA match

This data lists how many DO's matched in both the ACGME and the AOA match and compares it to Caribbean grads who matched ACGME. (Caribbean grads cannot participate in the AOA match)

I have bolded which of the two options has matched more students.

Specialty

PGY-1 Positions

Anesthesiology
D.O 103
U.S IMG 23


Dermatology
D.O 26
U.S IMG 0

Emergency Medicine
D.O 375
U.S IMG 109

Emergency Med/Family Med
D.O 10
U.S IMG 1

Family Medicine
D.O 656
U.S IMG 439

Internal Medicine (Categorical)
D.O 609
U.S IMG 460

Neurological Surgery
D.O 12
U.S IMG 3

Neurology
D.O 31
U.S IMG 20

Obstetrics-Gynecology
D.O 173
U.S IMG 76

Orthopedic Surgery
D.O 87
U.S IMG 3

Otolaryngology
D.O 11
U.S IMG 1

Pathology
D.O 31
U.S IMG 31


Pediatrics
D.O 251
U.S IMG 147

Physical Medicine & Rehab
D.O 18
U.S IMG 9

Plastic Surgery (Integrated)
D.O 11
U.S IMG 0

Psychiatry (Categorical)
D.O 132
U.S IMG 129

Radiology-Diagnostic
D.O 8
U.S IMG 4

Surgery (Categorical)
D.O 122
U.S IMG 51

Surgery-Preliminary (PGY-1 Only)
D.O 19
U.S IMG 81

Transitional (PGY-1 Only)
D.O 267
U.S IMG 33

Urology
D.O 19
U.S IMG 0

There are more D.O's the U.S IMG's in 19 of 21 specialties, and 1 specialty had the same amount. This does not take into account the attrition rates for either the Caribbean or DO schools. The Caribbean has a notoriously high attrition rate, but we'll get back to that later.

Here is some more data. This is ONLY from the MD match, there were another 1600 DO's that matched in the AOA match.

Active Applicants
DO = 2,045
US IMG = 3,695

Matched
DO = 1,444
US IMG = 1,749

Unmatched
DO = 601
US IMG = 1,946

Matching %
DO = 70%
US IMG = 47%

Of the US IMG's that made it through medical school, 1,946 of them didn't even match. This does not even take into consideration how many Caribbean grads didn't make it through the curriculum.



That data along with consideration of attrition rates, and my previous posts in the thread about Dual Certified AOA residencies, should put to rest ANY discussion of DO vs Caribbean MD for residency placement. If you would rather have the MD initials, then go for it. Just take into consideration the facts listed above.



Now, solely for Dr. Frauds sake, we can discuss the matter of a top Caribbean vs a top DO.

This is Dr. Frauds argument

As I have said, for those graduates without a red flag from my school, the rate for securing ACGME residency positions is likely over 95-99%. For the entire class, including those with Red flags, the rate of securing ACGME spots is likely > 88%. I dont have anything more concret to give you, this is my best approximation, but this really isn't too far off from the actual number.


Dr. Fraud believes that graduates from his school (AUC), who graduate "without a red flag" have match rates of 95%-99%. His sole shred of evidence for this statistic, is that he attends there currently.

My evidence is listed below



American University of the Caribbean 2010 Match Data

Anesthesiology - 1
Emergency Medicine - 11
Family Practice - 46
General Surgery - 4
Internal Medicine - 59
Neurology - 3
OB/GYN - 12
Pathology - 1
Pediatrics - 16
Prelim Medicine - 9
Prelim Surgery - 6
Psychiatry Residency - 12
Radiology - 2
Traditional Year - 5
Total 187

~340 students start a year. They have three start dates, January, May, and September. I am trying to find concrete evidence showing their actual enrollment numbers, but they virtually impossible to find.
55% Match



Roughly 340 students start each year at AUC, at different times of the year (Either January, May, September). AUC refuses to list class sizes on their website. My investigations at ValueMD show that the number is actually much closer to 380, but I will lowball the number to give Dr. Fraud the benefit of the doubt.

Of the 340 students that start the program each year, only ~187 match. ~153 students either: A) Drop out in debt or B) Did not match and will have reapply / strengthen their applications with more coursework (additional degrees) or additional research. Dr. Fraud has mentioned that the students who enter AUC who are "confident that they will graduate from their respective program" will match without a problem "95%-99%" of the time. According to this logic the 153 students that didn't make it must have not been confident that they would graduate the program. Do you honestly believe almost half the class that started medical school at AUC were not confident, and felt that they probably weren't going to make it? This IS AUC's data. I am not playing or manipulating the numbers. Their match list is from their site (it's cited) and it was updated to include students who pre-matched / found residencies through another method. You must also take into consideration that many students do NOT match on their first try going through the Caribbean (evidenced by the fact that 1,946 didn't match this year). This means it's impossible to tell how many of the 187 AUC matching students actually matched on their first try.

The above example is why attrition rates are extremely important, and SHOULD be factored into you decision of attending DO or Caribbean MD.

Now to compare AUC's data with a DO school


DMU-COM Class of 2010

Anesthesiology - 9
Emergency Medicine - 26
Family Medicine - 43
Internal Medicine - 30
Medicine-Preliminary - 6
Neurology - 4
Neuromusculoskeletal Medicine - OMT 1
Obstetrics - Gynecology - 14
Ophthalmology - 4
Otolaryngology - 1
Pathology -3
Pediatrics -16
Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation - 10
Psychiatry - 9
Radiology - Diagnostic - 3
Surgery - General - 6
Surgery - Neurological - 1
Surgery - Orthopaedic - 6
Surgery - Otolaryn & Facial Plastic - 2
Traditional Rotating Internship - 7

Total Students - 201
Started with ~212

95% Match

One start date.

95% of the students that started the program finished. In my opinion their match list is much more impressive as well (This is up to your personal evaluation, but I think most would agree with me). 2 Plastics, 6 Ortho's, 4 Optha, and 1 Oto, is pretty impressive. AUC had 0 matches in all four of those fields.




Both schools can lead you down the pathway of becoming a board certified physician. With either path, you are going to have to do a ton of work. But, and for the last time, if you want to match in the United States, and hope to land in a competitve residency, in a competitve location, you should opt for a DO school over a Caribbean school. This is my opinion, but I did the best I could to use facts to support the argument. Choose wisely.
 
price comparisons are unecom (1 year = $44,900) and (1 semester = roughly $22,000, without discount applied)

In the end, I will save about $70,000 in fed loans if I go SGU.

Strictly in terms of tuition costs,

UNECOM

Full Time Tuition $46,700 per year

Not taking into account the possibility of a tuition hike during the next 4 years.

Total tuition for 4 years of full-time study = $186,800

Source:- http://www.une.edu/financialaid/costscom.cfm

SGU

**Basic Sciences/Grenada**
Term 1 $21,552
Term 2 $21,552
Term 3/4 $29,481
Term 5$23, 803

**Clinical Years**
Term 1 $21,755
Term 2 $21,755
Term 3 $21,755
Term 4 $21,755
Term 5 $21,755

Also not taking into account the possibility of a tuition hike within the next 4 years,


Total tuition for four years of of full-time study = $205,163

With 1/3 off tuition discount applied, tuition = $136,775

Source:- http://www.sgu.edu/financial-services/som-tuition.html

Difference in tuition between UNECOM and SGU (with Chancellor's Circle Scholarship) = 186,800 - 136,775 = $50,025

I don't know what the difference in cost of living, transportation costs, etc would come into, but factoring all of these in, will the savings be significant in the end?
 
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price comparisons are unecom (1 year = $44,900) and (1 semester = roughly $22,000, without discount applied)

In the end, I will save about $70,000 in fed loans if I go SGU.
Strictly in terms of tuition costs,

UNECOM

Full Time Tuition $46,700 per year

Not taking into account the possibility of a tuition hike during the next 4 years.

Total tuition for 4 years of full-time study = $186,800

Source:- http://www.une.edu/financialaid/costscom.cfm

SGU

**Basic Sciences/Grenada***Clinical Years**Term 1 $21,552Term 1$21,755Term 2 $21,552Term 2$21,755Term 3/4$29,481Term 3$21,755Term 5$23, 803Term 4$21,755Term 5$21,755
Also not taking into account the possibility of a tuition hike within the next 4 years,


Total tuition for four years of of full-time study = $205,163

With 1/3 off tuition discount applied, tuition = $136,775

Source:- http://www.sgu.edu/financial-services/som-tuition.html

Difference in tuition between UNECOM and SGU (with Chancellor's Circle Scholarship) = 186,800 - 136,775 = $50,025


I don't know what the difference in cost of living, transportation costs, etc would come into, but factoring all of these in, will the savings be significant in the end?
I guess it depends on if you want a job or not? considering 40 something % of all foreign grads match. your chances arent that great. Oh and I know I know I know, the big 4's match rates are in the high 80%'s BUT thats the people who DIDNT drop out. They have really bad attrition rates. GO DO.
 
price comparisons are unecom (1 year = $44,900) and (1 semester = roughly $22,000, without discount applied)

In the end, I will save about $70,000 in fed loans if I go SGU.
I guess it depends on if you want a job or not? considering 40 something % of all foreign grads match. your chances arent that great. Oh and I know I know I know, the big 4's match rates are in the high 80%'s BUT thats the people who DIDNT drop out. They have really bad attrition rates. GO DO.

Well, I would not worry so much about attrition rate since you must have very high stats to begin with to receive scholarship (29+ mcat 3.7+ GPA IRRC). At this moment, SGU rotation situation is pretty solid in NYC, even superior to many DO's school.

Many people here would scream go DO no question, but your stats suggest that it is very likely that you would do well in SGU, and $50000 isnt a small sum either. Match rate data is favoring DO's, but considering that average DO's have higher stats than average caribbean, hence they perform better (also AOA match is a big safety net for DO), same with MD vs DO.
 
Good point. I will explain little different way.

OP has 1/3 tuition fee scholarship with SGU and less that top 5% SGU enrolled students are getting this scholarship. I think, top 5 percentile SGU student will have better residency placement. Obviously, top 5 percentile DO >> top 5 percentile DO student. However, top 5 percentile SGU will have better odd than median DO student.
For example:

Canada (Developed country) statistics
80% population is above UN poverty line
Mean yearly family income of Canada is US$ 30,000

India (Developing country) statistics
35% population is above UN poverty line
Mean yearly family income of India is US$ 3,000

Conclusion: Canada is much better than India

However, Indian 5% population (50 millions) are millionaires and have higher income than Canadian 90 percentile population.

It is important that where you lies on bell curve !!


Well, I would not worry so much about attrition rate since you must have very high stats to begin with to receive scholarship (29+ mcat 3.7+ GPA IRRC). At this moment, SGU rotation situation is pretty solid in NYC, even superior to many DO's school.

Many people here would scream go DO no question, but your stats suggest that it is very likely that you would do well in SGU, and $50000 isnt a small sum either. Match rate data is favoring DO's, but considering that average DO's have higher stats than average caribbean, hence they perform better (also AOA match is a big safety net for DO), same with MD vs DO.
 
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