www.Residency101.com
Home
Friday, 21 November 2008
Physician
Physician Salary
Medical Licensure
Physician Forums
ABIM
Board Review Courses
ABIM Exam Data
Exam Questions
ABIM Exam Tips
Required Procedures
ABIM 2006 Schedule
Certification Exam
Question Guidelines
Board Strategies
Medical Licensure
Board Questions
Residency
Interview Prep
2006 ERAS Match
Post Interview
Getting into Residency
Interview Questions 1
Interview Prep 2
Reference Letters
Residency CV
Interviews - Do's & Dont's
Interview Questions 2
Interview Questions 3
Personal Statement
Writing Your PS
Match Data 2005
USMLE
USMLE Introduction
USMLE Rules
USMLE Step 1
USMLE Step 2 CK
USMLE Step 2 CS
Step 2 CS History
Step 2 CS Physical Exam
Step 2 CS Counseling
Step 2 CS Patient Notes
Step 2 CS Communication
USMLE Step 3 & CCS
Step 3 CCS Prep
USMLE Step 3 CCS Tips
Step 3 CCS Checklist
ECFMG Certification
ECFMG Newsletters
ABP
Pediatric Certification
Boards Data
Boards Schedule 2006
Pediatric Links
Sub Specialty Boards 2006
ABP Exam Content
Main Menu
Home
Mini
Login Form





Forgotten your password?
No account yet? Create one
Syndicate
Newsflash
Physician Salary

Physician Salary - Primary Care Vs Specialists:

  • Last year was a good one for Primary Care Physicians. Their salary(read compensation) increased more than subspecialists for the first time in the last 5 years.
  • The median salary for Primary Care Physicians for 2004 was 161,000 and the median salary for Sub-Specialists(all sub-specialties put together) was 298,000.
  • For the year 2004, Primary Care Physicians saw an increase in their salary (compensation) of more than 3% compared to subspecialists whose compensation remained the same (No significant increase)
  • Resident decisions on pursuing a Fellowship is partly based on the increase in compensation yearly. The craze for Fellowship Vs. Primary Care also changes in Cycles of 5-7 years. Does this new data mean more number of Residents will opt for Primary Care? Only time will tell...
 
Match & Residency Data

Match & Residency Data - 2004-2005 Data Analysis:

  • The total number of Residents and Fellows in training for the year 2004-2005 was 101,200. 14% of these were Fellows.
  • The number of US Citizen IMGs is growing every year representing the fact that more US Citizens are going abroad for Medical School training.
  • Internal Medicine: There were 21,300 Internal Medicine residents in training in 2005. Compared to 10 years ago, the number of US MDs remained the same. There was a slight decrease in the number of IMGs.
  • Family Medicine: There were 9,300 Family Practice residents in training in 2005. Compared to 10 years ago, the number of US MDs declined by 22%. There was a corresponding increase in the number of IMGs.
  • Pediatrics: There were 7,800 Pediatric residents in training in 2005. Compared to 10 years ago, the number of US MDs increased by 5%. There was a slight decrease in the number of IMGs.
  • Med-Peds: There were 1400 Med-Peds residents in training in 2005. Compared to 10 years ago, the number of US MDs and IMGs remained the same.
  • OB-GYN: There were 4700 OBGYN residents in training in 2005. Compared to 10 years ago, the number of US MDs increased by 16%. There was a corresponding decrease in the number of IMGs.
 
What to write in your Residency Personal Statement PDF Print E-mail
Written by Ram   
Wednesday, 26 October 2005
What to write in your Residency Personal Statement: 
  • If you are at a loss, as to where to begin, answer these questions and you will come up with enough content.
Why did you join Medicine?Why did you choose this residency specialty (Internal medicine, Pediatrics, Family Practice, Surgery etc.)? Why are you interested in this fellowship specialty?What features of the residency / fellowship specialty, interest you? (Procedures, primarily outpatient, elderly population, recent advances in medical research, new blockbuster drugs)Brief background information about yourself, Medical school, honors and accomplishments. Don’t repeat your CV. Instead, try to emphasize the high points of your medical career.Are you interested in teaching? What has your experience been so far with medical students, nurses and residents? Will you be interested in pursuing a career in academic medicine? Do you plan to work at a University based hospital?How do you perceive your patients? Do you bond with them? Do you take your patient care responsibilities seriously?What research experience did you have in Medical school / Residency? What are your research interests? How do you plan to contribute to medical research?Write briefly about your family life and interests. Are you married? What does your spouse do? How many kids? These give the residency program director an insight into your personality and life. This gives flesh and life to your personal statement.
 
< Prev   Next >
Polls
This Website is ...
  
 
(C) 2008 www.Residency101.com
Joomla! is Free Software released under the GNU/GPL License.
Design by Mamboteam.com | Powered by Mambobanner.de