The Gateway to Your Orthopaedic Career.
  Friday, 01 December 2006
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Tufts vs. Boston, which one will it be?


Loving_ortho
19 years ago
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#52095
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Tufts students do their trauma rotations @ BMC...
19 years ago
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#52096
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No they don't, tufts goes to Brown
19 years ago
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#52097
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Ok, thanks for the info. But little bit more on both programs would be nice. I know they have a interview conflict and I'm sure many people are wondering the same thing.

Thanks doods,

loving_ortho
19 years ago
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#52098
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Boston is a "blue collar" program, you work your tail off and it's pretty much a gauranteed 80 work week when on trauma and many other services. Call is intense and a lot of nights, you will get very little if any sleep. It's very trauma heavy and gets most of the penetrating trauma for the city. You also get to work with Dr. Tornetta. Residents go to Springfield for peds and seem to enjoy it. No tumor. Good joints (Dr. Einhorn), and good sports (Dr. Schepsis, Dr Foster). Morning conferences daily with Friday morning dedicated to didactics. Other hospitals besides BMC include the VA and lehey clinic. Overall, a good program with some big names, very intense and you will work your tail off for five years. Sorry that I don't know about Tufts. Hope that this helps.
19 years ago
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#52099
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I may be able to offer a little perspective. I graduated from Tufts Medical School and am currently an Ortho intern at Boston Medical Center. As a med student I rotated through both programs. Tufts' hospitals are NEMC, New England Baptist, and Newton Wellesley. They also rotate to Rhode Island Hospital (Brown) for some trauma experience during their 4th year. The program is strong in sports and joints (mainly Baptist), and Dr. Cassidy is great to work with (Hand/new Chairman). The downsides I felt were little trauma experience (NEMC is level 3), and it seemed at times there were not enough cases to go around/residents double-scrubbed. They are definitely in a rebuilding phase as Dr. Cassidy just took over last year and they had some attendings leave NEMC. That said, it is still a great program and will provide you with the skills you need to become an orthopaedic surgeon. BU's hospitals are BMC (which is Boston City and University combined), Shriner's, VA in West Roxbury, and the Lahey Clinic. BMC is level 1 trauma and very busy! You spend 2 months doing trauma as an intern, 2nd year, 3rd year, and chief. Everyone takes trauma call though. We are trauma heavy, but it does not overshadow the experience on the other services. We have some big names here like Tornetta, Einhorn, and Schepsis, which is a plus. Every day we have board rounds at 6am and go over all the traumas and operative cases with Dr. Tornetta. On Fridays we have bone school with great didactic teaching and we go over articles and chapters of the OKU to prepare for the OITE. Overall you get a great experience in all areas. I don't have too much time to go on and on, but if any of you out there have specific questions you can pm me.
Good luck!
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