PS
By Guest on Saturday, 12 September 2009
Posted in Match Center
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My home residence is in Pennsylvania. I have immediately family living in Texas and Florida. I want to make it known to the FLA and TX residency programs I have family ties to there areas. Does anyone have ideas as to what the best way to go about doing this may be? Thanks,
My home residence is in Pennsylvania. I have immediately family living in Texas and Florida. I want to make it known to the FLA and TX residency programs I have family ties to there areas. Does anyone have ideas as to what the best way to go about doing this may be? Thanks,


Personal statement + interview time.
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16 years ago
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My home residence is in Pennsylvania. I have immediately family living in Texas and Florida. I want to make it known to the FLA and TX residency programs I have family ties to there areas. Does anyone have ideas as to what the best way to go about doing this may be? Thanks,


Personal statement + interview time.


The last line of my personal statement for those locations says, "Finally, I want to mention that I have family ties to the state of FLA/TX." Should I elaborate more so than this? Others in a similar situation, how did you phrase it? Thanks,
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16 years ago
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Rotate once in FL, once in TX
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16 years ago
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Rotate once in FL, once in TX


I'm trying.
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16 years ago
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Having done med school in Texas and in residency in FL, I know that the programs in both states have quite a few rotators, some more than others. It is a bit late to try an obtain rotations. I think your approach in the personal statement is fine, provided that someone reads the personal statement. I assume that most people read them all the way through, but with 600+ applications at major programs, it is understandable that some programs may not read it. Another option would be an email to the program director. In general, the people in those positions are receptive to emails from prospective applicants. There is a fine line there, but simply expressing your interest in a program or a given state may help. The bottom line is that the first consideration usually isn't where you came from, but when deciding between top applicants, distance from program can be a factor. The simple truth is that residents who apply to programs far from their current or previous locations are very unlikely to rank that program highly (with the exception of very well known programs like Campbell, HSS, Rush, etc...). Providing that information at the end of your personal statement would perhaps help in that situation, but the decision to put you in the possible interview pile will depend on things that have nothing to do with location.
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16 years ago
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