Other than implementation of the supplemental ERAS for select specialties, the residency ERAS hasn't had many modifications over the past decade. However, this year the AAMC overhauled the application in several significant, positive ways:
Monday, July 31, 2023
Important Updates to the Residency ERAS
Monday, July 24, 2023
How to Excel During Your (Emergency Medicine) Rotation
Many medical students just starting their fourth years are coping with specialty-specific electives and sub-internship rotations. What are the tricks to making a good impression during these clerkships? Here's a piece I wrote on how to succeed in your emergency medicine rotation; many of the tips translate to other specialty rotations as well.
Monday, July 17, 2023
A Novel Approach: Reading throughout your Rotations
I had a thoughtful advisee years back who told me about an interesting plan she had made for herself: As she rotated through different specialties during medical school, she read a book appropriate to each field. For internal medicine, she read "Being Mortal," by Atul Gawande. For neurology, she read the classic "The Man who Mistook his Wife for a Hat," by Oliver Sacks. For surgery, she read "When Breath Becomes Air," a beautiful book by Paul Kalanithi. The list goes on.
I was impressed by this contemplative approach to third and fourth year. So many of us are understandably focused on Shelf Exams and letters of recommendation that we don't give ourselves a chance to comprehensively reflect on our subject matter and patients' experiences.If you have a moment, please check out a few book recommendations I have for those in the medical field. Perhaps my advisee's stellar plan can be one that other medical students adopt. (You'll see that I strongly recommend Cutting for Stone. Dr. Abraham Verghese has a new book out that I'm reading right now called The Covenant of Water.)
Monday, July 10, 2023
"Optional" Secondary Essays: Are They Really?
I've recently received several questions about optional secondary essays and their necessity.
The beauty of an "additional comments" section is that it is intentionally vague. It's your chance to provide details, context, or qualifications that the structure of the application didn't allow you to present. For that reason, I lean toward using that space to both highlight who you are and any exceptional aspect of your candidacy that you'd want a reader to know before making an interview decision.So, one good option for these essays is to pick something completely nonmedical that distinguishes you and is nowhere else to be found on your application. In this case, the essay can actually be fun to write.
Of note, sometimes people use this type of a prompt to explain one major deficiency in their candidacy. I only recommend that if there's a big elephant in the room: In other words, in general I tell applicants – throughout the process – to avoid highlighting weaknesses. The goal is to demonstrate distinctiveness and worthiness, so negatives are usually left out. But sometimes someone has a big problem like a low MCAT score that is an anomaly that's worth addressing head on.
Bottom line: Since an interview isn't guaranteed, don't save your best material for an in-person meeting. Get your foot in the door. And as always, make sure your essay is substantive and not fluffy.
Monday, July 3, 2023
Don't Let ERAS Kick Y'ERAS
Just a reminder for residency applicants: ERAS tokens are now available for IMGs, and all residency candidates can start registering and submitting supporting documents on the myERAS website. Even if you aren't ready to start working on your application, I'd recommend registering and taking a look at what will be required of you.