What I Learned in Medical School #39: All the hard work and sweat were worth it in the end! I’m going to be a dermatologist!

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What I Learned in Medical School #39: All the hard work and sweat were worth it in the end! I’m going to be a dermatologist!
Congratulations on your residency match! Now what? Here are some tips to help you use that time gap to your best possible advantage.
Skip #1 for now, but still some really solid advice. #TBT
What I Learned in Medical School #44: Regardless of where we end up after the match, we will become phenomenal physicians.
What I Learned in Medical School #40: The best-laid plans of mice and men oft go awry. I can’t imagine the scope of plans that have been cancelled because of COVID: weddings, trips, etc.
As long as you have a lot of clothes, you will need a lot of socks, such as this kaitesocks.com
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I’ve been wanting to start this blog for a while now, but better late than never! This is going to be the journey of a 4th year D.O. med student applying for the OB/GYN residency match 2020-- the good, bad, ugly-- but hopefully mostly good.
The OB/GYN residency match has become increasingly competitive for lots of reasons. It’s a transitional time -the single accreditation system that has essentially united all residencies under the ACGME has essentially removed the separate-match barrier between traditionally MD vs DO residencies accepting their respective candidates. Despite the political move, it seems most MD programs will continue to discriminate wildly against DOs-- for example the University of Colorado-Denver charges a modest $150 fee for externship to MD students in their fourth year to rotate at their hospital whereas they charge an exorbitant $4,150 to osteopathic students and IMGs. On my midwest rotations I often run into students from ‘west coast’ schools- Western U, PNWU, AZCOM, Rocky Vista- because their home states in the west are barren of D.O.-friendly OB/GYN programs. It’s surprising that the part of the USA with the holistic reputation similar to osteopathic philosophy isn’t training doctors to practice in that way.
I’d love to be at an academic osteopathic residency where I am supported and welcomed and the holistic osteopathic philosophy is continued in my education. So, as part of my fourth year education I am doing rotations at a variety of hospitals with traditionally AOA-accredited residencies. I’m currently on my 3rd rotation and applications are due in 2 weeks. Competition is ramping up. Pressure is on to behave perfectly every day on these ‘away’ rotations (also known as auditions or sub-internships) because it is essentially a 2-4week interview. You aren’t the only one interviewing for the residency slot on the rotation- currently, I share the rotation with 6 other hopeful students. Last rotation there were 4 of us; the one before that 6. We try to be friends, but there is always that undercurrent of competition that you know you need to watch your back.
At the end of the day, I’ve passed all of my boards and will pass all of these classes/rotations and will walk across a stage in May and gain those gorgeous two letters after my name: D.O. Life would just really be grand if I were able to add those 5 other letters after it: OB/GYN.
Convenant AgriProjecten getekend
Ondernemers, onderwijs en overheid slaan de handen ineen met het ondertekenen van het Convenant AgriProjecten. – Foto Ernest Selleger
REGIO – Ons land hoort bij de wereldspelers in de agri- en foodsector. De Kop van Noord-Holland is dan weer één van de grootste spelers in dit land. Belangrijke innovaties rond melkrobots, GPS-systemen in de akkerbouw en energiebesparing worden in Nederland…
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