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New Match Schedule Could Open Opportunities

Vanessa Caceres  |  Issue: June 2011  |  June 13, 2011

The Alliance for Academic Internal Medicine and the fellowships participating in the Medical Specialties Matching Program (MSMP) voted to move the match date, and all subspecialties had to agree to the change. MSMP subspecialty societies who endorsed the change in dates included the ACR, the American Society of Hematology, Infectious Diseases Society of America, and the Association of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine Program Directors.

Benefiting Rheumatology

The key benefit of the match date change for rheumatology is attracting more people to the field. “I think this will expand the number of people in rheumatology who see the exciting things that we do,” says Abby Abelson, MD, chair of rheumatology at the Cleveland Clinic and chair of the ACR Workforce and Training Committee. The earlier and more frequent exposure to rheumatology may even help some students get a jumpstart on related research, Dr. Abelson adds.

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“This enables residents to get more exposure with a variety of rotations before they decide which fellowship they will apply for,” she notes.

The greater exposure to rheumatology may help more people see the intellectual stimulation the field provides, Dr. Kolasinski says. “The number-one reason people in the study said they chose rheumatology was because of the intellectual interest of the field,” she says of her research on subspecialty choice. “The fellows liked the detective work and being the ultimate diagnostician. You’re putting pieces of the puzzle together, and you’re called in when others are not sure what’s going on.”

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The date change will also help those already in rheumatology get a sense of the talent that is out there, Dr. Kolasinski says. “There’s a question of being exposed to students and residents and them being exposed to us and understanding that this is a career choice,” she notes.

A later match date also enables faculty to get to know applicants better, thus providing higher-quality letters of recommendation, says Dr. Bass. This is important considering that subspecialty faculty often write the most in-depth letters of recommendation for subspecialty fellowship applicants.

“The letters we’ll get will be much more helpful. Now, it’s harder for people to know interns well if they don’t have any exposure to rheumatology,” Dr. Abelson says.

There is also the hope—in all subspecialties, not just rheumatology—that the date change will help applicants feel more confident about their subspecialty choice, rather than applying for a fellowship even if they are unsure about their selection. Sometimes the indecision leads potential applicants to postpone their training for a year.

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Filed under:Education & Training Tagged with:Career developmentEducationFellowsrheumatologistTraining

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