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Anesthesiology :: Program Information
New York U SOM
State: New York
Freida: 040-35-21-106
Positions: 19
Years: 3
Average USMLE Step 1 Score of interviewed applicants: 116
Average USMLE Step 2 Score of interviewed applicants: 247
Percentage of applicants offered interviews who were AOA: 47%

Applied, Received Interview:
00022, UMDNJ - New Jersey, Step 1: 219, Step 2: 243, AOA
00036, New York University, Step 1: 232, Step 2: 245
00046, , Step 1: 255, Step 2: 252
00054, Drexel University, Step 1: 233, Step 2: 235
00066, Anonymous, Step 1: 235, Step 2: 233
00068, Anonymous, Step 1: 233, Step 2: 232
00132, University of Texas, San Antonio, Step 1: 211
00134, University of Colorado, Step 1: 230, Step 2: 241
00146, University of North Carolina, Step 1: 202, Step 2: 243
00195, University of Hawaii, Step 1: 250, Step 2: 263
00222, University of Arizona, Step 1: 232, Step 2: 236
00304, Anonymous, Step 1: 221, Step 2: 230
00396, Anonymous, Step 1: 198, Step 2: 219
00415, Boston University, Step 1: 241, Step 2: 263
00463, Anonymous, Step 1: 208, Step 2: 223
00483, Anonymous, Step 1: 223, Step 2: 232
00518, Anonymous, Step 1: 261, Step 2: 269
00541, Northeastern Ohio Universities, Step 1: 240, Step 2: 235
00543, Louisiana State University, New Orleans, Step 1: 235, Step 2: 247
00587, Anonymous, Step 1: 208, Step 2: 226
00616, UMDNJ - New Jersey, Step 1: 235, Step 2: 217, AOA
00622, University of North Carolina, Step 1: 236, Step 2: 263, AOA
00704, Anonymous, Step 1: 221
01271, Anonymous, Step 1: 237, Step 2: 217, AOA
01531, University of Pennsylvania, Step 1: 243, Step 2: 265, AOA
02279, University of Toledo, Step 1: 228, Step 2: 239
02331, Anonymous, Step 1: 227, Step 2: 252
02332, Anonymous, Step 1: 240, Step 2: 250
02605, University of California, San Diego, Step 1: 216, Step 2: 237
02608, Emory University, Step 1: 220, Step 2: 260
02617, Anonymous, Step 1: 222
02730, University of Miami, Step 1: 212, Step 2: 253
02867, Georgetown University, Step 1: 235, Step 2: 256
03032, Anonymous, Step 1: 234
03170, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, Step 1: 236, Step 2: 251
03172, Anonymous, Step 1: 252, Step 2: 275, AOA
03193, Tufts University, Step 1: 232, Step 2: 257
03463, University of Massachusetts, Step 1: 259, Step 2: 254
03653, Anonymous, Step 1: 256, Step 2: 251
03910, University of Illinois, Step 1: 227, Step 2: 242
03946, SUNY Downstate, Step 1: 246, Step 2: 258
13926, University of California, Los Angeles, Step 1: 227, Step 2: 235
13967, University of Texas, Galveston, Step 1: 245, AOA
13976, Texas A & M University, Step 1: 233, Step 2: 259
14035, University of Nevada, Step 1: 223, Step 2: 263
14163, Anonymous, Step 1: 213, Step 2: 240
14235, University of Cincinnati, Step 1: 232, Step 2: 262
14242, Anonymous, Step 1: 234, Step 2: 251
14250, UMDNJ - New Jersey, Step 1: 243, Step 2: 257
16950, Anonymous, Step 1: 249, Step 2: 244

Applied, No Interview:
00202, Anonymous, Step 1: 199, Step 2: 195
00307, Anonymous,
00419, University of Texas, Galveston, Step 1: 228, Step 2: 237
00674, Anonymous, Step 1: 224, Step 2: 216
02326, Drexel University, Step 1: 213, Step 2: 226
02345, , Step 1: 250, Step 2: 249
02714, , Step 1: 248, Step 2: 247
03301, Anonymous, Step 1: 241
03331, Anonymous, Step 1: 215, Step 2: 245
13952, Anonymous, Step 1: 217, Step 2: 228
14153, Anonymous, Step 1: 210, Step 2: 253
16949, Anonymous, Step 1: 249

Interview Experiences
A good one..Extremely friendly staff and the resident
very favorable, but didn't get to meet the chairman since he was out of town
standard
A bit impersonal of an interview day, very short interviews. Friendly residents, well rounded training at two main hospitals. I ranked this #2 but did not match here.
About twenty interviewees , but day well organized. Spend time in OR one on one with resident.
No dinner the night before. Interview day starts with presentation from PD and chair. 2 interviews, could be anyone from Chair, PD or junior faculty. Then tour of hospital, including about 30 minutes in OR with resident.
Hospital was closed so interview day was held in law office.
You sit in an conference room with chief residents and get 2 interviews from faculty.
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Program Advantages
New York city. Approachable attendings and residents. Residents learn, work but are not flogged and overworked
chairman from here say is a big part of why everyone goes there. strong critical care at bellevue.
high pay, alright hours
beautiful facilities, Bellevue Hospital, High Trauma. Team leader /Captain in control of delegating duties on their call nights.
Likely best trauma in NYC, combo of Bellevue and Tisch provides good balance of patient demographics & case load.
Opportunity to rotate at Bellevue (lots of trauma and autonomy). Location is pretty sweet. Salary is best in NY.
Residents are very happy, strong peds, regional, and trauma exposure. Strong research opportunities without being overbearing. Cool craniofacial surgeries are done here.
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Program Disadvantages
? trauma being in manhattan, kings county is probably better
no didactics
Not one of the best in NYC
Couldn't quite put my finger on it, but didn't really click here. Not very academic focus, seems like there might not be tons of intra-op teaching.
Weaker clinical exposure than other NY hospitals. Only advanced positions available.
Living in NY is expensive, advanced program
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