The Gateway to Your Orthopaedic Career.
  Sunday, 25 November 2007
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Hi all,

I'd appreciate some advice on my situation. I'm a medicine resident who has had a change of heart and would like to pursue a career in orthopedics. I'm trying to figure out how to approach this. I had very little experience in orthopedics in medical school (no 4th year rotation), and have become interested through my experiences in my clinic and the hospital. Early on in my medical school career I was interested in ortho and was able to be a part of an abstract that was presented at a national meeting, but I became fixated on my career in medicine and did not pursue anything further.

I was wondering how to go about this. I do not have the clinical experience at this point to get letters of recommendation from orthopedic surgeons. I assume that I am too late for the current application cycle, so would a research year next year be a good idea?

Here's my info:
Top 3 medical school
AOA
Step 1: 245
Step 2: 255
Resident at what many consider to be the top medicine program, in good standing with the program.

Thanks in advice for your help. I am looking for any advice.
18 years ago
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#53683
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Sorry to repost this... any ideas?
18 years ago
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#53684
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I would start by talking to the program director and ortho chairman at your current program. people change all the time, it happens, no need to be afraid, worried, scared.....just talk to the ortho dept and they should offer help to lead u in the right direction. ur grades/scores are top notch, no worries but people will question ur decision, is it for real or just a fluke b/c if u change once they want to know that u won't change back to medicine in 6 months.......leaving a residency is a big loss to program and leaves holes in the schedule so programs in all fields look for stability/personality.
18 years ago
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#53685
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Ebo,

Thanks so much for your help- I appreciate your advice.
18 years ago
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#53686
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I like you completed an internal medicine residency and then spent time doing doing orthopaedic research and then matched in ortho. Its not easy, but can be done. You have to find a place to do research that might give you an opportunity. I would suggest research time at:
1) U Penn clinical orthopaedic oncology fellowship
2) Research w/ Michael Mont at Sinai Hospital in Baltimore.

There are a number of other places to participate in clinical research:
Thomas Jefferson in Phila, Union Memorial in Baltimore.

The other option might be an orthopaedic house physician.

HB
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