Communication Experience – Honest Medical School Admission Guide #8 (2015) – Video


Communication Experience - Honest Medical School Admission Guide #8 (2015)
Full Medical School Admission playlist in order: http://med.coursegrinder.com Examples of ways to show that you have developed communication skills on your medical school CV! ===== If you...

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Communication Experience - Honest Medical School Admission Guide #8 (2015) - Video

Hobbies and Sports on CV – Honest Medical School Admission Guide #13 (2015) – Video


Hobbies and Sports on CV - Honest Medical School Admission Guide #13 (2015)
Full Medical School Admission playlist in order: http://med.coursegrinder.com A look at the final section of your CV. This section may seem like the dump for anything that did not fall into...

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Hobbies and Sports on CV - Honest Medical School Admission Guide #13 (2015) - Video

Quantifying Harmony: The Matchmaking Algorithm That Pairs Residents With Hospitals, Students With Schools

On March 20th, over 30,000 training physicians received the results of their residency applications.The National Resident Matching Program (NRMP), a non profit organization established by medical students in 1952, manages the process of matching applicants with training institutions. NRMP uses an algorithm that is based on the Nobel prize winning work of economists Dr. Lloyd Shapely and Dr. Alvin Roth.

This year was the largest Main Residency Match in history. Compared to last year, 651 more seniors took part in the Match; the growth is a result of rising medical school enrollment. There was also a 3% increase in the number of available positions: nearly 60% of the additional 600+ plus positions were in the primary care specialties of Family Medicine, Internal Medicine, and Pediatrics.

Data provided by NRMP

The algorithm is suspectedto take just 17 seconds to spit out optimal results. Its origins date back to the 1960s when David Gale and Lloyd S. Shapley, distinguished mathematicians and economists, devised a matchmaking algorithm to create stable marriages. A stable marriage was defined as one in which neither spouse would rather be paired with someone else. The GaleShapley algorithm, a deferred acceptance algorithm, creates the best possible pairing after multiple rounds of matching.

A version of the Gale-Shapely algorithm is the basis of the Match and the NYC high school choice program. There are a number of other use cases outside these two examples including high school enrollment programs in Boston, Newark, Denver, and Detroit.

The NRMP algorithm has only been changed twice in the last 60 years. The first modification was made to accommodate two people who wanted to match as a couple in 1984, and the second tweak changed the algorithm from program proposing to applicant proposing. That is, the algorithm went from prioritizing the preferences of training hospitals to prioritizing the preferences of applicants.

Current CEO of NRMP, Mona Signer, told FORBES, One of the benefits to this whole process is that we dont change the algorithm. It is consistent, and that is important in terms of creating trust in our process. She added, We could run matches from prior years and get the same result. In fact, sometimes we do that to make sure that the software is functioning correctly.

Every year NRMP publishes an extensive amount of data surrounding the Match on its own website while also distributing the data to other publications. Signer says, All the data collected serves to report the aggregate statistics for the Match outcome and to help applicants and program directors maximize their chances in the Match. They produce a program director survey aimed at helping students learn what program directors are looking for, as well as an applicant survey for program directors to understand what applicants are looking for.

Signer warns that, even with all this information available, there is no way to game the system.

According to Signer, It is not that there is a shortage of positions that keeps U.S. students from matching. Its really more a matter of matching their own credentials to an appropriate specialty.

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Quantifying Harmony: The Matchmaking Algorithm That Pairs Residents With Hospitals, Students With Schools

Ukrainian doctors tour mid-valley

LEBANON First-year medical student Vitaliy Natkha spoke Russian as he led five physicians from Uzhhorod, Ukraine, on atour of the College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific-Northwest.

Natkha, who is attending the COMP-Northwest medical school in Lebanon, speaks fluent Russian because he was born in Berdyansk, Ukraine.

"It's been great," Natkha said of last week's tour. "There's big differences in the systems they have."

Nathka was translating for a delegation of visiting Ukrainian doctors who came to the mid-valley as part of a sister-city relationship between Uzhhorod and Corvallis.

In addition to the Lebanon stop, the visitors also attended events at Oregon State University, Good Samaritan Regional Medical Center, Corvallis Family Medicine, The Corvallis Clinic and the state Capitol in Salem. They also squeezed in a sightseeing trip to the Oregon Coast.

Ukrainian physician Anzhela Dolgikh, who specializes in general practice and family medicine, said that the medical education system in the United States is different from learning medicine in Ukraine.

In Ukraine, students might study on the same cadavers for more than 20 years, she said. At COMP-Northwest, its anatomy lab brings in new donor patients every year.

"These cadavers are young," Dolgikh said after touring COMP-Norhwest's anatomy center.

Also, more technology is available, and students are allowed to practice on each other in the United States, shesaid. It's not legal for students to practice on each other in Ukraine.

Under the Ukrainian system, her medical education was comprised of lectures and exams, she said.

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Ukrainian doctors tour mid-valley

Young doctors lured to positions out west

March 25, 2015, 4 a.m.

A rural medical school with increasingly coveted spots up for grabs has clinched the interest of aspiring doctors with the help of the lifestyles and facilities on offer at Dubbo.

RFDS Dubbo Base Manager Darren Schiller and RFDS pilot Captain James Brown demonstrating the features of the plane to the University of Sydney medical students.

University of Sydney student Kieran Muir volunteered to be on the stretcher, with RFDS Flight Nurse Keryn Bolte showing the group how a patient is loaded into the plane. Photo supplied.

RFDS Dubbo Base Manager Darren Schiller talking to the University of Sydney students about the planes and the important work the service provides. Photo supplied.

RFDS Dubbo Base manager Darren Schiller, University of Sydney medical students Astrid Gardiner, Katherine Moore, Jack Luxford, Caitlyn Swinney, RFDS flight nurse Keryn Bolte and RFDS pilot Captain James Brown. Photo supplied.

University of Sydney medical students during a discovery bus tour of the School of Rural Health campus at Dubbo.

University of Sydney School of Rural Health student liaison officer Kiffin Miller leads medical students Diana Cavaye, Jack Luxford, Rebecca Thompson, Jacob Campbell and Clare White on a tour of the Dubbo campus. Photo: FAYE WHEELER

A rural medical school with increasingly coveted spots up for grabs has clinched the interest of aspiring doctors with the help of the lifestyles and facilities on offer at Dubbo.

Jack Luxford and Clare White were new converts to studying in the regional city they saw as offering professional and personal advantages.

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Young doctors lured to positions out west

Corruption and Nepotism – Honest Medical School Admission Guide #2 (2015) – Video


Corruption and Nepotism - Honest Medical School Admission Guide #2 (2015)
Full Medical School Admission playlist in order: http://med.coursegrinder.com A general overview of the most frustrating thing you will encounter in your journey to medical school. Although...

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Corruption and Nepotism - Honest Medical School Admission Guide #2 (2015) - Video

Match Day 2015 University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry – Video


Match Day 2015 University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry
One of the biggest annual events in medical schools across the country is Match Day. At 12:00pm EST, medical students across the country discover where they will spend the next few years of...

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Match Day 2015 University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry - Video

Medical students 'brainwashed' in Syria

Story highlights Families say the doctors and students went to Turkey to help refugees "They have been cheated, brainwashed," parliamentarian Mehmet Ali Ediboglu says The group is made up of Britons, Sudanese, an American and a Canadian

The group of 11 people includes seven Britons, an American, a Canadian and two Sudanese, Turkish lawmaker Mehmet Ali Ediboglu told CNN on Sunday.

Ediboglu, an opposition lawmaker, told The Observer that he had spoken with the students' families, who were convinced their loved ones wanted to work for ISIS, and were asking him for help tracking them down in neighboring Syria.

"They have been cheated, brainwashed. That is what I, and their relatives, think," Ediboglu said, according to the newspaper.

But he also stressed that the group did not travel with the intention of joining the battle.

"Let's not forget about the fact that they are doctors," he told The Observer. "They went there to help, not to fight."

In a joint statement, the students' and doctors' families said their children are humanitarians who went "to Turkey willingly to offer voluntary medical help to those refugees who are in need of medical care on Turkey's borders."

They have since "disappeared," the statement said.

"We have heard from the British, Turkish and Sudanese authorities that we have so far met, but we hope that the respectable governments of these countries would enforce, speed up and coordinate more effective measures to ensure the safety of our children wherever they are and bring them back to us as soon as possible," the statement said.

Eight of the group are medical students who've just graduated, and the three others are in their final year of medical school, he said. They'd been studying in Khartoum, Sudan.

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Medical students 'brainwashed' in Syria

Families vow to bring home British medical students who went to treat jihadis in Syria

Nine medical students were born in UK and studied medicine in Sudan Group of five men and four women left medical school and fled to Syria Lena Abdulqadir said she wanted to volunteer to help wounded Syrians' The surgeons daughter sent smiling selfie to sister before entering Syria Their parents believe they have been brainwashed by ISIS fanatics and have now travelled to the region to convince their children to return home

By Claire Ellicott for the Daily Mail

Published: 18:17 EST, 22 March 2015 | Updated: 06:22 EST, 23 March 2015

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Nine British medical students have travelled secretly to Syria to help treat jihadi fighters in hospitals controlled by Islamic State, it emerged yesterday.

The group of five men and four women, all in their late teens and early 20s, fled medical school in Sudan and travelled to Istanbul before crossing the Turkish border.

One woman, a surgeons daughter, sent a smiling selfie to her sister before entering Syria.

Their desperate parents believe they have been brainwashed by Islamic fanatics and have now travelled to the region in a bid to convince their children to return home.

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Families vow to bring home British medical students who went to treat jihadis in Syria

From the ground up: UNLV medical school taking shape

Leila Navidi

UNLV is in the planning stages for a medical school in which the first class would graduate in the year 2021. Above, UNLV nursing school students run through a simulation with a medical mannequin at the Clinical Simulation Center at Shadow Lane campus in Las Vegas. The nursing program is celebrating its 50th year at theuniversity.

By Jackie Valley (contact)

Sunday, March 22, 2015 | 2 a.m.

What does it take to build a medical school?

Lots and lots of planning.

Students wont arrive for another two years, but Barbara Atkinson, planning dean for the UNLV School of Medicine, has been busy crafting the schools curriculum, recruiting and hiring faculty and scouring the state for donors.

Supporters say Las Vegas first allopathic medical school will improve health care in Southern Nevada and be an economic driver.

To make that happen, though, UNLV and Nevada System of Higher Education officials say they need nearly $27 million up front from the state. Gov. Brian Sandoval has signaled he would support that funding, but he doesnt want to shell out the money all at once. He pledged $8.3 million for the medical school over the next two years, with the rest to follow in the next biennium.

UNLV also hopes to lure a large private donor or donors capable of giving $100 million to pay for medical school buildings.

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From the ground up: UNLV medical school taking shape

Berkshire medical students get matched with hospitals during Match Day

Charlotte DeLeo, a Pittsfield native and fourth-year student at the University of Massachusetts Medical School smiles during Match Day with her classmate A.J. Piper, also of Pittsfield. Held each third Friday of March, it's the day that medical students across the country get matched with their residency institution, marking the start of their professional experience. (Photo Courtesy of Charlotte DeLeo)

PITTSFIELD In a crowded room at the University of Massachusetts Medical School in Worcester, Charlotte DeLeo joined her 120 other classmates in clutching sealed white paper envelopes, counting down with their loved ones to noon.

When the moment came, all together the students tore open the letters that would reveal their destinies as to where they'll begin their residencies their careers as medical doctors. For these students the third Friday of March, also known as national Match Day, is one of the biggest days in their lives. Through interviews and rankings both by students and institutions, students across the country are algorithmically assigned their placements.

On July 1, DeLeo will begin her practice at her first-choice placement, UMass Memorial Medical Center.

"Everyone was nervous but excited. You could stay here in Massachusetts, or you could end up in California," DeLeo told The Eagle by phone on Friday afternoon after opening her letter.

"It was so emotional, probably as big as graduation," said Charlotte's mother, Marka DeLeo, who attended the ceremony with Charlotte's paternal grandmother and advocate, Thelma DeLeo, and Charlotte's boyfriend, Scott Walrath.

"For me and the other students here from the Berkshires and other places, it's the culmination of a lot of work, and a revelation of how people have found their little niches within medicine," Charlotte said.

"It was an emotional but very happy event. Most people got their first or second choices, and I think were really satisfied where they ended up," she said.

For the DeLeo family, it was a particularly prideful day. Both Charlotte's older brother, Dr. Michael DeLeo, currently a University of Pennsylvania-based radiologist, and her father, longtime Berkshire oncologist Dr. Michael J. DeLeo of Berkshire Hematology Oncology, are both alumni of UMass Medical School (UMMS) classes of 2009 and 1980, respectively.

Charlotte DeLeo also is related to a host of other physicians on both her paternal and maternal side.

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Berkshire medical students get matched with hospitals during Match Day

Medical Students Thought to Have Traveled to ISIS Hospitals

Eleven medical students and medical school graduates, including an American, are believed to have traveled to Syria to work in hospitals controlled by ISIS, a member of Turkey's parliament said Sunday.

The group seven British, two Sudanese and one Canadian, plus the American traveled through Turkey on March 12, Mehmet Ali Ediboglu, a member of parliament from the Hatay border region, told NBC News.

Ediboglu told Reuters that the students and graduates, who range in age from 19 to 25, have been telling their families over social media that they are fine and staying "at a beautiful house." The families reached out to Turkish officials to help find the young men and women, Ediboglu said.

"God forbid, they might be killed by an attack any minute. That's their concern. And more importantly they want to know what their children are doing in Syria," he told Reuters. "My assumption is that they have gone to Tel Abyad, because I know that the hospital there is extremely busy."

The British Foreign Office said in a statement that it was providing consular assistance to the families and has been in touch with Turkish police.

Ammar Cheikhomar

First published March 22 2015, 2:50 PM

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Medical Students Thought to Have Traveled to ISIS Hospitals