The Gateway to Your Orthopaedic Career.
  Friday, 11 January 2008
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Hey,
I want to start a thread where females interested in ortho can see how they compare, where to apply, etc.

Please give the following info:

School (Top 50/Not top 50/Public/Private in what area of the US)
Step I score
Step II score (if you waited to take it and if it makes a difference)
Grades during 3rd year
Research Experience (publications, abstracts, posters, or just involvement and if it helped, i.e. did they ask you about it during interviews)

Programs that you rotated away at and what you thought about them, including whether being a female worked against you, for you, or didn't even matter while you were there. Any programs you suggest that are female friendly or have great female role models? Or just which programs you liked best and why for any reason.

Programs you've applied to. How many you would suggest?

Programs you've been offered interviews at.

Programs you've been accepted to (if you're already a resident or beyond). If a resident, do you have any children? Did you have them before, during or after residency?

Just extra notes on women you've met doing ortho, how it's affected their family life - applicants, residents, fellows, women working in the field.

Has being a female worked against you/for you/doesn't matter during interview season?
18 years ago
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#53795
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I am a female ortho resident and I would have found this helpful when I was applying, so I will answer some of these questions.

School: East coast school with a strong ortho program
Step I score: 254
Step II score: 253 (the programs did not get the score before the match)
Grades during 3rd year: 3 A's, 3 A-'s
Research Experience: 3 publications, one presentation at a national meeting - it was all basic science reasearch - not ortho, yes I did get asked about it in interviews

Programs that you rotated away at and what you thought about them, including whether being a female worked against you, for you, or didn't even matter while you were there:

I rotated at a West coast program, I do not think that being female mattered.

Programs you've applied to: 35

Programs you've been offered interviews at:
22


Programs you've been accepted to (if you're already a resident or beyond). If a resident, do you have any children? Did you have them before, during or after residency?

I matched at one of my top choices and one of the most female-friendly programs I encountered. I do not have children but several residents (both male and female) do have children in my program. I have never felt that gender has mattered during my residency.

Any programs you suggest that are female friendly or have great female role models? Or just which programs you liked best and why for any reason.
The programs I found to be most female friendly (in alphabetical order):
Columbia, George Washington, UCSF, University of Minnesota, and University of Pennsylvania

Just extra notes on women you've met doing ortho, how it's affected their family life - applicants, residents, fellows, women working in the field.


Most women I have met in ortho have happy and successful personal lives. I think that going into a surgical field will affect choices about family because of the long hours and hard work, but ortho is probably not much different from the other surgical subspecialities.

Has being a female worked against you/for you/doesn't matter during interview season?

I think that female applicants have to get their foot in the door with good grades, board scores, research, and performance on rotations. Once you get an interview, being female probably works both ways, depending on the program.

I basically thought that most programs fell into one of 4 categories:
1) Programs that had women faculty/residents and were interested in continuing to match females into the program
2) Programs that that had women faculty/residents and did not seem to care about gender
3) Programs that did not have many female faculty/residents and were interested in getting more female residents
4) Programs that did not have or want female faculty/residents

I ranked programs in categories 1&2 over those in 3&4 because I did not want gender to be an issue during residency.

I hope this helps. Feel free to PM me if you have any questions.
18 years ago
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#53796
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Wow, thanks for the info! Much appreciated.
18 years ago
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#53797
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I didn't actually get in, but I will through in my two cents.

School: West coast private school with a strong ortho program
Step I score: 205 (ouch)
Step II score: 240 (had it for the second time around)
Grades during 3rd year: 3 honors, 6 HP
Research Experience: None the first time around. Five manuscripts in various stages of completion the second. It came up both times, and I think having some was helpful

Programs that you rotated away at and what you thought about them, including whether being a female worked against you, for you, or didn't even matter while you were there:

UCSD-heard a few jokes about the size of one of the female residents, but it didn't really seem to be a problem.
UF Jacksonville-didn't seem to matter.

Programs you've applied to: lots (around 60 I think)

Programs you've been offered interviews at:
5 each time (plus some GS ones the second time


Programs you've been accepted to (if you're already a resident or beyond). If a resident, do you have any children? Did you have them before, during or after residency?

Matched into my first choice GS program.

Any programs you suggest that are female friendly or have great female role models? Or just which programs you liked best and why for any reason.

Was told that Loma Linda was trying to get a female (didn't actually happen though). West coast programs seemed pretty gender neutral in general. Didn't come across any that seemed anti-woman, but could be that they just aren't open about it. In colorado they seemed pretty open to people trying to have babies.

Just extra notes on women you've met doing ortho, how it's affected their family life - applicants, residents, fellows, women working in the field.




Has being a female worked against you/for you/doesn't matter during interview season?

I think that since there are some places that still want to keep ortho a boys club it affects you ability to get an interview unless you are a stellar candidate, while if you were a boy you might get by with a lesser application. Just a thought from someone who didn't make it though.
15 years ago
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#53798
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Thanks so much for the info... I hope this thread comes back in the next couple years. I'm a female MSII at a public school in the southwest US interested in ortho. Doing as much research as I can get my hands on (right now doing a sweet internship in CA) but nervous for Step 1. We'll see...

Anyway, just wanted to say 'thanks'! If any of you ever have the overwhelming desire to offer any specific advice on ortho or Step 1, PLEASE feel free to PM me.
15 years ago
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#53799
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I'd like to bring this thread back up... can anyone out there comment on this?
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