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Is there any advantage to attending a top med school?

Q. Is there any advantage to attending a top med school?A. My previous answer to the advantages of attending top medical schools in matching with top competitive residency programs. Bottom line, even though the best students in any medical school can match into their specialty choice, graduates from top medical schools regardless of class rank, tend to favor the more competitive specialties (less primary care) and match into the best residency programs in those specialties. This is particularly helpful if there is aspiration for an academic career and perhaps leadership in that specialty, the politics of that specialty and perhaps leadership in medicine/medical education (US and transnational) where pedigree matters. I analyzed the 2016 Match data from medical schools of various tiers.Q. Do med students who go to schools such as JHU, Stanford, UCLA, WashU, etc., have an easier time matching with the top competitive residency programs?A2A. From the 2016 match, top tier schools did very well in matching to the most competitive specialties. Many took their own students eg. Stanford matched Dermatology (6). There is disproportionate representation in the most sought after fields, like Wash U matching Orthopedics (10), JHU matching ENT (8), and Duke matching Opthalmology (9), despite class size of only 96. The programs they match into are top tier in their specialties as well. These schools have a high percentage not going into Primary Care, giving room for Caribbean/osteopathic graduates. Mid tier schools like Texas A&M (class size may be a factor) astoundingly matched Dermatology (10), Opthalmology (3), Orthopedics (8). Newly opened schools like Texas Tech El Paso matched Dermatology (1), Opthalmology (3), Orthopedics (3), and Neurosurgery (1). Even the inaugural class of U of South Carolina Greenville matched into Orthopedics (2), Neurosurgery (1), and Urology (1).General Surgery is in decline.In the end, if you performed well in any US medical school and have commendable USMLE scores, you have a good chance of matching into your desired specialty.Harvard matched Dermatology (10), Opthalmology (6), Neurosurgery (2), OMFS (3), Orthopedics (4), Otolaryngology (3), Rad Onc (8), Urology (3), Vascular Surg (2).Stanford matched Dermatology (7), Opthalmology (2), Neurosurgery (2), Orthopedics (3), Otolaryngology (2), Rad Onc (2), Vasc Surg (1).Yale matched Dermatology (4), Opthalmology (4), Neurosurgery (2), Orthopedics (6), ENT (4), Rad Onc (4), Urology (3).JHU matched Dermatology (1), Opthalmology (4), Neurosurgery (4), Orthopedics (5), ENT (8), Urology (3).Wash U matched Dermatology (6), Opthalmology (3), Orthopedics (10), Otolaryngology (1), Rad Onc (2), Urology (3), Vascular Surg (1).Duke matched Dermatology (2), Opthalmology (9), Neurosurgery (3), Orthopedics (8), Otolaryngology (1), Rad Onc (2), Plastic Surg (3).Texas A&M matched Dermatology (10), Opthalmology (3), Orthopedics (8), Otolaryngology (2), Plastic Surgery (2), Urology (2), Vascular Surg (1).Texas Tech El Paso matched Dermatology (1), Opthalmology (3), Orthopedics (3), Neurosurgery (1).U South Carolina- Greenville (inaugural class) matched Neurosurgery (1), Orthopedics (2), Urology (1).Touro California / TUCOM-CA matched AOA programs in Opthalmology (1), Orthopedics (1), ENT (1), Neurosurgery (1).Ross University - Primary Care 2016 Ross University ResidencyHMS 2016 Match ListAnesthesiology (5) MGH, BWH (3), BIDMCDermatology (9) UCSF, NYU, Harvard (3), Stanford, NYP-Columbia, Duke, UPMCMed-Derm (1) HarvardEmergency Medicine (9) Harvard BWH/MGH (2), NYU, Stanford, UNC, HopkinsDuke, Georgia Regents, Rutgers RWJMSFamily Medicine (4) Contra Costa, Brown/Memorial Hosp, Swedish Med Center/First Hill, Harbor-UCLAGeneral Surgery (6) BWH, U Washington, Stanford, BIDMC, UCSF East Bay, BMCInternal Medicine-Primary Care (8) UCSF, BWH (2), MGH (3), CHA, BIDMCInternal Medicine (34) JHU (2), MGH (7), BWH (8), UCSF (2), NYP-Columbia (2), U Washington (2), Stanford (3), Brown (3), NYP-Cornell (research), UCLA (2),BIDMC, NYU, OHSUChild Neuro (1) CHBNeurology (6) (BWH/MGH) (4), NYP-Columbia, Mt. SinaiNeurological Surgery (2) MGH, UCLAOB/GYN (12) UCSF, Northwestern, Hopkins (2), Duke, Brown, Yale, U Washington, Einstein/Montefiore, BIDMC (3)Ophthalmology (6) MEEI (2), USC, UCSD, BMC, IEEIOMFS (3) MGH (3)Orthopedic Surgery (4) Harvard (2), UCSF, Naval Medical Ctr, PortsmouthOtolaryngology (3) Hopkins, MEEI, UCSFPathology (2) MGH, BWHPediatrics (5) Boston Combined - CHB (3), U Washington, MGHPediatrics-Primary Care (1) UCSFPlastic Surgery (2) U Washington, Einstein/MontefiorePsychiatry (11) MGH/McLean (3), UCSF, Harvard Longwood, Stanford (2), Stanford (research), U Washington, Penn, Case Western/MetroHealthRadiation Oncology (8) MD Anderson, Harvard (3), U Washington, Jefferson, NYP-Cornell, City of HopeRadiology (4) UCSF, Penn/HUP, NYP-Cornell, Maine MedUrology (3) BWH, MGH, Mt. SinaiVascular Surgery (2) U Penn, MGH=======Non-Clinical (3) JP Morgan, Boston Consulting Group, Bain & Company, FilmmakerTransitional Year (5) Santa Clara Valley, BIDMC/Brockton (2), Cambridge Health Alliance, Steward CarneyPrelim surgery (5) U Washington, MGH, St Lukes-Roosevelt, BWH, Mt SinaiPrelim medicine (25) BIDMC (4), BWH (10), Duke, MGH (4), Mt Auburn (3), Presbyterian Hosp, Dallas, St Lukes-Roosevelt, UT HoustonStanford University Match List 2016Anesthesiology (2) Stanford, UCSFChild Neurology (2) Stanford (2)Dermatology (7) NYP Hosp-Columbia Univ Med Ctr, Stanford (6)Emergency Medicine (3) UCSF, MGH (2)Family Medicine (1) U ColoradoGeneral Surgery (3) BWH, MGH, Stanford (2)Internal Medicine (16) BIDMC, BWH (3), Case (Phys-Sci), UPenn, MGH (3), NYP Hosp-Columbia, NYU (Clin Invest Track), Stanford, UC Riverside, U Colorado, Yale-New Haven Hosp, Yale-New Haven Hosp (Phys-Sci)Medicine-Primary (7) BU (Preventive), BWH (3), Dartmouth, MGH, UCLANeurology (1) UCSFNeurological Surgery(2) U Utah, StanfordObstetrics-Gyn (3) BWH, Stanford, White Mem Med CtrOphthalmology (2) New York Eye & Ear Infirm, StanfordOrthopedic Surgery (3) Baylor, GWU, Hosp For Special Surg-NYOtolaryngology (2) Johns Hopkins Hosp, U Texas Southwestern MedPathology (1) BWHPediatrics (5) Childrens Hosp-Philadelphia, Stanford(2), UC Davis, U WashingtonPlastic Surgery (3) Stanford (2), U WashingtonPsychiatry (4) Stanford Univ (3), U IowaRadiology-Diagnostic (3) MGH, Stanford, U UtahRadiation-Oncology (2) MSK, StanfordThoracic Surgery (1) StanfordVascular Surgery (1) StanfordYale 2016 Match ListAnesthesiology (1) StanfordDermatology (4) Northwestern, Walter Reed, Case, UCSFDiagnostic Radiology (2) UCSF (2)EM (6) Carolinas Med Ctr, UCSF, Penn, Icahn, Harbor-UCLA, NYPH - Columbia & CornellFamily Med (1) BUInternal Medicine (19) UCSF, Penn, Duke (3), Mayo - Rochester, Northwestern, NYPH-Columbia, MGH (2), U Wash (2), UCSF, Penn, BU, JHU,Albert Einstein/Montefiore, BWH, Madigan ArmyInternal Medicine / Primary Care (4) Penn, U Wash, BU, BWHNeurology (2) Yale, StanfordNeurosurgery (2) MGH, YaleOBGYN (6) Penn, UCLA, Northwestern, NYPH - Columbia, Yale (2)Ophtho (4) UCSF, NYU, Mayo - Rochester, Harvard - MEEIOrtho (6) Barnes-Jewish, Case, Yale, HSS, Penn, RushENT (4) Stanford, Icahn (2), Harvard - MEEIPathology (2) Penn, StanfordPediatrics (3) U Wash, Stanford (2)Plastic Surgery (2) Yale, UT Medical BranchPsychiatry (4) Yale (3), Cambridge Health AllianceRad Onc (4) MSK, Yale, JHU, UCLAUrology (1) IcahnJohns Hopkins 2016 match listAnesthesia (2) U Penn, U WisconsinDermatology (1) JHUENT (8) HMS/Mass Eye and Ear (2), JHU, USC, CCF, Mayo, Barnes-Jewish, UCSDEmergency Medicine (10) Icahn, BU, NMC Portsmouth, NYU, Alameda Health Systems – Highland (2) , UNC, U Conn, JHU (2)Family Medicine (3) Swedish Medical Center, Sutter Med Center, BUInternal Medicine (20) JHU (8), MGH (3), UCSF (3), BWH, UTSW, U Penn, UColorado, NYU, IcahnMed-Peds (1) JHUPediatrics (4) UCLA, CHOP, Stanford, ColumbiaNeurology (2) UCSF, BWHNeurosurgery (4) NYU, JHU, Duke, U WisconsinOBGYN (5) UCSF (2), UCSD, Yale, ColumbiaOphthalmology (4) JHU (2), U Iowa, U MichiganOrthopedics Surgery (5) JHU (3), U Conn, UNCPathology (4) JHU, UCSF, BWH, MGHPsychiatry (9) JHU (4), MGH (2), Yale, UCSF, NYUPM&R (2) JHU, StanfordRadiology (5) Albert Einstein (Diagnostic), BWH (IR), MGH, Florida – Orlando,JHU (Nuclear)General Surgery (12) BWH (2), Duke, NMC San Diego, JHU, Morehouse, Yale, UCSF, UCLA, U Iowa, Washington Hospital Ctr, JHU (Prelimary), Wash Med CtrThoracic Surgery (1) U PennUrology (3) Stanford, JHU, EmoryColumbia University College of Physicians & SurgeonsAnesthesiology (9) MGH, Columbia (5), U Michigan, Vanderbilt, YaleBusiness (3)Child Neurology (2) Columbia, StanfordDermatology (8) U Penn, Columbia (2), NYU, U Chicago, U Colorado, UCLA, YaleEmergency Medicine (13) Alameda Health System, Duke (2), Einstein/Jacobi Med Ctr (2), Icahn (3), Maimonides Medical Center, MGH (2), NY Methodist, UCLAFamily Medicine (3) Institute for Family Health-NY, UCSF, U MontanaInternal Medicine (36) BU, BWH, Einstein/Montefiore (2), Harbor-UCLA, U Penn,Icahn, JHU, MGH, Mayo, Northwestern, Columbia (12), NYU (3), Stanford, U Colorado, U Mich, UTSW, UCSF (3), Vanderbilt, Yale (2)Neurological Surgery (7) Emory, Northwestern, Columbia, Rutgers-New Jersey, U Cincinnati, USC, Wash U/ BarnesNeurology (5) BWH, Columbia (2), NYU, YaleObstetrics & Gynecology (7) Christiana Care (2), U Penn, Columbia, NYP Hosp-Weill Cornell, NYU (2)Ophthalmology (6) CCF, MEEI/Harvard, Nassau University, Northwestern,NYP Hosp-Columbia, SUNY UpstateOral & Maxillofacial Surgery (2) Columbia (2)Orthopedic Surgery (5) Madagan Army, Columbia (2), USC, UCSDOtolaryngology (5) U Penn, Columbia, Stanford, U Cincinnati, U UtahPathology (5) JHU, Columbia (2), NYP Hosp-Weill Cornell, StanfordPediatrics (23) Children's LA, Children’s Boston, CHOP, Cincinnati (2), Einstein/Montefiore, Emory, INOVA Fairfax Hospital, JHU, Nationwide Children’s, Columbia (7), Stanford, U Massachusetts, U Pitt (2), U Vermont, UCSFPsychiatry (14) U Penn, MGH (2), Columbia (3), NYP Weill Cornell (3), NYU,Thomas Jefferson, USC, U Washington (2)Radiation Oncology (2) Emory, NYURadiology – Diagnostic (4) U Penn (2), NYP-Columbia, NYP-Weill CornellSurgery – General (7) Albany Med Ctr, U Penn, NYMC-Westchester, Rutgers-RWJ, U Mich, U Wash, VanderbiltSurgery – Preliminary (2) Hofstra NSLIJ, ColumbiaSurgery – Thoracic (1) ColumbiaWashington University Match List 2016Anesthesiology (5) Barnes-Jewish, New York-Presbyterian, Rush, UCLA, U PittsDermatology (6) Barnes-Jewish (2), Baylor, JHU, U Mich, U PittsEmergency Medicine (4) Barnes-Jewish, Baylor, JHU, UCSFFamily Medicine (1) U CincinnatiGeneral Surgery (2) Northwestern, U ConnInternal Medicine (20) Barnes-Jewish (10), Hofstra North Shore-LIJ, JHU (2), MGH (3), Northwestern, Oregon (2), U ArizonaNeurology (4) Barnes-Jewish, BWH, U Penn, UCSFObstetrics and Gynecology (4) Case, Montefiore/Einstein, Tulane, UCSDOphthalmology (3) UCLA, U Mich, Wash UOrthopaedic Surgery (10) Barnes-Jewish, Cedars-Sinai, HSS, Ohio State,Oregon, Thomas Jefferson University, UCLA, UCSF, U Iowa, U RochesterOtolaryngology (1) NYUPathology (4) Barnes-Jewish (2), Stanford, UCLAPediatrics (10) Children's Boston (2), Medical College of Wisconsin, NYU, St. Louis Children's (3), UCSF, Baylor, Children's NationalPlastic Surgery (2) Barnes-Jewish, U MichiganPsychiatry (4) Barnes-Jewish (2), UTSW, YaleRadiation-Oncology (2) Baylor, U WisconsinRadiology-Diagnostic (2) MGH, UCSDUrology (3) Barnes-Jewish, Oregon, U PittsVascular Surgery (1) IndianaWake Foresthttp://www.wakehealth.edu/uploadedF...ervices/Documents/2016 HO List (External).pdfNorthwesternhttp://www.feinberg.northwestern.ed...ring/Summer+2013&utm_campaign=Ward+RoundsSUNY Downstatehttp://sls.downstate.edu/student...VCUhttp://www.medschool.vcu.edu/med...Columbiahttp://ps.columbia.edu/education...Georgetownhttps://som.georgetown.edu/prosp...Coloradohttp://www.ucdenver.edu/academics/c...MatchDay2016/Documents/2016 Match Results.pdfEVMShttps://www.evms.edu/media/depar...American University of the Caribbeanhttp://www.aucmed.edu/alumni/res...Brown Universityhttps://www.brown.edu/academics/...Eastern Virginia Medical School:http://www.evms.edu/media/depart...George Washington University:http://smhs.gwu.edu/academics/md...Ohio State University:http://medicine.osu.edu/students/li...Documents/Match Results by Specialty 2016.pdfRoss University:http://www.rossu.edu/medical-sch...Southern Illinois University:http://www.siumed.edu/news/Relea...St. George:https://postgrad.sgu.edu/Residen...UIC-Chicago:http://chicago.medicine.uic.edu/...UIC-Peoria:http://peoria.medicine.uic.edu/User...tudent Affairs/2016 Residency Assignments.pdfUIC-Urbana-Champaign:http://www.med.illinois.edu/sa/m...University of Buffalo:http://medicine.buffalo.edu/matc...University of Cincinnati:https://comdo-wcnlb.uc.edu/emos/...University of Florida:https://osa.sites.medinfo.ufl.ed...University of Iowa:http://www.medicine.uiowa.edu/uploa...s/Registrar/Table 6 - Specialty - Publish.pdfUniversity of Miami:http://admissions.med.miami.edu/...University of Nevada:http://medicine.nevada.edu/stude...University of North Carolina:https://www.med.unc.edu/ome/student...ments/senior-placement-by-specialty-2016/viewUniversity of North Dakota:http://www.med.und.edu/student-affa.../docs/2016-match-assignment-report-032116.pdfUniversity of Rochester:https://www.urmc.rochester.edu/Medi...016/documents/Match-Day-2016-Website-List.pdfUniversity of South Alabama:http://www.usahealthsystem.com/workfiles/com_docs/studentaffairs/match_results_2016.pdfUniversity of Wisconsin:http://www.med.wisc.edu/news-eve...University of Vermont:http://www.uvm.edu/medicine/mede...University of Virginia:https://www.med-ed.virginia.edu/...Vanderbilt University:https://medschool.vanderbilt.edu...West Virginia University:http://medicine.hsc.wvu.edu/stud...Wright State University:https://medicine.wright.edu/comm...TTU HSChttps://www.ttuhsc.edu/som/stude...UTMBhttps://www.utmb.edu/iutmb/artic...UTSWhttp://www.utsouthwestern.edu/ne...Baylor College of Medicine 2016Duke Medical Students Celebrate Match Day 2016!Friday, March 18, 2016Each year, fourth year medical students across the country view the third week of March as the start of their future. Match Day is a unified event organized by the National Resident Match Program. On March 18, medical students at Duke University School of Medicine opened their envelopes and learned where in the country they will begin their residency programs.A total of 96 students participated in Match Day at Duke this year and are headed to some of the nation’s most prestigious programs.Among them,23 are staying at Duke University8 are going to John Hopkins University programs7 are going to Harvard University6 are going to University of California at San Francisco programs6 are going to University of Texas Southwestern programs6 are going to the York Presbyterian (Columbia/Cornell) programs4 are going to University of Washington, Seattle Programs3 are going to Stanford University ProgramsStudents matched in the following specialties:Anesthesiology (7)Dermatology (2)Emergency Medicine (3)Family Medicine (6)Internal Medicine (19)Medicine/Pediatrics (4)Medicine/Psychiatry (1)Neurology (1)Neurosurgery (3)Obstetrics & Gynecology (4)Ophthalmology (9)Orthopaedics (8)Otolaryngology (1)Pathology (1)Pediatrics (5)Plastic Surgery (3)Psychiatry (3)Psychiatry - Pediatrics - Child Psych (1)Radiation Oncology (2)Radiology (9)Urology (4)Dartmouthhttps://geiselmed.dartmouth.edu/...Texas A&M HSC College of Medicine:Anesthesiology: (15) WVU, U Mass, UTMB (4), Baylor COM (3), Medical University of South Carolina, UTSW, U Texas San Antonio, Texas A&M (2), Naval Medical CenterDermatology: (10) Dartmouth, Texas A&M (2), Cooper Hospital University,Texas Tech, UTMB, Baylor U (2), U Mass, OregonEmergency Med: (13 )U Arkansas, U North Carolina, U Texas Houston, UTSW (2), U Cincinnati, U Florida - Jacksonville, John Peter Smith Hospital, U Kentucky (2), Texas A&M, Kaweah Delta Health Care District, VanderbiltFamily Med: (19) Conroe Regional Medical Center, Texas Tech (2), Fort Belvoir Community Hospital, North Colorado Medical Center, UC Davis, John Peter Smith Hosp, Baylor U, Utah Valley Regional, U Virginia, Glendale Adventist Medical Center, Texas A&M BCS (2), Christus Santa Rosa, McLennan County Family Medicine, Darnall Army Medical Center, John Peter Smith Hosp,Christus Santa Rosa (2)General Surgery: (14) Texas Tech, U New Mexico, Baylor COM, Methodist Hospital, U Texas Austin Dell, Orlando Health, Baylor U, UTSW, Baptist Health System, Texas Tech - El Paso, U Colorado, U Texas Houston, Keesler Medical Center, U Texas San AntonioInternal Medicine: (44) U Texas San Antonio (2), Oschner (3), Texas A&M (5), U Texas Houston (5), Baylor U (2), Southern Illinois, U Hawaii, Henry Ford, Hofstra NSLIJ SOM- Lenox Hill, Providence Sacred Heart, Loma Linda, UTMB (3), Methodist Texas A&M, Cedars-Sinai (2), LSU Shreveport (3), Texas Tech - El Paso, U Texas at Austin Dell, U Nevada, U North Carolina, U Louisville, Wake Forest, Emory, Mayo Clinic, Methodist Hospital, Texas Tech - Permian Basin, Baylor COMNeurology: (3) U Alabama, Texas A&M, DukeOB/GYN: (10) U Colorado (2), UT Houston (3), U Texas Southwestern (2),Texas A&M (2), Texas TechOphthalmology: (3) Texas A&M, UTSW, Texas TechOrthopedic Surgery: (8) UTSW (2), Texas A&M, Baylor U Med Ctr (2), U Chicago, Mayo Clinic, John Peter SmithOtolaryngology: (2) U Mississippi, Texas A&MPathology: (2) U Arkansas, Wake ForestPediatrics: (14) U Texas Houston, Children's Los Angeles, Texas A&M, St. Louis University, U Missouri-Kansas City, U Texas Austin Dell (2), Baylor COM- San Antonio (2), UTSW, U Oklahoma - Tulsa (2), U Utah, UC IrvinePlastic Surgery: (2) U South Florida, Loma LindaPM&R: (3) Icahn/Mount Sinai, U Arkansas, Carolinas Medical CenterPsychiatry: (11) U North Carolina, U South Florida, UTSW, Texas A&M, U Mass (2), U Oklahoma - Tulsa (2), U Texas Austin Dell, UTMB, U MarylandRadiology-Diagnostic: (7) Baylor U (2), Baylor COM, Texas A&M, UC Irvine,NCC- Walter Reed, U Texas HoustonTransitional: (2)Urology: (2) Texas A&M, Mayo Clinic - JacksonvilleVascular Surgery: (1) EmoryTTUHSC El Pasohttp://elpasoheraldpost.com/medical-students-learn-match-resultsThe Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center El Paso Paul L. Foster School of Medicine class of 2016 learned the results of the National Residency Match Program (NRMP) during a celebration Friday, March 18.A total of 73 senior medical students at TTUHSC El Paso were successful in matching to excellent graduate medical education positions.Three students have been accepted to programs in El Paso and 47% will remain in Texas. Overall, 52% matched to primary care residency programs, including family medicine, internal medicine, pediatrics, medicine/pediatrics and obstetrics-gynecology.Two students will begin their service to our country through the military match.The NRMP oversees a computerized process that links choices of graduating medical students with preferences of residency program directors.Orthopedics (3)Dermatology (1)Neurosurgery (1)Opthalmology (3)Gen Surg (7)U South Carolina- Greenville Inaugural class of 2016Anesthesiology (3) U Louisville, U Wisconsin, VanderbiltEmergency Medicine (4) Albany Medical Center, Naval Medical Center Portsmouth, U Virginia, VanderbiltFamily Medicine (8) Anderson Area Med Ctr, Bayfront Med Ctr- FL, U So Carolina,Palmetto Health COLUMBIA SC, Self Regional Healthcare-SC (2), Spartanburg Reg Healthcare-SC, Utah HealthCare InstituteInternal Medicine (6) Georgetown, U So Carolina (4), U Alabama BirminghamInternal Medicine/Psychiatry (1) NCC-Walter ReedNeurological Surgery (1) Wake Forest Baptist Med Ctr-NCObstetrics-Gynecology (7) Carolinas Med Ctr, NC, U So Carolina, Med Coll Wisconsin, Medical College of Georgia, San Diego Naval Medical Center, U Alabama Med Ctr, VanderbiltOrthopaedic Surgery (2) U S Carolina, VanderbiltPathology (2) B I Deaconess Med Ctr, Medical University of SCPediatrics (9) Carolinas Med Ctr-NC, Florida State University TALLAHASSEE, USo Carolina (3), Palmetto Health Richland (2), Tripler Army, U Arizona TucsonPsychiatry (2) LSU SOM-New Orleans, Wright Patterson AFB OHSurgery-General (3) U So Carolina, Spartanburg Reg Healthcare, Medical University of SCUrology (1) U South FloridaTouro California / TUCOM-CA 2016 Match List:Anesthesiology (1) Washington U ACGMEEmergency Medicine (5) Kaweah Delta Health Care ACGME, Allegiance Health - Jackson, MI AOA, Genesys Regional - Grand Blanc, MI AOA, Botsford - Thomas Jefferson ACGME, Drexel/Hahnemann ACGMEFamily Medicine (40) U Wisconsin ACGME, Natividad - Salinas, CA ACGME, San Joaquin General ACGME, UCSF (2) - Fresno, CA ACGME, Valley Consortium - Modesto, CA ACGME, Marian Regional - Santa Maria, CA ACGME, Mercy Medical Center - Redding, CA ACGME, UCSD ACGME, Kaiser Permanente - Napa/Solano - Vallejo, CA ACGME, Long Beach ACGME, UC ACGME, Kaweah Delta Health Care ACGME, Kaiser Permanente - Anaheim, CA ACGME, Valley Consortium - Modesto, CA ACGME, Harbor-UCLA ACGME, Shasta Community Health Center ACGME, Valley Consortium - Modesto, CA ACGME, Community Memorial Health System - Ventura, CA AOA, Downey Regional, CA AOA, Marian Regional - Santa Maria, CA AOA, Community Memorial - Ventura, CA AOA, Downey Regional, CA AOA, Community Memorial - Ventura, CA AOA, Southeastern Regional - Lumberton, NC AOA, College - Long Beach, CA AOA, Naval Camp Pendelton, Chino Valley, CA AOA, Broward - Ft. Lauderdale, FL AOA, LSU New Orleans, LA ACGME, Hennepin County - Minneapolis ACGME, U Missouri - Kansas City ACGME, U Montana AOA, U Nevada - Las Vegas ACGME, MediSys - Flushing, NY AOA, Our Lady of Lourdes - Binghamton, NY AOA, Valley Medical Center - Renton, WA ACGME, MultiCare Good Samaritan - Puyallup, WA AOA, Mercy Medical Center - Redding, CA ACGMEFamily Medicine-Emergency Medicine PA Aria Health - Philadelphia, PA AOAGeneral Surgery (4) UCSF - Fresno, CA ACGME, Sky Ridge Medical Center - Lone Tree, CO AOA, St Anthony Hospital - Lakewood, CO AOA, MediSys Health Network - Flushing, NY AOAInternal Medicine (24) UC Riverside ACGME, UC Irvine ACGME, UCSF - Fresno, CA (2) ACGME, Kaiser Permanente - Oakland, CA ACGME, Scripps Mercy Hospital ACGME, Arrowhead Regional Medical Center - Colton, CA (2) AOA, College Medical Center - Long Beach, CA AOA, St. Joseph's Lakeland - Lakeland, FL AOA, Walter Reed, Mercy Health - Muskegon, MI AOA, CarePoint Health - Bayonne Medical Center - Bayonne, NJ AOA, Palisades Medical Center - North Bergen, NJ AOA, Hackensack UMC Palisades - Norht Bergen, NJ AOA, Montefiore Medical Center/Einstein - Bronx, NY ACGME, Christ Hospital (2) - Cincinnati, OH ACGME University Hospital - Parma, OH AOA, Wright Patterson Air Force, Legacy Emanuel/Good Samaritan - Portland, OR ACGME, Good Samaritan Regional Medical Center - Corvallis, OR AOA, U Texas - Houston, TX ACGMENeurological Surgery (1) CA Arrowhead Regional Medical Center - Colton, CA AOANeurology (2) NY Hofstra NSLIJ School of Medicine - North Shore LIJ ACGME, UTSW ACGMEObstetrics & Gynecology (7) Kennedy U/Our Lady of Lourdes - Stanford, NJ AOA, Wyckoff Heights Medical Center - Brooklyn, NY AOA, Womack Army Medical Center - Ft. Bragg, NC, GWU ACGME, Boston U ACGME, Sparrow Hospital - Lansing, MI ACGME, Jersey Shore U ACGMEOphthalmology (1) Arrowhead Regional - Colton, CA AOAOrthopedic Surgery (1) NJ Inspira Health Network AOAOtolaryngology & Facial Plastic Surgery (1) Doctor’s Hospital - Columbus, AOAPathology (1) Stanford ACGMEPediatrics (14) U Arizona - Tucson, AZ ACGME, UCSF - Fresno, CA ACGME, Loma Linda (2) ACGME, USC A ACGME, Emory ACGME, Tripler Army Medical Center (2) - Honolulu, HI, U Kansas ACGME, Children’s Michigan (2) - Detroit ACGME, Detroit AOA, Children’s Mercy Hospital - Kansas City, MO ACGME, Case ACGME, OMECO Teaching Health Center - Tulsa, AOAPhysical Medicine & Rehabilitation (8) UC Irvine ACGME, Larkin Community - South Miami, FL AOA, Marianjoy Rehab Hospital - Wheaton, IL ACGME, Schwab Rehabilitation Hospital - Chicago, IL ACGME, Columbia/Cornell-New York Presbyterian - New York, NY ACGME, NYU ACGME (2), U Pitts ACGMEPsychiatry (6) U Arizona - Tucson, AZ ACGME, UCSF - Fresno, CA ACGME, Advocate Lutheran General Hospital - Park Ridge, IL ACGME, Harvard South Shore - Brockton, MA ACGME, Walter Reed Army Medical Center - Bethesda, MD, Oregon - Portland, OR ACGMERadiology-Diagnostic (2) Grand Rapids, MI ACGME, Geisinger - Danville, PA ACGMESurgical - Preliminary (1) Kern Medical Center - Bakersfield, CA ACGMEThoracic Surgery (1) CA UC Davis ACGMETraditional Rotating Internship (7) CA Hemet Valley Medical Center (2) - Hemet, CA AOA, McLaren Oakland - Pontiac, MI AOA, Peconic Bay - Riverhead, NY AOA, Adena Health System - Chillicothe, OH AOA, Clarion Hospital, PA AOA, Naval Medical Center - San Diego

What is the most straightforward way to get to med school?

Q. What is the most straightforward way to get to med school?A. The most straight forward way would be to enter a combined BS/MD program right out of high school. This pretty much guarantees medical school admission, if minimal standards are met. Some programs actually shorten the duration of 4+4 to 6 or 7 years.Complete List: BA/MD and BS/MD Programs in the USPosted by Rebecca Safier | Apr 9, 2016 9:00:00 PMCOLLEGE ADMISSIONSDo you dream of becoming a doctor? If you’re set on going to medical school, then a combined BS/MD or BA/MD program might be for you. The majority of these combined programs allow motivated high school students to go right from undergraduate to medical school without having to go through another application process.While there aren’t a ton of spots available in combined programs, there are schools throughout the country that offer them. Before getting to the list, let’s review what these programs entail and the pros and cons of them for high school and young undergraduate applicants.What Are Combined BA/MD and BS/MD Programs?Combined programs allow students to earn a Bachelor’s degree, either a Bachelor’s of Arts (BA) or Bachelor’s of Science (BS), and then proceed directly into a medical program for their Doctor of Medicine (MD). Because students are already accepted to medical school, they can forego the typical medical school admissions process near the end of undergrad.Instead of applying separately to medical school, they would just go through one major admissions process at the end of high school or, occasionally, a condensed application process early in college. Programs that ask students to apply after first getting admitted to the college are typically referred to as early assurance programs.Students in combined programs commit to a specific college and medical school or network of schools. The medical school is usually part of the same institution or a partner school in the same region or college network. For instance, the SUNY and University of Texas systems, along with the Eastern Virginia network, offer students some choice of medical schools within their connected or partner colleges. On the other hand, students in Boston University’s combined program would attend BU for both undergraduate and medical school.While combined programs offer students early assurance, some still do require that applicants take and do well on the MCAT. Students must also maintain a certain GPA as they work their way through their required college classes. Many offers are conditional on the student's undergraduate and testing performance.Most combined programs are the same length as non-combined ones - eight years. In other words, most students in direct medical programs will still go to college for four years and then to medical school for four years. There are a few that offer accelerated programs, though, by compressing the amount of time spent as an undergraduate. These programs may be seven or even six years.For example, Drexel University College of Medicine offers both an eight-year combined program and seven-year combined program. It has an eight-year BA/MD program and BS/MD program for students majoring in Biomedical Engineering or Engineering. It also offers a fast-tracked seven-year BA/BS/MD program for students who major in Biological Sciences, Chemistry, Psychology, or Engineering. Most schools have either an eight-year or an accelerated program, while others, like Drexel, offer both choices depending on your field of study as an undergraduate.Before taking a closer look at accelerated programs, let’s go over some of the pros and cons of combined medical programs for students.Pro: you'll get to impress people by adding MD after your name whenever you sign it. Con: you might not be able to watch shows like Grey's Anatomy anymore because of all their medical inaccuracies.Pros of a Combined ProgramApplying to medical school is a competitive and stressful process, so the major pro of getting into a combined program means that you won’t have to go through that! You’ll be able to rest easy and focus on your academics with the knowledge that you’ve already been accepted.A combined program allows you to commit to medicine in your academic and professional path. You’ll spend the next years of your life working toward your goals and ultimately will graduate with your MD.Not only will you have a steady educational and career path, but you may also benefit from the stability of studying in one school or system of schools. You’ll get deeply immersed in the community and get to know the professors and facilities well.Finally, in addition to offering students a stable and challenging program in their chosen fields, many combined programs also offer scholarship money. Because they tend to be extremely selective, direct medical programs often offer financial aid to the highly achieving students who get in.Of course, there are also downsides to think about for combined medical programs. Let’s consider some of the cons of committing to a six to eight-year program.Cons of a Combined ProgramMost combined programs involve eight years of intensive study. While they eliminate the hurdle of a stressful med school application process down the line, they also demand a huge commitment from high school students. Your goals may very well shift as you grow and gain new experiences in college. Combined programs call for a great deal of dedication and commitment from young students whose aims may change as they grow older.Of course, dropping out of the program is always an option if your goals change. If you do drop out but later change your mind and decide to apply again to med school, you might end up stuck at a school that wasn’t initially your first choice or find yourself lacking required courses. On the flip side, if you switch your major from pre-med to something else, you might have to add more semesters as an undergrad. Plus, giving up such a selective program that you worked hard to get into would almost certainly be a stressful and nerve-wracking ordeal!Another potential con of some combined programs is the commitment to the same location for eight years. Some students might be ready to experience a new city after undergrad, but they’ll have to stick around for another four years. Some combined programs involve relocation to a partner school, but most take place within the same university.Just as combined programs limit your choices in terms of medical schools and location, they also typically don’t offer as much flexibility in curriculum. While your fellow students may discover different fields or participate in study abroad, your own course schedule may not allow for as much exploration.This kind of intensive, structured program may be a pro for some students and a con for others. Just be aware that combined programs call for a big commitment at a young age. Carefully consider whether you’re ready to make that leap.Before checking out the full list of schools, let’s take a moment to go over accelerated programs and how they’re unique.Accelerated programs take an already intense track of study and send it into hyperspeed.What Are Accelerated BA/MD and BS/MD Programs?An accelerated program is a type of combined program that is shorter than the typical eight years. Most are seven, but there are a few as short as six years.Usually, the undergraduate portion is shortened, rather than medical school. These programs may combine two required classes into one or have students attend year-round by taking intensive courses throughout the http://summer.As with combined programs, students will move directly from undergrad into a medical school program to which they’ve already been accepted. They might just be a little younger than their peers. In addition to the considerations discussed above, what are some pros and cons specific to accelerated combined medical programs?Pros of an Accelerated ProgramAs a combined program, an accelerated program shares all the pros discussed above, such as the opportunity to get early acceptance to medical school and commit to a field of study that you’re passionate about. The shorter time, furthermore, means that you can enter medical school and earn your MD even faster, giving you a leap ahead into your profession by a year or more.Because these programs are shorter, they may have a lower cost than the traditional eight-year path. Note that accelerated programs are by no means easier than non-accelerated ones. Rather, they’re usually even more challenging because they compress the same amount of material and requirements into a shorter amount of time. If you’re a high-achieving and motivated student, then an accelerated medical program may be just the kind of challenging and intensive experience you’re looking for.Cons of an Accelerated ProgramThe accelerated nature of these programs means that they demand even more of a commitment from applicants, who are often young students who haven’t yet graduated high school. Accelerated programs are a huge challenge and commitment, and they offer even less flexibility and room to explore than the eight-year combined programs.If you commit to an accelerated program, not only do you have to be absolutely sure about your decision to earn your MD in a shortened period of time, but you also have to be prepared to miss out on some normal undergraduate experiences. As someone studying on the fast track, you won’t have as much time to explore, spend time with friends, or perhaps study abroad. These experiences can be very enriching parts of college, so you should think about whether you’re ready to limit them right off the bat.Accelerated programs often require students to study year-round, limiting the potential for summer jobs, travel, or internships. They can be grueling, combining already tough classes like Organic Chemistry I and II into the same semester. The risk with an accelerated program is that the stress and pressure could turn you away from a path which you’d otherwise have enjoyed if you took the usual, slower route.Finally, because the program is shorter than others, you need to do your research to make sure it’s as high quality as others. Whether you’re committing to a combined or an accelerated program, you should do extensive research to ensure that you’re committing the next six to eight years of your life to the best program for you.Check back soon for our comprehensive guide on how to apply to combined medical programs. For now, read on to peruse our full list of the country’s BS/MD and BA/MD programs.Choose a medical school already! Your cat is tired of playing patient.BS/MD and BA/MD Programs:The Full ListBelow is our most updated list of BS/MD and BA/MD programs in the U.S. We’ve divided the list into combined programs that you apply to as a high school student and early assurance programs that you apply to after you get accepted to or enter undergrad.Some schools have several programs within them, and their programs might be six, seven, or eight years in length. You can click on the name of each school to learn more about its combined medical programs and admissions process. Note that there are a few combined programs on the list that are only available to state residents or require that students become a state resident once they matriculate as an undergrad. These are marked with an asterisk.Combined BA/BS/MD Programs for High School ApplicantsYou can apply to these combined programs as a high school student and get guaranteed admission to medical school. To keep the offer valid, you’ll have to take required courses and maintain a certain GPA. Despite your guaranteed admission to medical school, you might still have to take the MCAT for some of these BA/MD or BS/MD programs.School# Years of Program(s)Albany Medical College7 or 8Baylor College of Medicine8Boston University School of Medicine7 or 8Brown University Warren Alpert School of Medicine8California Northstate University School of Medicine6 or 7Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine8City College of New York (Sophie Davis School of Biomedical Education)7Drexel University College of Medicine7 or 8Florida Atlantic University Charles E. Schmidt College of Medicine*7 or 8Florida State University College of Medicine7 or 8George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences7 or 8Hofstra North Shore - LIJ School of Medicine8Howard University College of Medicine6Indiana State University*8Medical College of Georgia*8Meharry Medical College7 or 8Northeast Ohio Medical University*6 or 7Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine7 or 8Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine8Rosalind Franklin University Chicago Medical School8Rowan University - Cooper School of Medicine8Rutgers New Jersey Medical School7 or 8Sidney Kimmel Medical College6, 7, or 8State University of New York Downstate Medical Center8Stony Brook University School of Medicine8St. Louis University School of Medicine8Temple University School of Medicine8Texas A&M Health Science Center College of Medicine*8Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center School of Medicine*8The Commonwealth Medical College8University of Alabama School of Medicine8University of Cincinnati College of Medicine8University of Colorado College of Medicine*8University of Connecticut School of Medicine*8University of Illinois at Chicago School of Medicine*8University of Hawaii School of Medicine*8University of Miami School of Medicine7 or 8University of Missouri- Kansas City School of Medicine6University of Nevada School of Medicine*7University of New Mexico School of Medicine*8University of Oklahoma School of Medicine7 or 8University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine8University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry8University of South Alabama College of Medicine*8University of South Florida College of Medicine7University of Texas Medical School*6, 7, or 8University of Toledo School of Medicine7, 8, or 9Washington University in St. Louis School of Medicine8Wayne State University School of Medicine8*State residents only or state residents preferredSo your preferred program wants you to wait and apply as an undergraduate? I guess your pets can put up with this doctor-patient make believe game just a little longer.Combined BA/BS/MD Programs for Undergraduate ApplicantsThe following schools offer programs that you apply to once you’ve already been accepted as an undergrad. They might ask you to apply immediately after you get in or as a freshman or sophomore. Again, you can click on the name of each school to read more about its BA/MD programs and BS/MD programs and admissions process.School# Years of Program(s)Boston University School of Medicine8Drexel University College of Medicine8East Carolina University8Eastern Virginia Medical School8George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences7 or 8Loyola University, Stritch School of Medicine8Marshall University - Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine8Meharry Medical College8Mount Sinai School of Medicine8Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine7Robert Wood Johnson Medical School8Rowan University8Rutgers New Jersey Medical School State7 or 8Temple University School of Medicine7Texas A & M Health Science Center College of Medicine*8The Commonwealth Medical College8Tufts University School of Medicine8Tulane University School of Medicine8University of California, Los Angeles, School of Medicine8University of Central Florida College of Medicine8University of Florida College of Medicine7University of Miami School of Medicine7 or 8University of New York Upstate Medical School8University of South Florida College of Medicine7Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine8* State residents onlyNow that you’ve seen the full lists of combined medical programs, let’s review some points to consider if you’re deciding whether or not to apply to a BS/MD or BA/MD dual degree program.A combined medical program isn't exactly "until death do us part," but it's still a big commitment! Make sure you're ready to make it.Deciding on a Combined BA/MD or BS/MD ProgramApplying to college requires a lot of research, and applying to a combined medical school program requires even more. When you agree to a dual degree program, you’re not just committing to a school for four years of undergraduate. You’re committing six to eight years of both undergraduate and graduate education.Because of the nature of this commitment, you must carefully consider your reasons for wanting to attend medical school. Make sure that you understand the program’s requirements and feel comfortable pursuing an intensive track of study in the same city for the foreseeable future.Combined programs are very selective, and they tend to expect applicants to have some experience, perhaps through an internship or volunteer work, in the medical field. This first-hand experience working in a medical setting or shadowing doctors will also help you determine whether an MD is the right degree for you.If you feel ready to commit to this path, then you should focus on putting together the strongest application you can. Demonstrate your passion for the field through your essays and experiences, and show admissions officers that you have the maturity and drive to pursue your pre-med and medical degrees in their combined program.If you decide that a combined program’s the right path for you, then you’ll be able to relax and enjoy the assurance of a guaranteed medical school acceptance. Of course, you can probably only relax for a moment. Then it’s back to work!

How much does going to a high ranking medical school matter in terms of being able to go to a highly competitive residency? Also, does school rank matter as much as the medical school you attend?

Q. How much does going to a high ranking medical school matter in terms of being able to go to a highly competitive residency? Also, does school rank matter as much as the medical school you attend?A. Previous answer on the same subject. In the process of analyzing the 2018 Match Data. TN's answers to:Q. Is there any advantage to attending a top med school?My previous answer to the advantages of attending top medical schools in matching with top competitive residency programs. Bottom line, even though the best students in any medical school can match into their specialty choice, graduates from top medical schools regardless of class rank, tend to favor the more competitive specialties (less primary care) and match into the best residency programs in those specialties. This is particularly helpful if there is aspiration for an academic career and perhaps leadership in that specialty, the politics of that specialty and perhaps leadership in medicine/medical education (US and transnational) where pedigree matters. I analyzed the 2016 Match data from medical schools of various tiers.One other point. There is no consensus ranking for medical schools. May be ball park for top 20 schools. The US News ranking is contrived. It ranks schools with the most NIH funding for research and another for the strength of their primary care programs. These criteria are dubious and nobody cares, except may be premeds.Residency programs know about your school and its reputation in academic circles in their specialty. Medical schools do not have across the board excellent residencies in all specialties. So your particular medical school may have a mediocre residency program in that specialty. That department is what the residency programs know about your school. In my time, the General Surgery residency program at Duke University was top notch. But the Anesthesiology residency program was on probation. Perhaps in their interdepartmental skirmishes, the Anesthesiology Department was overshadowed, hence unable to recruit outstanding faculty. Just my wild guess. If you were to apply for General Surgery, you certainly were well trained knowing the reputation of the department. If you were to apply for Anesthesiology, your medical school may not be as well thought of.Q. Do med students who go to schools such as JHU, Stanford, UCLA, WashU, etc., have an easier time matching with the top competitive residency programs?A2A. From the 2016 match, top tier schools did very well in matching to the most competitive specialties. Many took their own students eg. Stanford matched Dermatology (6). There is disproportionate representation in the most sought after fields, like Wash U matching Orthopedics (10), JHU matching ENT (8), and Duke matching Opthalmology (9), despite class size of only 96. The programs they match into are top tier in their specialties as well. These schools have a high percentage not going into Primary Care, giving room for Caribbean/osteopathic graduates. Mid tier schools like Texas A&M (class size may be a factor) astoundingly matched Dermatology (10), Opthalmology (3), Orthopedics (8). Newly opened schools like Texas Tech El Paso matched Dermatology (1), Opthalmology (3), Orthopedics (3), and Neurosurgery (1). Even the inaugural class of U of South Carolina Greenville matched into Orthopedics (2), Neurosurgery (1), and Urology (1).General Surgery is in decline.In the end, if you performed well in any US medical school and have commendable USMLE scores, you have a good chance of matching into your desired specialty.Harvard matched Dermatology (10), Opthalmology (6), Neurosurgery (2), OMFS (3), Orthopedics (4), Otolaryngology (3), Rad Onc (8), Urology (3), Vascular Surg (2).Stanford matched Dermatology (7), Opthalmology (2), Neurosurgery (2), Orthopedics (3), Otolaryngology (2), Rad Onc (2), Vasc Surg (1).Yale matched Dermatology (4), Opthalmology (4), Neurosurgery (2), Orthopedics (6), ENT (4), Rad Onc (4), Urology (3).JHU matched Dermatology (1), Opthalmology (4), Neurosurgery (4), Orthopedics (5), ENT (8), Urology (3).Wash U matched Dermatology (6), Opthalmology (3), Orthopedics (10), Otolaryngology (1), Rad Onc (2), Urology (3), Vascular Surg (1).Duke matched Dermatology (2), Opthalmology (9), Neurosurgery (3), Orthopedics (8), Otolaryngology (1), Rad Onc (2), Plastic Surg (3).Texas A&M matched Dermatology (10), Opthalmology (3), Orthopedics (8), Otolaryngology (2), Plastic Surgery (2), Urology (2), Vascular Surg (1).Texas Tech El Paso matched Dermatology (1), Opthalmology (3), Orthopedics (3), Neurosurgery (1).U South Carolina- Greenville (inaugural class) matched Neurosurgery (1), Orthopedics (2), Urology (1).Touro California / TUCOM-CA matched AOA programs in Opthalmology (1), Orthopedics (1), ENT (1), Neurosurgery (1).Ross University - Primary Care 2016 Ross University ResidencyHMS 2016 Match ListAnesthesiology (5) MGH, BWH (3), BIDMCDermatology (9) UCSF, NYU, Harvard (3), Stanford, NYP-Columbia, Duke, UPMCMed-Derm (1) HarvardEmergency Medicine (9) Harvard BWH/MGH (2), NYU, Stanford, UNC, HopkinsDuke, Georgia Regents, Rutgers RWJMSFamily Medicine (4) Contra Costa, Brown/Memorial Hosp, Swedish Med Center/First Hill, Harbor-UCLAGeneral Surgery (6) BWH, U Washington, Stanford, BIDMC, UCSF East Bay, BMCInternal Medicine-Primary Care (8) UCSF, BWH (2), MGH (3), CHA, BIDMCInternal Medicine (34) JHU (2), MGH (7), BWH (8), UCSF (2), NYP-Columbia (2), U Washington (2), Stanford (3), Brown (3), NYP-Cornell (research), UCLA (2),BIDMC, NYU, OHSUChild Neuro (1) CHBNeurology (6) (BWH/MGH) (4), NYP-Columbia, Mt. SinaiNeurological Surgery (2) MGH, UCLAOB/GYN (12) UCSF, Northwestern, Hopkins (2), Duke, Brown, Yale, U Washington, Einstein/Montefiore, BIDMC (3)Ophthalmology (6) MEEI (2), USC, UCSD, BMC, IEEIOMFS (3) MGH (3)Orthopedic Surgery (4) Harvard (2), UCSF, Naval Medical Ctr, PortsmouthOtolaryngology (3) Hopkins, MEEI, UCSFPathology (2) MGH, BWHPediatrics (5) Boston Combined - CHB (3), U Washington, MGHPediatrics-Primary Care (1) UCSFPlastic Surgery (2) U Washington, Einstein/MontefiorePsychiatry (11) MGH/McLean (3), UCSF, Harvard Longwood, Stanford (2), Stanford (research), U Washington, Penn, Case Western/MetroHealthRadiation Oncology (8) MD Anderson, Harvard (3), U Washington, Jefferson, NYP-Cornell, City of HopeRadiology (4) UCSF, Penn/HUP, NYP-Cornell, Maine MedUrology (3) BWH, MGH, Mt. SinaiVascular Surgery (2) U Penn, MGH=======Non-Clinical (3) JP Morgan, Boston Consulting Group, Bain & Company, FilmmakerTransitional Year (5) Santa Clara Valley, BIDMC/Brockton (2), Cambridge Health Alliance, Steward CarneyPrelim surgery (5) U Washington, MGH, St Lukes-Roosevelt, BWH, Mt SinaiPrelim medicine (25) BIDMC (4), BWH (10), Duke, MGH (4), Mt Auburn (3), Presbyterian Hosp, Dallas, St Lukes-Roosevelt, UT HoustonStanford University Match List 2016Anesthesiology (2) Stanford, UCSFChild Neurology (2) Stanford (2)Dermatology (7) NYP Hosp-Columbia Univ Med Ctr, Stanford (6)Emergency Medicine (3) UCSF, MGH (2)Family Medicine (1) U ColoradoGeneral Surgery (3) BWH, MGH, Stanford (2)Internal Medicine (16) BIDMC, BWH (3), Case (Phys-Sci), UPenn, MGH (3), NYP Hosp-Columbia, NYU (Clin Invest Track), Stanford, UC Riverside, U Colorado, Yale-New Haven Hosp, Yale-New Haven Hosp (Phys-Sci)Medicine-Primary (7) BU (Preventive), BWH (3), Dartmouth, MGH, UCLANeurology (1) UCSFNeurological Surgery(2) U Utah, StanfordObstetrics-Gyn (3) BWH, Stanford, White Mem Med CtrOphthalmology (2) New York Eye & Ear Infirm, StanfordOrthopedic Surgery (3) Baylor, GWU, Hosp For Special Surg-NYOtolaryngology (2) Johns Hopkins Hosp, U Texas Southwestern MedPathology (1) BWHPediatrics (5) Childrens Hosp-Philadelphia, Stanford(2), UC Davis, U WashingtonPlastic Surgery (3) Stanford (2), U WashingtonPsychiatry (4) Stanford Univ (3), U IowaRadiology-Diagnostic (3) MGH, Stanford, U UtahRadiation-Oncology (2) MSK, StanfordThoracic Surgery (1) StanfordVascular Surgery (1) StanfordYale 2016 Match ListAnesthesiology (1) StanfordDermatology (4) Northwestern, Walter Reed, Case, UCSFDiagnostic Radiology (2) UCSF (2)EM (6) Carolinas Med Ctr, UCSF, Penn, Icahn, Harbor-UCLA, NYPH - Columbia & CornellFamily Med (1) BUInternal Medicine (19) UCSF, Penn, Duke (3), Mayo - Rochester, Northwestern, NYPH-Columbia, MGH (2), U Wash (2), UCSF, Penn, BU, JHU,Albert Einstein/Montefiore, BWH, Madigan ArmyInternal Medicine / Primary Care (4) Penn, U Wash, BU, BWHNeurology (2) Yale, StanfordNeurosurgery (2) MGH, YaleOBGYN (6) Penn, UCLA, Northwestern, NYPH - Columbia, Yale (2)Ophtho (4) UCSF, NYU, Mayo - Rochester, Harvard - MEEIOrtho (6) Barnes-Jewish, Case, Yale, HSS, Penn, RushENT (4) Stanford, Icahn (2), Harvard - MEEIPathology (2) Penn, StanfordPediatrics (3) U Wash, Stanford (2)Plastic Surgery (2) Yale, UT Medical BranchPsychiatry (4) Yale (3), Cambridge Health AllianceRad Onc (4) MSK, Yale, JHU, UCLAUrology (1) IcahnJohns Hopkins 2016 match listAnesthesia (2) U Penn, U WisconsinDermatology (1) JHUENT (8) HMS/Mass Eye and Ear (2), JHU, USC, CCF, Mayo, Barnes-Jewish, UCSDEmergency Medicine (10) Icahn, BU, NMC Portsmouth, NYU, Alameda Health Systems – Highland (2) , UNC, U Conn, JHU (2)Family Medicine (3) Swedish Medical Center, Sutter Med Center, BUInternal Medicine (20) JHU (8), MGH (3), UCSF (3), BWH, UTSW, U Penn, UColorado, NYU, IcahnMed-Peds (1) JHUPediatrics (4) UCLA, CHOP, Stanford, ColumbiaNeurology (2) UCSF, BWHNeurosurgery (4) NYU, JHU, Duke, U WisconsinOBGYN (5) UCSF (2), UCSD, Yale, ColumbiaOphthalmology (4) JHU (2), U Iowa, U MichiganOrthopedics Surgery (5) JHU (3), U Conn, UNCPathology (4) JHU, UCSF, BWH, MGHPsychiatry (9) JHU (4), MGH (2), Yale, UCSF, NYUPM&R (2) JHU, StanfordRadiology (5) Albert Einstein (Diagnostic), BWH (IR), MGH, Florida – Orlando,JHU (Nuclear)General Surgery (12) BWH (2), Duke, NMC San Diego, JHU, Morehouse, Yale, UCSF, UCLA, U Iowa, Washington Hospital Ctr, JHU (Prelimary), Wash Med CtrThoracic Surgery (1) U PennUrology (3) Stanford, JHU, EmoryColumbia University College of Physicians & SurgeonsAnesthesiology (9) MGH, Columbia (5), U Michigan, Vanderbilt, YaleBusiness (3)Child Neurology (2) Columbia, StanfordDermatology (8) U Penn, Columbia (2), NYU, U Chicago, U Colorado, UCLA, YaleEmergency Medicine (13) Alameda Health System, Duke (2), Einstein/Jacobi Med Ctr (2), Icahn (3), Maimonides Medical Center, MGH (2), NY Methodist, UCLAFamily Medicine (3) Institute for Family Health-NY, UCSF, U MontanaInternal Medicine (36) BU, BWH, Einstein/Montefiore (2), Harbor-UCLA, U Penn,Icahn, JHU, MGH, Mayo, Northwestern, Columbia (12), NYU (3), Stanford, U Colorado, U Mich, UTSW, UCSF (3), Vanderbilt, Yale (2)Neurological Surgery (7) Emory, Northwestern, Columbia, Rutgers-New Jersey, U Cincinnati, USC, Wash U/ BarnesNeurology (5) BWH, Columbia (2), NYU, YaleObstetrics & Gynecology (7) Christiana Care (2), U Penn, Columbia, NYP Hosp-Weill Cornell, NYU (2)Ophthalmology (6) CCF, MEEI/Harvard, Nassau University, Northwestern,NYP Hosp-Columbia, SUNY UpstateOral & Maxillofacial Surgery (2) Columbia (2)Orthopedic Surgery (5) Madagan Army, Columbia (2), USC, UCSDOtolaryngology (5) U Penn, Columbia, Stanford, U Cincinnati, U UtahPathology (5) JHU, Columbia (2), NYP Hosp-Weill Cornell, StanfordPediatrics (23) Children's LA, Children’s Boston, CHOP, Cincinnati (2), Einstein/Montefiore, Emory, INOVA Fairfax Hospital, JHU, Nationwide Children’s, Columbia (7), Stanford, U Massachusetts, U Pitt (2), U Vermont, UCSFPsychiatry (14) U Penn, MGH (2), Columbia (3), NYP Weill Cornell (3), NYU,Thomas Jefferson, USC, U Washington (2)Radiation Oncology (2) Emory, NYURadiology – Diagnostic (4) U Penn (2), NYP-Columbia, NYP-Weill CornellSurgery – General (7) Albany Med Ctr, U Penn, NYMC-Westchester, Rutgers-RWJ, U Mich, U Wash, VanderbiltSurgery – Preliminary (2) Hofstra NSLIJ, ColumbiaSurgery – Thoracic (1) ColumbiaWashington University Match List 2016Anesthesiology (5) Barnes-Jewish, New York-Presbyterian, Rush, UCLA, U PittsDermatology (6) Barnes-Jewish (2), Baylor, JHU, U Mich, U PittsEmergency Medicine (4) Barnes-Jewish, Baylor, JHU, UCSFFamily Medicine (1) U CincinnatiGeneral Surgery (2) Northwestern, U ConnInternal Medicine (20) Barnes-Jewish (10), Hofstra North Shore-LIJ, JHU (2), MGH (3), Northwestern, Oregon (2), U ArizonaNeurology (4) Barnes-Jewish, BWH, U Penn, UCSFObstetrics and Gynecology (4) Case, Montefiore/Einstein, Tulane, UCSDOphthalmology (3) UCLA, U Mich, Wash UOrthopaedic Surgery (10) Barnes-Jewish, Cedars-Sinai, HSS, Ohio State,Oregon, Thomas Jefferson University, UCLA, UCSF, U Iowa, U RochesterOtolaryngology (1) NYUPathology (4) Barnes-Jewish (2), Stanford, UCLAPediatrics (10) Children's Boston (2), Medical College of Wisconsin, NYU, St. Louis Children's (3), UCSF, Baylor, Children's NationalPlastic Surgery (2) Barnes-Jewish, U MichiganPsychiatry (4) Barnes-Jewish (2), UTSW, YaleRadiation-Oncology (2) Baylor, U WisconsinRadiology-Diagnostic (2) MGH, UCSDUrology (3) Barnes-Jewish, Oregon, U PittsVascular Surgery (1) IndianaWake Foresthttp://www.wakehealth.edu/uploadedF...ervices/Documents/2016 HO List (External).pdfNorthwesternhttp://www.feinberg.northwestern.ed...ring/Summer+2013&utm_campaign=Ward+RoundsSUNY Downstatehttp://sls.downstate.edu/student...VCUhttp://www.medschool.vcu.edu/med...Columbiahttp://ps.columbia.edu/education...Georgetownhttps://som.georgetown.edu/prosp...Coloradohttp://www.ucdenver.edu/academics/c...MatchDay2016/Documents/2016 Match Results.pdfEVMShttps://www.evms.edu/media/depar...American University of the Caribbeanhttp://www.aucmed.edu/alumni/res...Brown Universityhttps://www.brown.edu/academics/...Eastern Virginia Medical School:http://www.evms.edu/media/depart...George Washington University:http://smhs.gwu.edu/academics/md...Ohio State University:http://medicine.osu.edu/students/li...Documents/Match Results by Specialty 2016.pdfRoss University:http://www.rossu.edu/medical-sch...Southern Illinois University:http://www.siumed.edu/news/Relea...St. George:https://postgrad.sgu.edu/Residen...UIC-Chicago:http://chicago.medicine.uic.edu/...UIC-Peoria:http://peoria.medicine.uic.edu/User...tudent Affairs/2016 Residency Assignments.pdfUIC-Urbana-Champaign:http://www.med.illinois.edu/sa/m...University of Buffalo:http://medicine.buffalo.edu/matc...University of Cincinnati:https://comdo-wcnlb.uc.edu/emos/...University of Florida:https://osa.sites.medinfo.ufl.ed...University of Iowa:http://www.medicine.uiowa.edu/uploa...s/Registrar/Table 6 - Specialty - Publish.pdfUniversity of Miami:http://admissions.med.miami.edu/...University of Nevada:http://medicine.nevada.edu/stude...University of North Carolina:https://www.med.unc.edu/ome/student...ments/senior-placement-by-specialty-2016/viewUniversity of North Dakota:http://www.med.und.edu/student-affa.../docs/2016-match-assignment-report-032116.pdfUniversity of Rochester:https://www.urmc.rochester.edu/Medi...016/documents/Match-Day-2016-Website-List.pdfUniversity of South Alabama:http://www.usahealthsystem.com/workfiles/com_docs/studentaffairs/match_results_2016.pdfUniversity of Wisconsin:http://www.med.wisc.edu/news-eve...University of Vermont:http://www.uvm.edu/medicine/mede...University of Virginia:https://www.med-ed.virginia.edu/...Vanderbilt University:https://medschool.vanderbilt.edu...West Virginia University:http://medicine.hsc.wvu.edu/stud...Wright State University:https://medicine.wright.edu/comm...TTU HSChttps://www.ttuhsc.edu/som/stude...UTMBhttps://www.utmb.edu/iutmb/artic...UTSWhttp://www.utsouthwestern.edu/ne...Baylor College of Medicine 2016Duke Medical Students Celebrate Match Day 2016!Friday, March 18, 2016Each year, fourth year medical students across the country view the third week of March as the start of their future. Match Day is a unified event organized by the National Resident Match Program. On March 18, medical students at Duke University School of Medicine opened their envelopes and learned where in the country they will begin their residency programs.A total of 96 students participated in Match Day at Duke this year and are headed to some of the nation’s most prestigious programs.Among them,23 are staying at Duke University8 are going to John Hopkins University programs7 are going to Harvard University6 are going to University of California at San Francisco programs6 are going to University of Texas Southwestern programs6 are going to the York Presbyterian (Columbia/Cornell) programs4 are going to University of Washington, Seattle Programs3 are going to Stanford University ProgramsStudents matched in the following specialties:Anesthesiology (7)Dermatology (2)Emergency Medicine (3)Family Medicine (6)Internal Medicine (19)Medicine/Pediatrics (4)Medicine/Psychiatry (1)Neurology (1)Neurosurgery (3)Obstetrics & Gynecology (4)Ophthalmology (9)Orthopaedics (8)Otolaryngology (1)Pathology (1)Pediatrics (5)Plastic Surgery (3)Psychiatry (3)Psychiatry - Pediatrics - Child Psych (1)Radiation Oncology (2)Radiology (9)Urology (4)Dartmouthhttps://geiselmed.dartmouth.edu/...Texas A&M HSC College of Medicine:Anesthesiology: (15) WVU, U Mass, UTMB (4), Baylor COM (3), Medical University of South Carolina, UTSW, U Texas San Antonio, Texas A&M (2), Naval Medical CenterDermatology: (10) Dartmouth, Texas A&M (2), Cooper Hospital University,Texas Tech, UTMB, Baylor U (2), U Mass, OregonEmergency Med: (13 )U Arkansas, U North Carolina, U Texas Houston, UTSW (2), U Cincinnati, U Florida - Jacksonville, John Peter Smith Hospital, U Kentucky (2), Texas A&M, Kaweah Delta Health Care District, VanderbiltFamily Med: (19) Conroe Regional Medical Center, Texas Tech (2), Fort Belvoir Community Hospital, North Colorado Medical Center, UC Davis, John Peter Smith Hosp, Baylor U, Utah Valley Regional, U Virginia, Glendale Adventist Medical Center, Texas A&M BCS (2), Christus Santa Rosa, McLennan County Family Medicine, Darnall Army Medical Center, John Peter Smith Hosp,Christus Santa Rosa (2)General Surgery: (14) Texas Tech, U New Mexico, Baylor COM, Methodist Hospital, U Texas Austin Dell, Orlando Health, Baylor U, UTSW, Baptist Health System, Texas Tech - El Paso, U Colorado, U Texas Houston, Keesler Medical Center, U Texas San AntonioInternal Medicine: (44) U Texas San Antonio (2), Oschner (3), Texas A&M (5), U Texas Houston (5), Baylor U (2), Southern Illinois, U Hawaii, Henry Ford, Hofstra NSLIJ SOM- Lenox Hill, Providence Sacred Heart, Loma Linda, UTMB (3), Methodist Texas A&M, Cedars-Sinai (2), LSU Shreveport (3), Texas Tech - El Paso, U Texas at Austin Dell, U Nevada, U North Carolina, U Louisville, Wake Forest, Emory, Mayo Clinic, Methodist Hospital, Texas Tech - Permian Basin, Baylor COMNeurology: (3) U Alabama, Texas A&M, DukeOB/GYN: (10) U Colorado (2), UT Houston (3), U Texas Southwestern (2),Texas A&M (2), Texas TechOphthalmology: (3) Texas A&M, UTSW, Texas TechOrthopedic Surgery: (8) UTSW (2), Texas A&M, Baylor U Med Ctr (2), U Chicago, Mayo Clinic, John Peter SmithOtolaryngology: (2) U Mississippi, Texas A&MPathology: (2) U Arkansas, Wake ForestPediatrics: (14) U Texas Houston, Children's Los Angeles, Texas A&M, St. Louis University, U Missouri-Kansas City, U Texas Austin Dell (2), Baylor COM- San Antonio (2), UTSW, U Oklahoma - Tulsa (2), U Utah, UC IrvinePlastic Surgery: (2) U South Florida, Loma LindaPM&R: (3) Icahn/Mount Sinai, U Arkansas, Carolinas Medical CenterPsychiatry: (11) U North Carolina, U South Florida, UTSW, Texas A&M, U Mass (2), U Oklahoma - Tulsa (2), U Texas Austin Dell, UTMB, U MarylandRadiology-Diagnostic: (7) Baylor U (2), Baylor COM, Texas A&M, UC Irvine,NCC- Walter Reed, U Texas HoustonTransitional: (2)Urology: (2) Texas A&M, Mayo Clinic - JacksonvilleVascular Surgery: (1) EmoryTTUHSC El Pasohttp://elpasoheraldpost.com/medical-students-learn-match-resultsThe Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center El Paso Paul L. Foster School of Medicine class of 2016 learned the results of the National Residency Match Program (NRMP) during a celebration Friday, March 18.A total of 73 senior medical students at TTUHSC El Paso were successful in matching to excellent graduate medical education positions.Three students have been accepted to programs in El Paso and 47% will remain in Texas. Overall, 52% matched to primary care residency programs, including family medicine, internal medicine, pediatrics, medicine/pediatrics and obstetrics-gynecology.Two students will begin their service to our country through the military match.The NRMP oversees a computerized process that links choices of graduating medical students with preferences of residency program directors.Orthopedics (3)Dermatology (1)Neurosurgery (1)Opthalmology (3)Gen Surg (7)U South Carolina- Greenville Inaugural class of 2016Anesthesiology (3) U Louisville, U Wisconsin, VanderbiltEmergency Medicine (4) Albany Medical Center, Naval Medical Center Portsmouth, U Virginia, VanderbiltFamily Medicine (8) Anderson Area Med Ctr, Bayfront Med Ctr- FL, U So Carolina,Palmetto Health COLUMBIA SC, Self Regional Healthcare-SC (2), Spartanburg Reg Healthcare-SC, Utah HealthCare InstituteInternal Medicine (6) Georgetown, U So Carolina (4), U Alabama BirminghamInternal Medicine/Psychiatry (1) NCC-Walter ReedNeurological Surgery (1) Wake Forest Baptist Med Ctr-NCObstetrics-Gynecology (7) Carolinas Med Ctr, NC, U So Carolina, Med Coll Wisconsin, Medical College of Georgia, San Diego Naval Medical Center, U Alabama Med Ctr, VanderbiltOrthopaedic Surgery (2) U S Carolina, VanderbiltPathology (2) B I Deaconess Med Ctr, Medical University of SCPediatrics (9) Carolinas Med Ctr-NC, Florida State University TALLAHASSEE, USo Carolina (3), Palmetto Health Richland (2), Tripler Army, U Arizona TucsonPsychiatry (2) LSU SOM-New Orleans, Wright Patterson AFB OHSurgery-General (3) U So Carolina, Spartanburg Reg Healthcare, Medical University of SCUrology (1) U South FloridaTouro California / TUCOM-CA 2016 Match List:Anesthesiology (1) Washington U ACGMEEmergency Medicine (5) Kaweah Delta Health Care ACGME, Allegiance Health - Jackson, MI AOA, Genesys Regional - Grand Blanc, MI AOA, Botsford - Thomas Jefferson ACGME, Drexel/Hahnemann ACGMEFamily Medicine (40) U Wisconsin ACGME, Natividad - Salinas, CA ACGME, San Joaquin General ACGME, UCSF (2) - Fresno, CA ACGME, Valley Consortium - Modesto, CA ACGME, Marian Regional - Santa Maria, CA ACGME, Mercy Medical Center - Redding, CA ACGME, UCSD ACGME, Kaiser Permanente - Napa/Solano - Vallejo, CA ACGME, Long Beach ACGME, UC ACGME, Kaweah Delta Health Care ACGME, Kaiser Permanente - Anaheim, CA ACGME, Valley Consortium - Modesto, CA ACGME, Harbor-UCLA ACGME, Shasta Community Health Center ACGME, Valley Consortium - Modesto, CA ACGME, Community Memorial Health System - Ventura, CA AOA, Downey Regional, CA AOA, Marian Regional - Santa Maria, CA AOA, Community Memorial - Ventura, CA AOA, Downey Regional, CA AOA, Community Memorial - Ventura, CA AOA, Southeastern Regional - Lumberton, NC AOA, College - Long Beach, CA AOA, Naval Camp Pendelton, Chino Valley, CA AOA, Broward - Ft. Lauderdale, FL AOA, LSU New Orleans, LA ACGME, Hennepin County - Minneapolis ACGME, U Missouri - Kansas City ACGME, U Montana AOA, U Nevada - Las Vegas ACGME, MediSys - Flushing, NY AOA, Our Lady of Lourdes - Binghamton, NY AOA, Valley Medical Center - Renton, WA ACGME, MultiCare Good Samaritan - Puyallup, WA AOA, Mercy Medical Center - Redding, CA ACGMEFamily Medicine-Emergency Medicine PA Aria Health - Philadelphia, PA AOAGeneral Surgery (4) UCSF - Fresno, CA ACGME, Sky Ridge Medical Center - Lone Tree, CO AOA, St Anthony Hospital - Lakewood, CO AOA, MediSys Health Network - Flushing, NY AOAInternal Medicine (24) UC Riverside ACGME, UC Irvine ACGME, UCSF - Fresno, CA (2) ACGME, Kaiser Permanente - Oakland, CA ACGME, Scripps Mercy Hospital ACGME, Arrowhead Regional Medical Center - Colton, CA (2) AOA, College Medical Center - Long Beach, CA AOA, St. Joseph's Lakeland - Lakeland, FL AOA, Walter Reed, Mercy Health - Muskegon, MI AOA, CarePoint Health - Bayonne Medical Center - Bayonne, NJ AOA, Palisades Medical Center - North Bergen, NJ AOA, Hackensack UMC Palisades - Norht Bergen, NJ AOA, Montefiore Medical Center/Einstein - Bronx, NY ACGME, Christ Hospital (2) - Cincinnati, OH ACGME University Hospital - Parma, OH AOA, Wright Patterson Air Force, Legacy Emanuel/Good Samaritan - Portland, OR ACGME, Good Samaritan Regional Medical Center - Corvallis, OR AOA, U Texas - Houston, TX ACGMENeurological Surgery (1) CA Arrowhead Regional Medical Center - Colton, CA AOANeurology (2) NY Hofstra NSLIJ School of Medicine - North Shore LIJ ACGME, UTSW ACGMEObstetrics & Gynecology (7) Kennedy U/Our Lady of Lourdes - Stanford, NJ AOA, Wyckoff Heights Medical Center - Brooklyn, NY AOA, Womack Army Medical Center - Ft. Bragg, NC, GWU ACGME, Boston U ACGME, Sparrow Hospital - Lansing, MI ACGME, Jersey Shore U ACGMEOphthalmology (1) Arrowhead Regional - Colton, CA AOAOrthopedic Surgery (1) NJ Inspira Health Network AOAOtolaryngology & Facial Plastic Surgery (1) Doctor’s Hospital - Columbus, AOAPathology (1) Stanford ACGMEPediatrics (14) U Arizona - Tucson, AZ ACGME, UCSF - Fresno, CA ACGME, Loma Linda (2) ACGME, USC A ACGME, Emory ACGME, Tripler Army Medical Center (2) - Honolulu, HI, U Kansas ACGME, Children’s Michigan (2) - Detroit ACGME, Detroit AOA, Children’s Mercy Hospital - Kansas City, MO ACGME, Case ACGME, OMECO Teaching Health Center - Tulsa, AOAPhysical Medicine & Rehabilitation (8) UC Irvine ACGME, Larkin Community - South Miami, FL AOA, Marianjoy Rehab Hospital - Wheaton, IL ACGME, Schwab Rehabilitation Hospital - Chicago, IL ACGME, Columbia/Cornell-New York Presbyterian - New York, NY ACGME, NYU ACGME (2), U Pitts ACGMEPsychiatry (6) U Arizona - Tucson, AZ ACGME, UCSF - Fresno, CA ACGME, Advocate Lutheran General Hospital - Park Ridge, IL ACGME, Harvard South Shore - Brockton, MA ACGME, Walter Reed Army Medical Center - Bethesda, MD, Oregon - Portland, OR ACGMERadiology-Diagnostic (2) Grand Rapids, MI ACGME, Geisinger - Danville, PA ACGMESurgical - Preliminary (1) Kern Medical Center - Bakersfield, CA ACGMEThoracic Surgery (1) CA UC Davis ACGMETraditional Rotating Internship (7) CA Hemet Valley Medical Center (2) - Hemet, CA AOA, McLaren Oakland - Pontiac, MI AOA, Peconic Bay - Riverhead, NY AOA, Adena Health System - Chillicothe, OH AOA, Clarion Hospital, PA AOA, Naval Medical Center - San Diego

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