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Schedule for aways / applying after graduation

  • throwadogabone
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15 years 8 months ago - 15 years 8 months ago #30244 by throwadogabone
Schedule for aways / applying after graduation was created by throwadogabone
Hi!

I have a unique situation and was hoping to get some feedback on elements of my plan. I'm a 4th year med student in the US scheduled to graduate this year, but my wife is in another city about 6 hours away for 2 years of grad school. At the end of those two years, she has to move to a third city for her job. Obviously, it would be ideal if we wouldn't have to live apart for years at a time so I am considering doing a year of research following graduation, which would finish at the same time as her grad school, and then start my residency in the third city (ideally). I have three quick questions:

1) In order to do this, I'd have to do my away electives in March and April of this year. Is this too early for aways? I already did a rotation at my home program so they wouldn't be my first ortho exposure, but I'm concerned that they won't remember me when the ranking time comes.

2) Is there a disadvantage to applying for residency following graduation? I've looked at the statistics and it appears to be much more difficult to match as an 'independent' applicant than a 'US Senior". However, the 'independent' category includes re-applicants and FMGs so it seems impossible to predict how applying after graduation would affect a US senior applying for the first time after med school. Any thoughts?

3) Should I simply 'postpone' graduation for one year and apply as a US Senior? I could then do away electives this upcoming summer. The reason this isn't as appealing is because most post-doc fellowships require a commitment of at least one year, which means it needs to start in June. Also, the salary difference between a pre-doc researcher and a post-doc researcher is huge (~20,000 vs ~40,000).

Hope this wasn't too long. I'm in desperate need of advice. Thanks for your help!

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15 years 8 months ago - 15 years 8 months ago #19548 by
Replied by on topic Well. In the grand scheme
Well. In the grand scheme of all this 20K may seem like a lot of money but in reality thats nothing. So I have learned to never make a decision based soley on money.

To put it in perspective....my ortho residency and fellowship interviews...including suits, travel, lodging, registration....have cost neraly 20 grand.....

If I were you....live the year apart and figure it out....you should just apply straight off like everyone else...

I hate to tell you this...but its much harder to get an ortho residency than a year long research job...so you need to priortize and put your career first for logical reasons....

and dont worry about the 20 difference...its peanuts in the big picture.

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15 years 7 months ago - 15 years 7 months ago #19757 by
I'm not an attending but I can tell you that your best option from an application standpoint is to not finish medical school and apply as a US senior, ie prolong your fourth year coursework over the course of 2 years and do research concomitantly.

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