The Gateway to Your Orthopaedic Career.
  Monday, 11 March 2013
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Take heart.

Congratulations to those who are getting good news today. And for those who received bad news, I'm truly sorry. I was in your position before, so I know the emotional kick-in-the-nuts that not matching is. Keep in mind that there is a much higher number of qualified applicants than there are residency positions, so it is bound to happen to a lot of strong applicants. I'm sorry that you're one of them. It sucks, but from someone who was in your shoes not so long ago, here's my advice.

1. Celebrate with your friends. This week sucks for you, but on Match day be there for everyone you know. Its awkward and depressing, but saying "I didn't match" to a hundred people that you're close with will make it a lot easier to say the rest of the year, and believe me, you'll need to be comfortable with it. This year will be hard, and you have to swallow your pride and face facts if you're going to get in next time.

2. Nothing is going to stop you from feeling shitty today, and I can't blame you. But today you have some decisions to make. First decision is 'Do I still pursue Ortho'? If you are a qualified applicant and your answer is "yes", then the next question is 'Prelim year versus Research year'. Each has their own advantages and disadvantages, and really it comes down to which will help improve your application for next year.

3. Assess your application. Scrutinize it as closely as you can and determine what aspect wasn't perfect. If its something you can fix, DO IT! If not (Step 1, Grades) find a proxy that can demonstrate that your deficit was the exception, not the rule.

4. Recruit. Get some people on board who could go to bat for you this coming year. You'll need advocates. Keep in mind that one strong advocate probably goes a lot farther than a lot of mediocre ones.

5. Don't get too down. If you really are a strong, committed applicant, then your chances of matching are better than not. Nothing is guaranteed, but at this point nothing is final.

Again, I'm sorry. If I can be of any help or support, please PM me.
13 years ago
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#58147
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Thanks to the above poster for doing this. I have also been there and wanted to post something with the intention of being helpful to those who did not match.

It's been five years now, but I remember the day I got the phone call telling me I didn't match quite well. Many of you, like me, probably had no back-up plan in place and were not expecting this. I've met several people who didn't match over the last five years, and though I'm sure there are some exceptions out there everyone I've met seems like a great candidate, easy to work with and all around the type of person I'd like as a fellow resident. I don't understand how or why this happens. Five years later I still have no idea why it happened to me, though I asked everyone I could think of what was missing or wrong in my application, interview, hair color, whatever. No one as of yet has been able to help me explain it. However, as one of the people interviewing me recently for fellowship said, "it really doesn't matter at this point". That's the crux of what I wanted to say. Five years from now, this will be behind you. Other than putting me a year behind my peers and the expense of interviewing and moving twice, I cannot think of a long term negative consequence of my not matching the first time around. You will get through this.

Many good suggestions are given above, and I'd also say to look at previous years' posts titled not matching or black Monday or whatever in March. Much of the information in those posts was helpful for me.

I went the prelim surgery year route. I could not afford to delay graduation financially speaking. I had a family already, and needed to start working, and that was the most sure option for me to do so. There are several ways to do this, but as mentioned above you need to first figure out if you want to stick with ortho or not. It's not easy to stick with this and get in, but if you really want it, you can certainly make it happen. The only thing lower than an intern is a prelim intern, and if you take that route you'll see what I mean. However, you'll learn a ton, and after that year no one can question your resolve to be an orthopaedic surgeon. I use some of the intangeables I learned that year every day.

Good luck. PM me if I can be helpful.
13 years ago
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#58148
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I agree with everything stated above. I too did not match and have no idea why. It does happen to good and even great candidates. Please read my previous post for some info regarding my match process. i do want to support the Prelim route.

The second time around it was a breeze and I was pretty certain it was going to work out. The whole process is better and you have a much bigger advantage going through again once you get the interviews. Coming in knowing how to take care of surgical patients and be a doctor was a huge plus for the programs that chose to interview me a second time around.

Feel Free to contact me for advice over the next year. And trust me, dont give up on ortho if this is what you want. I couldnt be happier right now at my program.
13 years ago
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#58149
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I did not match and will be able to rotate with an ortho program for 1 month as a prelim anywhere in the country. What programs have a strong history of taking prelims?
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