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Thanks for your time. Why do people go into traditional rotating internship? is this because they can not match? is it paid or do you still have to take out loans? I appreciate your knowledge.
That sound positive. Thanks a lot. what does it involve?
That sound positive. Thanks a lot. what does it involve?
3. Traditional Rotating Year or first year to be served by any student who is undecided regarding specialty or one requiring AOA clinical training for eventual licensure or one intending second year ACGME residency. Content will include:
a. Family Practice 1 month
b. Internal Medicine 2 months
c. General Surgery 1 month
d. Pediatrics 1 month
e. Women Health (OB and/or office Gyn) 1 month
f. Elective 1 month
g. Selective 4 months
h. Integrated OMM/OPP across all rotations
It involves wasting time and the government's money for a year.
It also gives your loans an extra year to grow if you decide to do an ACGME residency that doesn't recognize AOA-accredited rotating internships.
Traditional rotating internships only make sense nowadays if you're doing an osteopathic residency.
It involves wasting time and the government's money for a year.
It also gives your loans an extra year to grow if you decide to do an ACGME residency that doesn't recognize AOA-accredited rotating internships.
Traditional rotating internships only make sense nowadays if you're doing an osteopathic residency.
😕
Sounds like someone got screwed🙄
...or if you go into a specialty that requires an intern year that can be done elsewhere (known as residencies that match with an "advanced"/pgy2 position). some that come to mind are pm&r, anesthesia, radiology, dermatology.
also, if you have any aspirations of practicing in "the 5 states" it makes sense to complete an AOA internship as opposed to doing a categorical/prelim med/prelim surg/transitional year through the allopathic match and then having the headache of resolution 42.
You should make darned sure that the AOA internship is approved by the ACGME advanced residency before going that route. Advanced residencies have no obligation to honor the rotating internship as equivalent to an ACGME TY/prelim year, and many don't. I know if I were a program director for any moderately competitive advanced residency I would have a huge problem with a D.O. who did their internship at some osteopathic hospital in the sticks somewhere.
Resolution 42 petition=an application to be filled out and mailed to the AOA.
Rotating internship= a year of being a scut monkey for little pay and no respect.
From my point of view, the Resolution 42 route makes more sense to me.![]()
Whoa whoa whoa. Look at all osteopathic schools' match lists though (I'm looking at DMU and CCOM, which I had thought were two pretty respectable DO schools). Both put a substantial (20ish) number of students into traditional rotating programs or transitional year programs. What happens to these students? Do they have to scramble to match into something after their internship year?
Interesting. Do you apply and match during your traditional rotating year or is that determined beforehand?you'll see a number of residencies that start in year 2. The traditional rotating year is year 1.
it'd be good to hear from some others in the thick of it
How difficult a time do people who match into trad rotating internships but not residencies have securing a residency? It's not like this really influences my decsion...I'm likely going to CCOM either way. But it's a nice thing to know.
How does one get oneself in the (seemingly terrible) position of securing a traditional rotating internship but not a residency?
my residency accepts the DO intern year, which is not in the sticks👍You should make darned sure that the AOA internship is approved by the ACGME advanced residency before going that route. Advanced residencies have no obligation to honor the rotating internship as equivalent to an ACGME TY/prelim year, and many don't. I know if I were a program director for any moderately competitive advanced residency I would have a huge problem with a D.O. who did their internship at some osteopathic hospital in the sticks somewhere.
Resolution 42 petition=an application to be filled out and mailed to the AOA.
Rotating internship= a year of being a scut monkey for little pay and no respect.
From my point of view, the Resolution 42 route makes more sense to me.![]()
I'm a bit confused. If you do an AOA approved residency, do you have to do the traditional rotating internship or can you elect not to?
Depends on what field you are in. Some fields require a traditional internship/transitional year/ before beginning the residency. Examples include but are not exclusive to: Gas, PM&R, Rads, Eye, a handful of EM programs and others. Some fields don't require an internship year that those would include things like FM, IM, most EM programs and Surgery.
I know several people headed to derm next year who are doing an internship at my hospital right now. Also a couple headed to gas.
Do you match derm and internship together or do you actually apply for derm residencies after the rotating internship? The reason I ask is because you never see derm matches on a match list (which is part of why people think DO derm programs don't exits or you can't be a DO derm), but for something like PM&R you see it (and all are dual or MD).
JaggerPlate: these people matched their derm and their internship at the same time. Or maybe not exactly the same time, but they have all known where they were headed when they started the internship. I think it typically shows up as having matched to an internship on the match lists.
Yes. On match day, these people (and others like Gas, Rads, etc) find out where they are going for their internship/transitional year AND where they will do their residency beginning PGY-II.
As an aside, some allopathic residency programs accept the osteopathic internship as a substitute for a transitional year. This isn't universal but common and institution dependent.
The interns I am thinking of are all MD's, and the internship programs are (obviously) allopathic, as are their future residency programs. I know these people from the hospital where I work, which is part of the UT system.
One girl going into derm, and another girl going into gas, are both very hot. I don't mean that they're kind of pretty, and the fact that they're doctors makes them hot. I mean that if you saw them out at a bar, and they told you they were doctors, you wouldn't believe them.
Thats interesting. The thing scpod posted made it seem like you enter your internship and still have to apply to programs at a later date.
Thats interesting. The thing scpod posted made it seem like you enter your internship and still have to apply to programs at a later date.
....I think the osteo derm, procto, etc. thing is relatively new and, frankly, ******ed....
Only in those four fields...derm, procto, etc. All the other osteo and every single allo field are as I described (including derm, etc). I think the osteo derm, procto, etc. thing is relatively new and, frankly, ******ed.
Also, if you intend to do an osteopathic internship, then an allopathic residency in one of those 4 (derm, procto, PM&R, etc) you behave like a allo applicant and apply to both simultaneously.
Ideally, you would match into an internship AND match into a residency program simulateously. Most people are so fortunate. Unfortunately, some people match into a residency program (beginning PGY-II) but don't match into an internship. These people scramble into an internship. Others match into an internship but not into a residency. Those folks can scramble into PGY-II positions if available or re-apply during their PGY-I year.
The interns I am thinking of are all MD's, and the internship programs are (obviously) allopathic, as are their future residency programs. I know these people from the hospital where I work, which is part of the UT system.
One girl going into derm, and another girl going into gas, are both very hot. I don't mean that they're kind of pretty, and the fact that they're doctors makes them hot. I mean that if you saw them out at a bar, and they told you they were doctors, you wouldn't believe them.
There are two reasons you would do a trad year:
1. you didnt match (seems to be more common than 2)
2. You are doing an ACGME residency
I just realized this thread was brought back from the dead. Oh well, I just follow the crowd anyways.
I'm going to do allopathic surgery, and I am strongly considering doing a TRI first. Most surgical programs won't be happy about you trying to do family med, internal med, ob/gyn, etc your intern year when you are supposed to be only doing surgical months. Some allow it tho.
I hear at my school heavy rumors that the AOA rotating intern year is going to be completely done away with in the next two years... is there any truth to this??? Are there similar rumors of this at other osteopathic schools???
i've read through what i can so far but i'm still confused.
i'm thinking about doing an AOA trad intern year and then some military pay back time then apply from residency. Would doing an allopathic internship year when the military scholarship time is up be possible?
to allow for applying for an allo residency after completing the allo internship?
i'm confused about the funding issues.
the military time would be 4 years if i were to take this path.
thanks in advance, i just need to know, b/c the scramble into an allo intern year seems frightening. AND i may want to stay DO when residency time comes anyway.
personal perspective on mil scholarship: they respect DOs, and they treat you fairly.