The Gateway to Your Orthopaedic Career.
  Tuesday, 16 July 2013
  3 Replies
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Hello,

I will be starting medical school at Georgetown in a couple of weeks and am trying to develop a solid plan of attack for the next 1-2 years that will make me most competitive for a California Ortho residency (originally from California).

This past year I had the opportunity to get my masters at Georgetown, which allowed me to take 80% of the M1 courses- I will be exempt from taking these courses. Because of this I will have a bit more free time than I otherwise would.

My question is: should I use this time to read/review step 1 first aid/annotating first aid as my courses progress or should I focus on getting involved with ortho research and further bolstering my ortho resume? Or even better, should I do both?

In general, is there any other advice that anyone might have for me as a medical student just starting the climb to an Ortho residency?

Thanks.
12 years ago
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#58261
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I am entering into my second year and much like you I was eager to get started building my resume as a first year. My advice would be to start trying to make connections in the department of orthopaedics for research. Probably a good place to start would be to read the professors bios and see which guys are the most involved with research and start emailing them. Chances are that most of them will not respond, but if you are like me one kind soul will respond. Also, if you can find away to meet some of the residents most programs require research and most residents are not interested in research so they love to get help from med students. You have a pretty sweet deal having already completed most of your coursework so knocking out some research and getting people to like you should be your number one priority. I do think it is a good idea to start using First Aid, Goljan and maybe Pathoma, but you still have a bunch of time for boards so I would focus on finding people who will contend for you when you apply to residency. Keep in mind I am only a second year, but this is what I would do if I was in your position. Check out orthogunner.com they have suggestions of what you should be focusing on each year of medical school to better your chances of landing the ortho residency of your choice.
12 years ago
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#58262
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The major bulk of Step 1 stuff comes from your M2 year. Its critical that you nail Step 1 for Ortho - this year, your M1 year, I would just make sure that you don't forget what you learned already. Using FA to reinforce what you learned would be a good use of your time.

If you have this free time, it would be great to get involved in some Ortho research. Meet some people in the department and jump on a project or 2. This will serve you well going forward - getting some abstracts done and meeting people in the field. Hope this helps! For whatever it is worth
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