The Gateway to Your Orthopaedic Career.
  Thursday, 17 March 2005
  28 Replies
  19 Visits
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Congrats to those who matched this year...there was a similar 2004 post to this one where people listed there "credentials" (i.e. board scores, # of clinical honors, research (any), # of interviews and where they matched). Thought it would be nice to see where next year's future orthopods stand in relation to those who will blaze the trail b4 us...that is when you sober up of course...erin go braugh!
21 years ago
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#49780
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I came to orthopaedics late in my junior year, so I thought I was screwed. I hadn?t prepared for Step I like I should have, and it cost me.

Graduated "Cum Laude" (combo of GPA and honors, neither of which was outstanding, and honor wasn't known at match time)

Step I less than 220
Step II less than 230
Rotated at home school and one other.
Non-AOA
No honors in General Surgery, but did have honors on one Ortho rotation and a few cores (FP,Psych, Med).

Talked with my chairman, he said there was no chance in hell I was getting interviews at any place I didn't rotate, and not to waste my money applying all over the country. Applied to 10, got 2 interviews (home school and the school at which I had rotated). Figured I was screwed and would reapply next year.

Matched at No. 1, my home school. Just a little glimmer of hope for those of you out there that think it's impossible. Just remember, my story is unusual. If you're not stellar on board scores, rotate as much as possible. Work as hard as you can, do not increase the workload on the residents, and find ways to help whenever you can. Be nice to ancillary staff (secretaries, nurses, clinic managers, program secretary). Remember, they have the boss?s ear, and a verbal recommendation from one (or all of them) may carry as much weight as the best written recommendation from someone the chairman may barely know.

It's also important to have a reality check, and if you're not likely to match, make sure you have a back-up in which you would be happy if you didn't match in ortho. If you have the money, it's not a bad idea to cast as big of a net as possible. I met several people on my interviews that were less than stellar, but had applied to nearly every program in the country, and had gotten a few more interviews. I don't know if they matched or not, but I would think more interviews equals a higher chance of matching.

Most importantly, listen to people you know care about you and your future. I knew my chairman was one of those people and his advice could be trusted. He also wasn't one to offer advice when he didn't know what he was talking about.

Finally, try not to piss anyone off. Everybody talks and you can really screw yourself. My Chairman's final advice before I set off on my away was "Remember, lots of people to more damage to their file during their rotations than they help. Don't be one of those people."
21 years ago
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#49779
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Congrats to the matched

Is there, or will there be, a published database (on freida, scutwork, orthogate, etc.) that lists programs and the pgy-1's (applicant's name or med school's name) that matched there?
21 years ago
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#49778
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Medical school: Midwest private school
Step I: 95
Step II: 97
AOA: Not a chance
First year: grades sucked
Second year: Mix of high pass and honors
Third year: Honors Peds, EM, FM, Med, Surg, Psych, OB/Gyn; High pass neuro
Fouth year: Away electives (2 in cali)
Research: tons of ortho
Applied to 10 programs, 7 interviews, went to 6
My top three:
1. Stanford
2. UCLA
3. USC

Location was key to me for family reasons. Stoked to match at # 1 Stanford. Now enjoying fourth year electives. Sub-I coming up
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21 years ago
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#49777
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Here is my list:

Midwest state school, no home ortho program.
StepI: 223
StepII:240
Not AOA
Clinical (outstanding, advanced, pass): 3 outstandings and 3 advanced.
Away rotations: Tacoma, Michigan, Loma Linda
6yrs of research (non-ortho) 7 publications
Extracurriculars

Applied to 60 programs. Got 15 interviews. Went on 12 for scheduling reasons. Ranked all I interviewed at. The list in alphabetical order: Beaumont, Loma Linda, Fort Wayne, MCW, Mclaren, SIU, SLU, U of Indiana, UIC, U of Michican, U of Wisconsin, Wayne State.

Matched at U Mich!!! Couldnt be happier!

Remember that there is no ranking of which program is the best program out there, there is only the best program for you. You will hear my post that this program or that program is in the top 10 but that will most likely be a ranking of the hospital admission or research money or something like that but a residency is more than just numbers. The best program for you is the one where you will love going to work everyday because of the people you work with.
For me it was important to go to a program that the residents and I clicked and a program that had cool faculty that worked with you and were enthusiastic about teaching.
For all those reading these posts looking at the numbers or the grades, remember that the interview is what will sell you to the program. It doesnt matter what the numbers are once you get the interview. Research and AOA and honors are great but ultimately you want to come across as a great person to work with who will make whatever program you get into proud to call you a resident. Be interesting and let your passion show!

PM me if you have any questions.
21 years ago
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#49776
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University of Illinois-subcampus
with no Home Ortho program
Step 1 233(94)
Step 2 230(93)
Not AOA
Outstanding/satisfactory/unsatisfactory in 1st 2 years
2 Outstandings in Preclinical years
Outstanding/Advanced/Proficient/Unsatisfactory in 2nd 2 years
Outstanding in Surgery, OB/GYN, and Psych
Advanced in Peds and Intenal Med, Proficient in Family Med
3 aways - Harvard, UCLA, Miami
5 letters of Rec, 1 from Chairman at Harvard, 1 from Chairman at UCLA, 1 from Chairman in Gen Surg at home, 1 from community Ortho Doc, 1 from community Med-Peds Doc
Lots of research in Undergrad, no pubs
One overseas Ortho project in England, no pubs but everyone asked about this on the trail

Applied to 69, mainly top programs and only big cities (currently in small town and can't stand it!)
Had 15 offers, took 13 due to scheduling conflicts
Interviewed at (in no particular order) UIC, UCLA, USC, Miami, Henry Ford, Colorado, Minnesota, Wayne State, Drexel, UVA,Howard, UMDNJ-NJMS, and SUNY Downstate
Ranked every place I interviewed at with a total of 15 ranks, UVA and UMDNJ had 5 and 6 years spots

MATCHED at UMDNJ-NJMS and very happy to have matched here, Newark is not the greatest place to live in but the training is incredible and NYC is just across the river.
For those interested, UMDNJ is a very minority friendly program with at least one minority resident per year out of six(including myself).

When I applied, my priorities were a large academic program in a large city with multiple training facilities. I also wanted a program with cool people that enjoy partying. Great weather and great women like those in Miami and LA would have been a great bonus especially for a single guy!

Congratulations to everyone who matched, regardless of where u matched don't forget there is those less fortunate who would love to have ur spot.

Enjoy the rest of your days as a Med student!
21 years ago
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#49775
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SE state school
#6 of 100
Step I 242
Step II 226 taken after interviews
Senior AOA
All honors 3rd year except Neurology
NO Research
Applied to 31 got 14 interviews went on 12
List:
Pitt
Vandy
Greenville
AMC
NYU HJD
Arizona
Miami
Orlando
Baylor
Indiana
Pitt research
UF
Wake
Matched No. 1 Pitt
21 years ago
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#49774
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Step 1- 255
Step 2- 251
AOA
Ortho Research in 1st year med school - no pubs
Multiple Research in college w/ 1 pub abstract
Mostly Honors through all 4 years (only 4 High passes total)
Rotated (home, Sinai, Jeff -- all honors)

Applied: 37 (northeast)
Offered: 27
Attended: 16 (Rochester, RWJ, Pitt, Maryland, UConn, Georgetown, GW, Penn, Jeff, Einstein-Philly, Einstein-NYC, Sinai, SUNYDown, Brown, Penn State, NYU-HJD)

Ranked 14 (did not rank SUNY or Einstein Philly)

Top Ten:
Pitt
Brown
Rochester
Penn State
Penn
RWJ
UConn
NYU-HJD
Sinai
Georgetown

Matched at BROWN!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
So @#$%ing excited and stoked!!!!
21 years ago
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#49773
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For the midwesterners out there. . . .

Low-Mid tier Midwest State School
No home ortho Program
Sr AOA
Step I: 236
Step II: 249 (a few interviewers mentioned this--not sure it helped much, but it didnt hurt)
Preclinical: 5-6 honors
M3: Honors on all rotations.
M4: Honors on Rads, Honors on 2 ortho aways, high pass on 1 ortho away (only rads and one of the ortho honors made my transcript)
No research
Aways at Southern Illinois University, Indiana, and CWRU

Applied to 70: 1 closed, 41 offers, 16 interviews, ranked all 16.
Interviewed at (in no particular order): SIU, CWRU, Indiana, MCW, Madison, Ann Arbor, Loyola, Akron General, Akron Summa, Grand Rapids, Kalzoo, Allegheny, Mayo, UIC, Nebraska, Henry Ford

Matched at my No. 1 SIU!

I sincerely think that I would have received good training at every program on my list and would have been very happy at my top 11.

Here are my thoughts regarding programs and the process for future applicants:

First, dont let anyone tell you there is a perfect program out there--there is only the perfect program for you. Every program has their strengths and weakness; you just need to decide what is important to you. I think it is good to have an idea of what you are looking for when you start the process, although you should keep an open mind. For me, it was helpful in deciding where to rotate, apply, and rank based on my preferences for the three basic questions regarding my training: Who, How, & Where?
Example:
Who: young attendings vs established faculty; laid back vs ambitious residents; big names vs solid teachers;
How: academic vs community; early operative experience vs top heavy experience; mentor (1on1 with faculty) vs team approach; research focus vs technical focus; night float vs overnight call; daily conferences vs weekly conferences; workhorse vs ivory tower; cutting edge vs bread & butter; reputation vs experience; call frequency, presence of VA, presence of children's hospital, relationship between staff and residents, tauma load, etc.
Where: large city vs smaller community; urban vs more rural patient base; desire to buy a home vs apt rental; family friendly vs party friendly; staying close to family vs heading to a new place;
I personally think that if you know how you feel regarding these issues, the whole process will be a little less murky.

Program Highlights:

SIU: This was simply the perfect fit for me. I think they get some of the best jr operative experience anywhere. There is plenty of exposure to tertiary cases, but the focus is on the bread & butter of orthopaedics. I really love the 1on1 training approach. This was the best group of guys I met anywhere and their relationship with the attendings is great. I like the midwestern rural patient base and I challenge someone to find a more affordable community.

Grand Rapids: Outstanding program, probably one of the strongest "community" programs. Great operative experience. I thought the trauma experience was one of its best features.

Akron General & Akron SUMMA: I loved these programs. They both put up a pretty good fight for my top spot. Programs are very similar. Residents are great at both programs but had different personalities which I thought was the main difference between the programs. I think these are programs that everyone who is interested in the midwest should apply to whether they are interested in academic or community programs. I was very impressed.

Kalamazoo: Outstanding operative experience. Very pleasant family friendly community. Only two residents/yr scares me a little and it was still ranked very high.

MCW: Very well balanced program in a very liveable city. I think they probably get a great operative experience, especially for a university based program.

Indiana: Blue collar program. Very well trained. Great group of residents. Great mix of facilities (VA, county hospital, peds hospital, etc.). Great city that is affordable w/ easy commute. Shockingly good call schedule.

Allegheny: Hybrid program. Community program with academic opportunities and focus. Heavy case load. Another program at which I think most people would be pleased to interview whether their focus was academic or community based. Pittsburgh is a very affordable blue collar city.

CWRU: Great residents and big name, approachable faculty. It would have been ranked higher on my list, but it is probably very obvious that I am not very interested in academics and playing russian roulette for the extra research year was less than appealing to me. I think this program would prepare anyone superbly for a career in academia.

I hope this is helpful for future applicants. Congratulations to everyone that matched and good luck to those of you who are going after it again next year. Please feel free to PM me with any questions.
21 years ago
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#49772
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Top tier NW med school
No AOA, just over 50% preclinical honors
Clinical honors in 2 ortho rotations, fam med, neurology, anesthesiology
Step I and II - right around the mean
Research: 2 projects, 1 in submission for publication
Did 1 away rotation at Maricopa, so didn't end up mattering much

Applied to >100 programs, offered 5 interviews, matched at #2, Geisinger, and am thrilled things worked out this way.
21 years ago
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#49771
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This one's for the underdogs out there...

Lower-Mid Tier NE school
No AOA or preclinical honors
Honors - surgery, family, 3 ortho rotations
HighSat - ped, med, ob, neuro
Step I: just dismal
Step II: 235
Research: 1 paper presented, abstracts submitted for 3 other projects
6 yrs work experience prior to med school
Extracurriculars: special olympics (volunteered, not team member), mentoring
Did 5 aways over 4 months, didn't need to do that much in retrospect

Applied to 60+, couples matched w/ Internal Med, offered 10 interviews (in no particular order: drexel, lij, wayne st, henry ford, u maryland, maimonides, jeff, u so cal, agh).

Both of us matched at #3 MCV/VCU...very stoked!!
21 years ago
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#49770
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I don't know what you are talkin bout.................
21 years ago
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#49769
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Hope this helps and gives some hope to those that worry.

NOT AOA
Step I: 230s
Step II: 230s(was on application, mentioned only at 1 interview)

Research: published research
Went to 11 interviews.
2 Away rotations: Emory, Miami

ROL:
1. Emory
2. U Michigan
3. U Iowa
4. U Miami

Matched at No. 1: Emory. God knows how.

Advice: As far as getting the interviews, it helps to be AOA but if you do well on Step I and well during 3rd year, it helps even more. Be cool on your away rotations, work hard. Show them who you are. Don't complain because somebody else always has it worse. Be enthusiastic and ask the residents about life outside of medicine(ie. what to do in spare time, marriage, raising a family). Also, tell your top choice that you want to be there.

Sometimes things don't work out. Still, stick to it and be sure you want to go through this. Take your time deciding and enjoy the ride.
PM me if you want to know more...
21 years ago
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#49768
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Middle tier NE school
Couples Matched with Peds

Step I: 226
Step II: 251 (took early, some places really liked that)
Took a one-year research position b/w 2nd and 3rd year doing cartilage basic science work

Several pubs in Ortho from college and med school, 4 ORS abstracts, other meetings, 2 published papers and 2 pending, a few awards...

Not AOA
Preclinical: not so great
Clinical: Honors (Surg, Med, OB/Gyn), HP (Peds, FamMed), P (Neuro, Psych -- may have actually helped)
Honored 3 Ortho rotations (home, UMDNJ-NJMS, LIJ)

Applied to about 60 programs, offered interviews at 22 programs. Went to 15, ranked all but one (got the bad letter from HSS). Rank list was obviously complicated with the couple's situation, but went something along the line of:
0. HSS -- didn't rank it, but really loved it. What else can I say.
1. LIJ -- Rotated there and loved it. Great faculty, awesome residents, great location, excellent research, awesome ancillary staff.
2. Case -- an awesome place, definitely worth 5 or 6 years in Cleveland, a top notch program amazing facilities
3. Lenox Hill -- another great program with some of the best faculty around, unbeatable location. Would have ranked it higher if not for 8 months out of town for rotations (my S.O. didn't like that idea)
4/5. UMDNJ-NJMS/Rochester (combinations of 6 and 5 year programs). UMDNJ was a place I rotated, I think it is incredible and very well rounded, with outstanding facilities and a great group of residents that are very well trained, would have ranked it higher if not for the location relative to peds programs. Rochester is top-notch, with great facilities and great research, a very friendly and pleasant environment, but my S.O. was ready to call things off over the thought of 5 to 6 years in Rochester, I really liked it though.
6. Miami -- awesome location
7. NYMC-Westchester -- solid program, well-rounded
8. Drexel
9. Henry Ford -- a solid program with nice facilities and nice perks, but it's in Detroit
10. St. Luke's -- probation made it drop a lot in my mind
11. Downstate
12. Einstein/Montefiore
13. Stony Brook
14. Buffalo

In the end, matched at No. 1 -- LIJ, my S.O. got her first choice as well. We couldn't be happier.
21 years ago
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#49767
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Great post by grizzle!

top 20 med school in south, according to USNews.
StepI: 241 (97)
StepII: Have not yet received score. Will update when it arrives.
NOT AOA.
Honored 5 pre clinical rotations, passed the rest.
Honored Surgery, Neuro. High pass Family, Pedi. Pass Medicine, OB/GYN. Currently taking Psych.
Honored all selectives, electives and aways.
Aways at UC Davis and Mayo.
Took year off from school (unfortunately after doing my aways, so the aways did not count during my application) to do research.
Research: 1 basic science Biochemistry publication-not ortho related. 2 presentations (1 in pedi HIV, other in basic science immunology that is kinda ortho related)

Applied to 53 programs. Invitations from 13. Attended 11 due to conflicts (Missed out on Wichita Kansas and UCSF). Ranked 11.

1. UCLA
2. WashU
3. Boston University
4. CASE
5. U. of MD (5 yr)
6. U. Michigan
7. UTHSC San Antonio
8. Henry Ford
9. Penn State
10. Baylor
11. HSS (although they did not rank me)

Ecstatic to have matched at No. 1 UCLA! GREAT program, and I prefer palm trees over snow in the winter.

Congrats to all who matched.
21 years ago
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#49766
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God willing, this may be the last time I log onto this site. This is the fullest record I can create. I hope it helps all y'all coming behind. It is finally over.

Ivy League
AOA/class rank/GPA do not exist at my school. Grades are H/P/F
Step 1: 223/90 (two-digit score is all that matters. PDs can't interpret 3-digit--not a joke)
Step 2: Taking it in April
pre-clin: honors in neuroanatomy, path, histo. Mandatory P/F in gross.
Clin: Honors in Surg and Psych. Grades not back for Peds yet (like it matters) Honors in home and all away ortho rotations, though away grades never made it to application.
Research: Strong research, but not stellar. 1 ORS presentation, but tons of awards/grants/fellowships, Co-wrote one book chapter in The Adult Hip.
Extracurric: President of Med school (didn't matter), lead several do-gooder type projects (may have helped), nightclub dj (certainly helped)
Aways: HSS, RUSH, Emory
Letters: 3 from home faculty (couple of v. famous folks), and one from an away. All were very very strong (I think this is probably the best part of my app)
Personal Statement: I write very well, and it was good.

Interviews: I wanted to be in a big city. Applied to 49 programs. Interviews offered at ~14. Declined 2-3 due to conflicts.

HSS,St. Luke's, Maimonides, Mt. Sinai, Einstein/Montefiore, RUSH, Emory (incl. in rotation), UCSF, UPEnn, BU, UF-Jax, URochester, Yale, Brown, Howard.

Rejected by many, including Harvard, Columbia, HJD, Tulane, Temple, Miami, UVA, Hopkins, MD, Union Memorial, Ochsner, Georgetown, Duke, Carolinas MC, UNC, allegheny, Northwestern, UIC, Loyola, Stanford, UCLA, USC, UF GAinesville, UMDNJ, SUNYs (take your pick--they all canned me).

I ended up ranking 10 schools, though 3 had 6-year spots and I ranked a total of 12 (Ranked Rochester's 5 year only)

I received the "not good, not bad" letter from HSS, and a v. encouraging call from RUSH. Several other programs also sent v. nice letters, but usually shy of the "we are in love with you and ranking you No. 1" letter. Take all these with a grain of salt, however.

My top 3 (which rotated several times prior to finalizing)
1. HSS
2. RUSH
3. UCSF

Ended up at #2--RUSH and am thrilled. I was lucky to have such a deep list, that the difference between No. 1 and #3 isn't huge and #3 and #5 is non-existent. I had ivies that didn't crack the top 7. Chicago is one of the best cities in the country, and certainly my favorite of all that I'd been considering (personally hate NYC, but can tolerate). RUSH is a very strong program with great research and NO OVERNIGHT CALL. EVER. You have to love it.

My take on the programs, in brief:

HSS and RUSH are quite similar, though on different scales. Strengths include excellent faculty, cutting-edge research, ridiculous facilities, experience with tons of cases, strong sports and joints and spine. Great cities, obviously. HSS gives you cheap housing, which is good, but in the Chi, you can afford to own property, which is definitely a plus. Nice to leave residency with assets > liabilities.

Weaknesses include limited hot trauma experience, limited clinic experience, occassional feeling that you are a a cog in the surgery machine.

Differences: Rush has the benefit of being a real hospital, not a boutique, so you can still see patients with non-ortho ailments and get consults like you'll do in the real world. The downside, of course, is that you have all those annoying consults and have to share resources with other depts. Also, as it's smaller, its positives are not in the same abundance as HSS, but are still present. Added, but silly benefit: Rush's OR has the most amazing panoramic view of downtown chicago. Really beautiful.


Other programs: UCSF is awesome. seemingly v. well balanced. Experience at several different types of hospitals, wonderful location, though ungodly expensive and your salary is crap. Interim chair is nice, but they haven't had a real chair for several years now. Some folks worry about HIV rate. This was No. 1 for a while for me.

Don't sleep on Mt. Sinai, Brown, Emory, Yale, Penn.

All great programs. Brown and Emory have the most incredible trauma experiences you can want. Emory's may be a bit too incredible. People at both are very nice, especially Emory. Brown has several world-class, world-famous folks and a very resident-friendly chair. He can get you whatever fellowship you want. Must note that there is a mandatory 6th year which is a built-in trauma fellowship. You lose a year, but you gain great skills and experience autonomy, but with a net. You are also v. marketable with a trauma fellowship in your pocket--definite plus over just a 6th research year. Emory balances its Grady trauma experience with brand new, beautiful private office space and ORs in the 'burbs. ATL is awesome. Providence is much better than expected. Very liveable city and close to NYC and Boston.

Don't believe the going story about Yale. It's a great program with early hands-on experience, great faculty and great residents. Downside is New Haven, though that's better than it was.

Sinai is nice. Small and v. hard-working. If you love NYC, consider it strongly.

Penn was very impressive. Incredibly nice and concerned Chair--wouldn't leave until he knew that we all had travel/lodging arrangements as we got caught in a blizzard. Super facilities. CHOP has to be seen to be believed. Philly is better than expected too.


Others still--

U of Rochester may be the single best program I visited (honestly, I think it's probably the best program in the country and would rank it above HSS, RUSH, and UCSF for sheer training and research). Brilliant Chair who is so nice, you think he's hiding something. first-rate faculty. Great hospital. BUT IT'S IN ROCHESTER, NY. Deal-breaker for a single guy, but probably ideal if you have a S.O. and certainly if you have a family (good schools, cheap real estate, etc.)

Howard--DC is great. This program is better than anticipated. V. small, but dedicated faculty. Good trauma experience. Nice facilities and lifestyle. Not overly academic, but working on it.

Einstein/Montefiore
Blue-collar, in a good way. Very Nice chair. Good facilities. Bronx has low cost of living for NYC.

UF Jacksonville
Growing program. Fantastic Chair--clearly the strength here. Weather is nice, but not miami Jax is a bit down-trodden, but real estate is cheap. Frat atmosphere to program (ivy league background and research were actually seen as negatives here by many). Young faculty, not much depth/experience. Informal, though. You will learn to operate, but not much else. Could be great fit for someone who isn't me.

St. Luke's
On probation. Avoid.


TAKE HOME MESSAGE(S):

1) I know how ludicrous this sounds, but don't stress about the process, 3rd years. Not because it isn't stressful, but because it doesn't help. Note that my numbers are not that impressive, but I still got interviews at the top programs in the country. I also got rejected by some top programs and some programs that I considered sure-bet safeties. The process is fickle.

2) The best thing you can do to match is away rotations. Period. Rotate where you want to end up. Don't sell yourself short--if a school is a safety, it's a safety; don't waste a month somewhere you wouldn't want to live. Do well on rotations by showing up on time, being nice, and being interested. That's all there is to it, I promise.

3) Rank programs according to your desires, no one else's (unless you have a S.O. to consider, then make them happy or you'll both be miserable). There is no gain to trying to anticipate how programs will rank you.

4) All the games--thank you notes, 2nd looks, calls from people--are just that. Don't get sucked in. Clearly department connections can help (but they can also hurt; many PDs get off on trading applicants like baseball cards). Just do what you do, because these people will do what they do. And remember, these people DO NOT LOVE YOU. You are at best an employee and all employees are replaceable. If you match at your first choice dream program and they send you wine and roses, don't forget that you are expendable. If you got hit by a bus before you started there, they would not change their OR schedule to attend your funeral. They might send your folks flowers. It is sad, but true. All the same, try to work with people who seem nice and concerned about your well-being at least a bit. It will make your life easier.

The process is ugly, it's cold, but it's manageable. Just don't think you have any more control than you do. Letting go can be the best thing, sometimes.

This shit is just a job, nothing more. There are tons of other great jobs, arguably better, both in and out of medicine. Don't be afraid to pick something else. If I hadn't matched, I was going to law school and would finish at least 2 years earlier and make more money. While I admire and respect the attitude of the "ortho is the only thing that will make me happy" people who try and try again, and do, eventually achieve their goals, I don't get it. Life is too precious. But we all just have to do our thing, I suppose.

Okay, kids. Best of luck. I still may check PMs from time to time.

-Grizzle-
21 years ago
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#49765
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Information withdrawn
21 years ago
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#49764
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Couples matched with OB/Gyn
Mid tier Northern state school
Step 1: 258
Step 2: 257
Junior AOA
4/6 Clinical Honors (not peds or ob)
No ortho research; 1 retrospective ENT study (really weak!)
Applied to 50, got 28 interviews, took 12
Programs ranked in no particular order: Chatt, MUSC, Greenville, USC, Carolinas, Lenox Hill, WVU, Akron General, Allegheny, Arkansas, Miami, Kentucky.
Matched at Akron and could not be happier. There have been several posts talking about what an excellent program this is and it is really true. The chairman is a solid guy and he sold me on this program very quickly. For all you third years, this is definitely a place you want to apply to.
21 years ago
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#49763
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Private NE School
Step 1: 239
Step 2: after list submitted
+AOA
Honored 3 ortho rotations
1 ortho case report submitted, accepted after interview season
1 plastics presentation

Applied to 54, offered 26? interviews, went on 16.

1. NYU-HJD
2. Mt. Sinai
3. Lenox Hill
4. Columbia
5. LIJ
6. St. Luke's
...
Geographic concerns influenced my list
XX if anyone cares

Matched at No. 1 NYU-HJD!
Congrats to all...
Feel free to PM w/ any questions
21 years ago
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#49762
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Top Tier Med School in NE
Step 1- 255
Step 2- 240 (took after interviews)
AOA senior year
Honors in half of third year, surg, ob/gyn (does anyone care?), familymed with sports med emphasis
Honors in all ortho rotations, ortho research rotation
3 projects, no publications

Applied to 30, 22 offered, went on 13, ranked 12

Top 5 in ranking
Pitt
AGH
Akron General
Ohio State
Case

Matched at No. 1 Pitt (6yr)
21 years ago
·
#49761
0
Votes
Undo
Unbelievable, can't believe its all over! Congratulations to everyone.

mid-tier midwest school
step 1: 249/99
step 2: 247/99 (results after ROL due)
+AOA
Top 10% of class
Honors in IM/peds/FP
GS - pass
3 ortho rotations - honors
+ortho research
-publications
applied to 60+
offered 11, attended all

1. Ochsner clinic
2. Baylor
3. Brown
4. UTSW
5. Cincy
6. SLU
7. UMKC
8. KU
9. Wayne State
10. Henry Ford
11. Medical College of Ohio

Matched at No. 1 Ochsner!
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What more can you ask? OK, love to hang but need some zzz before i head out to tahoe in the early AM!!
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