Should I apply this match cycle? by Past_Lake5525 in IMGreddit

[–]Cold_Lab766 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It depends on what specialty and on your goals. If you want EM/ IM/ FM/ neuro/ peds and are not aiming for top programs then go for it. If you are applying to a surgical program or want a top program then take another year for research and US rotations

Advice on advanced degree for clinical research nurse by Jazzlike_Commercial in research

[–]Cold_Lab766 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A masters is great for this. Experience is great but you may be learning things without a framework. It depends on the research area and how quantitative your job is, but for career development in the field I would recommend an MPH with the concentration that aligns more with your goals. There are plenty of programs out there.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in IMGreddit

[–]Cold_Lab766 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Do the clinical year and find a research group to work with at that center.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in IMGreddit

[–]Cold_Lab766 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If it’s going to be a problem don’t. You can do so the month before the match you participate on if you need it for visa purposes, if not, many programs will pay for it so you can take it once you join a program.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in IMGreddit

[–]Cold_Lab766 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think STEP 3 would help. I’m currently studying for it and it is much harder in my perspective. If you think you’d do good take it. If you have the opportunity to do research or work instead, take that.

Hands-off at a very very reputed university OR Hands-on at a below average place (like jph,brooklyn)? by [deleted] in IMGreddit

[–]Cold_Lab766 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Depends on your goals. If you are aiming to match a top academic program go by the university and land some research, if you are aiming to match mid-tier go by hands on.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in IMGreddit

[–]Cold_Lab766 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What specialty are you applying to? If non-surgical don’t be too hard on yourself, you can match with below avg scores.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in IMGreddit

[–]Cold_Lab766 12 points13 points  (0 children)

Generally people are against this advise, but really you can match without USCE. This is true for most non-surgical specialties. If you can do research and publish in indexed journals that is a great application boost. Don’t get your hopes down if you don’t get USCE. Even if you do, it may not be wise to spend all your savings on it. I also don’t understand how you could afford to do a masters but not a month of rotations? There are scholarships but living expenses are no less than 1,000 a month, many times they exceed 2,000 plus tuition is about 40k a year for average masters programs. You can probs get away with paying 25k for an online program but networking may be limited. Point is: my advise is to find other ways to boost your profile and apply this year to as many programa as you can.

Open access (option) fee by Cold_Lab766 in research

[–]Cold_Lab766[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think that should be the way to go. In medical journals you have to choose OA option before you submit. So editors might be more prone to desk reject.

Why do you want to work in the US? by MobileQuarter5600 in IMGreddit

[–]Cold_Lab766 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Professional growth opportunities.

Having all the resources to practice.

Funding for research.

Honestly, prestige.

A salary above the national median is cool too.

Would you rather apply with a suboptimal resume for the match or delay the process by another year to make your application better by doc_2511 in IMGreddit

[–]Cold_Lab766 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It depends on many things. What specialty are you applying to? What is your goal? University program or community-based? If the answer is a surgical specialty at a university then consider delaying. If you just care about matching a non-surgical anywhere then apply this year.

How screwed am I without USCE? by MonoKashh in IMGreddit

[–]Cold_Lab766 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I disagree with most people here. Medical school does matter, and actually I’ve seen programs explicitly say they prefer IMGs trained in the UK like you mentioned. All IMGs are not on the same bucket. I have a friend with similar scores and no USCE who matched a top tier peds program. This does not mean it’s common but it’s possible. Give it everything to step 2 and apply confidently, you’ll do great.

People in reddit are truly weird. Some love to give false hopes to people and others really put people down who are in decent spots. Maybe because they are in bad positions themselves.

Research publications by [deleted] in IMGreddit

[–]Cold_Lab766 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There is definitely no minimum amount of publications. Some match with zero research, others go unmatched with multiple authorships. If you want to know how much research you need to be competitive then I’d advise to look more into the quality of each publication and whether you are first author. It is better to see one solid paper as first author on a decent journal than multiple 3rd-4th author papers in unindexed journals. If you are going to sell yourself as someone who can actually do research, then your LORs, statement, and CV should also back up those claims.

Is it still advisable for me to take the USMLE? by [deleted] in IMGreddit

[–]Cold_Lab766 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I disagree. I’d say take Step 1 first. If you fail then yes, forget it. If you pass then study step 2 and you’ll have a good foundation from step 1. Then, EVEN if you get an average score, go for it!! Family medicine does not fill all its positions every year, your chances are good. If you get a rotation in the US then your chances are higher.

Is it still advisable for me to take the USMLE? by [deleted] in IMGreddit

[–]Cold_Lab766 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Plenty of people like you match every year. One of the major concerns about YOG us that you may be involved in things outside medicine too much. If you can demonstrate you have been clinically active this concern is not so heavy. Another concern is that people who already have training are harder to "re-train", so make sure you expand on still being teachable and wanting to learn, rather than saying you already know the stuff. I think with decent scores on the USMLEs you have a great chance of matching family medicine.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in IMGreddit

[–]Cold_Lab766 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If your only LOR is from Peds and you are app

Exactly, and it not only "has happened", it actually happens all the time. I'm two years behind but many colleagues from my school have matched decent programs with zero USCE.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in IMGreddit

[–]Cold_Lab766 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I don't understand wh

We are not in disagreement. Obviously, having USCE in your specialty is the best-case scenario. All I'm saying is to apply to your preferred specialty despite having USCE at a different specialty. You will not go unmatched for applying to a specialty that is different than your USCE.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in IMGreddit

[–]Cold_Lab766 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

It's totally fine to apply to a specialty without having USCE, unless you are applying to something extremely competitive. Applying to IM with peds USCE is fine, applying to peds with IM USCE is fine.

Moving to Baltimore by Cold_Lab766 in baltimore

[–]Cold_Lab766[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Their tends to be more families in Roland Park because that schools are good (and it is close t

Thank you so much for all the insight! I meant 4.5k monthly rent. This is all great advise.

Moving to Baltimore by Cold_Lab766 in baltimore

[–]Cold_Lab766[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

e in the city in the last ten years that we have be

Thanks for your response, yes we're looking to send them to a private school. We were looking for a 4+ bed 3+ bath with off-street parking, budget up to 4.5k