This document provides guidance for medical students entering their fourth year. It outlines the requirements and timeline for exams, rotations, residency applications and interviews. Key points include: taking Step 2 CK by the end of the year, completing required rotations in July-August and December-January if possible, and using away rotations in the fall to gain exposure and experience in specialties of interest. It emphasizes starting the residency application in the spring, and provides resources for researching specialties and programs. The overall message is to plan ahead strategically for a successful application year.
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This document provides guidance for medical students entering their fourth year. It outlines the requirements and timeline for exams, rotations, residency applications and interviews. Key points include: taking Step 2 CK by the end of the year, completing required rotations in July-August and December-January if possible, and using away rotations in the fall to gain exposure and experience in specialties of interest. It emphasizes starting the residency application in the spring, and provides resources for researching specialties and programs. The overall message is to plan ahead strategically for a successful application year.
This document provides guidance for medical students entering their fourth year. It outlines the requirements and timeline for exams, rotations, residency applications and interviews. Key points include: taking Step 2 CK by the end of the year, completing required rotations in July-August and December-January if possible, and using away rotations in the fall to gain exposure and experience in specialties of interest. It emphasizes starting the residency application in the spring, and provides resources for researching specialties and programs. The overall message is to plan ahead strategically for a successful application year.
This document provides guidance for medical students entering their fourth year. It outlines the requirements and timeline for exams, rotations, residency applications and interviews. Key points include: taking Step 2 CK by the end of the year, completing required rotations in July-August and December-January if possible, and using away rotations in the fall to gain exposure and experience in specialties of interest. It emphasizes starting the residency application in the spring, and provides resources for researching specialties and programs. The overall message is to plan ahead strategically for a successful application year.
.light at the end of the tunnel or an oncoming train?
What do you want to do with your life?
RULE #1 Dont freak if you dont know, work hard
RULE #2 If you do know, still work hard
RULE #3 Work on developing the knowledge and skills youll need to be a great doc
RULE #4 BE HONEST WITH YOURSELF Are you interested in the common patient complaints? Are there patients you really dont like dealing with? Are there patients you would be miserable not seeing?
Lifestyle choices? Practice choices? Your colleagues Geography Try to see as many patients as you can third year If you are really unsure talk to some fourth years and talk to faculty Back to RULE #1 Do NOT freak out. Fourth year will be different for EVERY single person Four parts: The Tests Things required for MUSOM Things required for your residency goals Things required by/for you (aka FUN) By July 1, 2011 ACLS: Two sessions offered by MUSOM
By December 31, 2011 Step 2 CK: Essentially just like Step 1, only generally considered easier and 1 block of questions longer Step 2 CS: 12 patient OSCE that you have to travel for, pay lots of $$ for, but not study much for
By April 1, 2012 MUSOM Radiology Exam: On-line 100 question exam 4 weeks of IM at the VA
4 weeks of Emergency Med at CHH
4 weeks of Surgery (1 wk anesthesia + 3 wks of subspecialty)
Plus22 weeks of electives/away rotations/rural if you need it The things for your residency goals & for FUN Away rotations Extra rotations in your field or subspecialties Stuff you may never see again International or Wilderness electives Time off for interviews/vacation/having babies http://musom.marshall.edu/students/senior-handbook/ Listing, description & contact info for all the fourth year electives Check them out BEFORE the scheduling meeting so you have an idea what is out there What do you want to do? Do we have an academic department? Is it a highly competitive specialty? Do you want to go to a highly competitive area/specific program? How strong of a candidate are you? Do you need to take Step 2 early? Do you need to apply to more than one specialty? Will you need to do a lot of interviews? As for the answers
http://www.nrmp.org/ - then go to the Data & Reports section, then entire 281 page PDF is there for all specialties Help you honestly gage your chances as an applicant in your chosen field Guide for away rotations, where to apply, personal statement Letter of recommendation (youll need at least 3). If you dont have one find one! Join the American College of Whatever Specialty, some have virtual mentors Current MS-4s Access to faculty is a MUSOM strength use it! Isersons Getting into a Residency (library or purchase)
When to take Step 2 CK?
When to take Step 2 CS?
Away Rotations: Yes or No?
Interview Season Scheduling?
Your Residency Candidacy If step 1 low: need a boost, take early If step 1 high: maybe consider late, but earlier usually better
Preparation Have you struggled on mini-boards? Do you know you need extra study time?
Timing Have to sit by end of December but fit around away rotations, required rotations, interviews, etc. Takes 3-wks to score, if going for the boost try to take by the end of Sept at the latest so score will be in by Nov 1st Time & Resources MUCH more varied than Step 1 (1-6 wks) Kaplan/USMLE World QBANK (Both are pretty good) Step 2 Review Course Pretty Good, 2 weeks, mostly half days First Aid Step 2 unlike Step 1 this is only ok not the best Step Up to Medicine Great, but long and detailed Secrets Very popular detailed Crush Step 2 Very Popular very general
Main Focus of test: Internal Medicine As pathology was to Step 1 OB/GYN & Pediatrics MUSOM typically perform well here Surgery (subspecialties) Use Qbank for review *Neurology/Biostats Fill in your knowledge gaps, biostats VERY high yield Psychiatry First Aid for Psychiatry is great
Travel: Houston, Chicago, Philly, Atlanta or Los Angeles (Philly hardest to schedule) Does NOT require a lot of preparation, no advantage to waiting Realize it is administered directly by the USMLE not Prometric First Aid for CS is all youll need. Review it the couple of days before your test Squish it in whenever is it convenient given the travel. Schedule ASAP (you can change it relatively easily if you have enough advance notice) You should definitely consider if: MUSOM does not have an academic department You want to go to a specific program specific city extremely competitive residency or place Everyone: just to see a different way of doing things
Visiting Student Application Service (VSAS) http://www.aamc.org/programs/vsas/ Other Institutions check their websites
Most are 4 weeks Rotations are usually subspecialties Highest yield for resident exposure Define whats most important: what or when Apply to 2-3 for the same month Personal contact/connections Frustrating how slow schools are with getting back to you Respond promptly
Programs/schools are grouped into somewhat arbitrary tiers there is no 10-best list Ask Faculty in the field Expect some Bias See Linda Holmes for list of graduates in a specialty Ask MS-4s going into that specialty Freida (on the AMA site) Specialty Training Statistics StudentDoctor.net http://forums.studentdoctor.net/ US News Best Hospitals http://health.usnews.com/sections/health/best-hospitals
Cannot miss any days of your anesthesia week
Check with away rotations on interview policy BEFORE committing
Flexible electives (academic medicine, medical spanish, readings in international/rural health, medical education) October November December January Anesthesia ------------------ -------+++++++ +++++++++ +++++++++++ Derm ------------------ ------------------ ++++++++++ ++++++++++ ER ------------------ -------+++++++ +++++++++ +++++++++++ Family -------------++ ++++++++++ +++++++++ +++++---------- Gen Surg ------------------ ++++++++ +++++++++ ++++------------ Internal -------------+++ ++++++++ +++++++++ ++++------------ Neuro Surg ------------------ ++++++++++ ++++++++ ++++--------- ObGyn -------------+++ ++++++++ +++++++++ ++++------------ Ortho ------------------ ------------------ +++++++++++ ++++++++ Peds -------------++ +++++++++ +++++++++ +++++---------- Rads ------------------ ++++++++++ ++++++++ ++++++++ Required rotations: July/August if that is your field Christmas and NYE if live nearby Strategically schedule interviews Away rotations: Earlier than later, be wary of interview season Interviews: Clump together geographically
Preference will be given to the first three months of your schedule Required/away/elective/step 2 Required/sub-I/away Away/away/step 2/elective Away/away/away, etc You can trade required times with your classmates $$ is a issue for interviews & aways you do NOT get much school loan money Credit cards, parents, residency & relocation loans
Start planning/thinking about things NOW (but not to the detriment of your rotations!) You should start working on your application in LATE spring it will take WEEKS to finish it (due Sept 1 st ) Personal Statement Letters of Recommendation (Ask early!) Compiling all of your extracurricular activities Research Community service Leadership/Awards Hobbies (be VERY honest here you will get a lot of interview questions!) Things more complicated if you do Ophtho, Peds Neuro, Urology, Military
in mid-march (shortly after Match Day) The dirty details of the Applications (ERAS) Interviewing 101 The Matches & Ranking (NRMP) Small-group discussions with freshly matched MS-4s and current residents http://musom.marshall.edu/students/senior-handbook/
Evidence-Based Recommendations For Natural Bodybuilding Contest Preparation: Nutrition and Supplementation by Eric Helms, Alan Aragon, and Peter Fitschen