1 / 31

Preparing for Pediatrics Residency Training

Preparing for Pediatrics Residency Training. Department of Pediatrics University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Contacts. Harvey Hamrick, MD – Residency Director harvey_hamrick@med.unc.edu Julie Byerley, MD – Student Director julie_byerley@med.unc.edu

garron
Télécharger la présentation

Preparing for Pediatrics Residency Training

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Preparing for Pediatrics Residency Training Department of PediatricsUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

  2. Contacts • Harvey Hamrick, MD – Residency Directorharvey_hamrick@med.unc.edu • Julie Byerley, MD – Student Directorjulie_byerley@med.unc.edu • Kenya McNeal-Trice, MD – Student Directorkmtrice@med.unc.edu • Kelly Lear – Student and Residency Coordinator klear@med.unc.edu

  3. Med/Peds Contacts • Anne Stephens, MD – Residency Directoranne_stephens@med.unc.edu • Denise Craig – Residency Coordinatordtc@med.unc.edu

  4. Choosing Pediatrics as a Specialty • Caring for children and working with their families • Breadth of opportunities • Primary care • Subspecialty • Cognitive • Procedural • Outpatient and inpatient opportunities • Variable schedules, work load, income, etc. • Further discussion is welcomed by advisors

  5. Overall Perspective on Pediatrics Training • You will be able to match somewhere if you list enough programs • Significant variability in “competitiveness” of individual programs • Prediction of who could match where is difficult • programs rank using different priorities

  6. Pediatric Career Advisors • Dr. Byerley, Dr. McNeal-Trice, or Dr. Hamrick will be your advisor • S/he will meet with you regularly, give individualized advice, and write your departmental letter

  7. The Fourth Year Schedule at UNC • Rotations completed in September should be in the Dean’s letter • Do at least one “hard core” rotation (AI or critical care) before interview season • It doesn’t have to be in Pediatrics • If you want a letter from a fourth year rotation plan that to be completed by the end of September

  8. The Fourth Year Schedule at UNC • Contrasting opinions • Get started on Pediatrics • This is your last chance to take non-pediatric courses that interest you: take advantage of that • Do a critical care unit • Consider radiology and other electives • Consider traveling • Signing the forms – Byerley, McNeal-Trice, and Hamrick

  9. A New Elective • Transition to Pediatric Internship • Offered only one block • Combination of didactics and clinical work • Not required

  10. Away Rotations • Performance here will outweigh the application, positively or negatively • Not necessary to match at any given place • Helpful if your heart is set on one program or one geographic area • If you do one, complete it by the end of January

  11. Deciding Between Two Fields • Ok to apply to two fields but decide on one preference by the interview if possible • Be careful with your ERAS letters • Programs do not want to match applicants who are not committed to a given field • Be honest

  12. Considering Where to Apply • Use FREIDA to choose programs for applications • http://www.ama-assn.org/ama/pub/category/2997.html • Start with geography

  13. Where to Apply • Geography • Size • Reputation • Academic or community setting? • Children’s hospital or not? • Presence of fellows • Board pass rates

  14. How Many to Apply To • Individual question – your advisor can help • Generally not more than 20 • Couples match candidates should apply to more places than individuals

  15. The Application Process • Use ERAS to apply • http://www.aamc.org/students/eras/start.htm

  16. Application Components • General ERAS Application • Personal Statement • CV • Transcript • Dean’s Letter (MSPE) • Letters of Recommendation • USMLE Transcript • Photograph

  17. Personal Statement • Statement of one page or less that clarifies why the student is choosing pediatrics • Sincere, individualized • Why pediatrics suits your talents • Gives the interviewer something to talk about • Everyone entering pediatrics loves children – be sure it says more than that • Choose safe over bold

  18. Essentials about the Personal Statement • Assure that there are no spelling or grammatical errors • Don’t try to be too unique • Be sure your career goal advisor reads it before its finalized to ERAS • Don’t hurt your application with your personal statement

  19. CV • Outlined by ERAS • Include elements from college and medical school, and other previous work • Be sure your CV looks sincere and not filled with meaningless one time activities • Longer doesn’t necessarily mean better • Have it reviewed by your career advisor before submission

  20. Letters of Recommendation • Dean’s Letter • Pediatric Departmental Letter • Written by your assigned career advisor • Is “the chair’s letter”, which may or may not be required • Two to three others • Choose someone you worked with clinically • Inpatient is generally more valuable than outpatient • Don’t have to all be in pediatrics • Research mentor letters are okay as long as there are adequate clinical letters • Be sure to thank those who write for you

  21. USMLE Transcript:When to Take Step II • Early if your Step I is low • Whenever if Step I is high • As required by the Dean’s Office • When it fits your schedule

  22. Interviews • Schedule as early as you are invited • Season is November - February • Try to group geographically • talk directly with programs so they can help you do that • Be very, very nice to coordinators • Go to all the socials • Remember -they are part of the interview

  23. The Interview Day • Remember the whole visit is a job interview • Meet as many people as possible • Be yourself, but on your best behavior • This is not the time to complain • Be professional at all times • Have questions prepared to ask, and ask multiple people

  24. The Faculty Interview • Show your enthusiasm for learning and patient care • Show respect for research, opportunities in primary care, subspecialties, etc. regardless of your own interests • They should have read your application • remember what you wrote • Be prepared to ask good questions (not the details about call schedules, maternity leave, etc.)

  25. Follow Up After Interview Day • Send thank you notes routinely, but don’t go overboard • It’s ok to tell your top choice you love them • It is NOT required • Always be honest • “Near the top of my list” doesn’t many anything to programs • Complete whatever communication you intend before mid-February • Don’t expect follow up communications from the programs to you • No news is NOT bad news

  26. Second Visits • Scheduled visits after the interview day arranged by the coordinator at the student’s request • Much less formal • An opportunity for shadowing • Done only if the student needs to see the program again, but can be very helpful • Definitely NOT required

  27. How Programs Rank • Highly variable and hard to predict • Interview • Clinical performance – academic (based on grades, dean’s letter) • USMLE scores, step 2 > step 1 • Dean’s letter, class rank • Letters of Recommendation • Preclinical performance (based on grades, dean’s letter) • School reputation • Extracurricular experience (leadership, service) • Research experience

  28. How to Rank Programs • Geography • Feel • Resident satisfaction, friendliness, support • Breadth of experiences offered, patient population • Affiliated sites • Strength of faculty • Resident responsibility • Fellowship opportunities • Board pass rate • Stability

  29. How Many to Rank • Your advisor can help • Generally people entering peds rank 8-12 programs • Rank anywhere you interviewed that you would rather be an intern than jobless

  30. Subsequent Meetings • May: meeting with this year’s MS4s who matched in peds • July: you should have met with your advisor at least once • September/October: social

  31. Last Bits • Please let us know when your career decision is finalized • Stay organized along the way

More Related