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Brown U
State: Rhode Island Freida: 420-43-21-183 Positions: 7 Years: 4
| Average USMLE Step 1 Score of interviewed applicants: 121 Average USMLE Step 2 Score of interviewed applicants: 257 Percentage of applicants offered interviews who were AOA: 48%
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Applied, Received Interview: 00078, George Washington University, Step 1: 224, Step 2: 238, AOA 00095, University of California, Irvine, Step 1: 248, Step 2: 240 00106, Anonymous, Step 1: 252, Step 2: 236, AOA 00113, Anonymous, Step 1: 244, Step 2: 267 00116, Anonymous, Step 1: 248 00119, Anonymous, Step 1: 253, Step 2: 236 00125, Anonymous, Step 1: 251 00154, Anonymous, Step 1: 246, Step 2: 261, AOA 00164, Anonymous, Step 1: 263, Step 2: 259, AOA 00172, Boston University, Step 1: 250, Step 2: 247, AOA 00186, Anonymous, Step 1: 244, Step 2: 253 00211, Anonymous, Step 1: 263, Step 2: 269 00232, Anonymous, Step 1: 251, Step 2: 252 00317, SUNY Buffalo, Step 1: 255, Step 2: 240, AOA 00349, Anonymous, Step 1: 237, Step 2: 241 00403, Anonymous, Step 1: 232, Step 2: 254, AOA 00423, Anonymous, Step 1: 252, Step 2: 254, AOA 00431, New York Medical College, Step 1: 221 00506, Anonymous, Step 1: 251, Step 2: 246 00524, University of North Carolina, Step 1: 263, Step 2: 278, AOA 00565, University of Michigan, Step 1: 254, Step 2: 263 00586, Anonymous, Step 1: 245, AOA 00601, Anonymous, Step 1: 252, Step 2: 256 00606, University of Connecticut, Step 1: 264, Step 2: 258 00620, Anonymous, Step 1: 266, Step 2: 274, AOA 00664, Albert Einstein of Yeshiva University, Step 1: 250, Step 2: 258 00668, Anonymous, Step 1: 234, Step 2: 249 00673, Anonymous, Step 1: 242 00681, Anonymous, Step 1: 252, Step 2: 264 00692, University of Cincinnati, Step 1: 242, Step 2: 253 02022, Columbia University, Step 1: 273, Step 2: 267 02351, Wayne State University, Step 1: 266, AOA 02439, Anonymous, Step 1: 266, Step 2: 281, AOA 02539, Albert Einstein of Yeshiva University, Step 1: 245, Step 2: 252 02576, Anonymous, Step 1: 253, Step 2: 260, AOA 02584, Anonymous, Step 1: 244, Step 2: 263, AOA 02618, Boston University, Step 1: 251, Step 2: 252 02642, Anonymous, Step 1: 253 02649, Virginia Commonwealth University, Step 1: 269, Step 2: 279, AOA 02727, Boston University, Step 1: 231, Step 2: 248 02734, Anonymous, Step 1: 259, Step 2: 271, AOA 02866, Anonymous, Step 1: 227 02949, SUNY Upstate, Step 1: 243, Step 2: 249 03078, Drexel University, Step 1: 253, Step 2: 262 03163, University of Utah, Step 1: 255, Step 2: 255, AOA 14164, University of Massachusetts, Step 1: 240, Step 2: 239 14165, University of Massachusetts, Step 1: 240, Step 2: 239 17388, , Step 1: 1, Step 2: 1, AOA 17389, , Step 1: 1, Step 2: 1, AOA 17390, , Step 1: 1, Step 2: 1, AOA
Applied, No Interview: 00081, Anonymous, Step 1: 230, Step 2: 249 00097, Temple University, Step 1: 232, Step 2: 215 00109, Tufts University, Step 1: 249, Step 2: 257 00122, Anonymous, Step 1: 231 00126, SUNY Buffalo, Step 1: 234, Step 2: 236 00187, SUNY Upstate, Step 1: 241, Step 2: 225 00205, Anonymous, Step 1: 255, AOA 00228, Drexel University, Step 1: 230, Step 2: 257 00239, Anonymous, Step 1: 227, Step 2: 235, AOA 00247, Anonymous, Step 1: 189, Step 2: 209 00314, University of Oklahoma, Step 1: 232, Step 2: 209 00319, University of New England, Step 1: 244 00331, Morehouse School of Medicine, Step 1: 250, Step 2: 240 00341, SUNY Buffalo, Step 1: 240 00345, UMDNJ - Osteopathic Medicine, Step 1: 224 00395, Drexel University, Step 1: 247 00411, Anonymous, Step 1: 238, Step 2: 245 00416, University of Washington, Step 1: 256, Step 2: 255, AOA 00446, Anonymous, Step 1: 238, Step 2: 251, AOA 00458, UMDNJ - Osteopathic Medicine, Step 1: 245 00478, Anonymous, Step 1: 244, Step 2: 246, AOA 00535, Anonymous, Step 1: 239 00557, Anonymous, Step 1: 251, Step 2: 255 00567, Anonymous, Step 1: 246, Step 2: 238 00583, Boston University, Step 1: 250, Step 2: 265 00662, Anonymous, Step 1: 252, Step 2: 235, AOA 00678, Anonymous, Step 1: 252, Step 2: 259 00686, , Step 1: 239 02289, Anonymous, Step 1: 245, Step 2: 258 02314, University of Cincinnati, Step 1: 220, Step 2: 238 02352, University of Illinois, Step 1: 237, Step 2: 241 02353, Philadelphia College - Philadelphia, Step 1: 252, Step 2: 263 02386, Anonymous, Step 1: 206, Step 2: 196 02592, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, Step 1: 241, Step 2: 248 02644, University of Virginia, Step 1: 250, Step 2: 255 02648, University of California, San Diego, Step 1: 254, Step 2: 264 02692, Creighton University, Step 1: 255, Step 2: 262, AOA 02827, Anonymous, Step 1: 207, Step 2: 227 02868, Dartmouth College, Step 1: 267, Step 2: 273 02946, University of Vermont, Step 1: 254 02950, Kansas City University, Step 1: 227 03045, Mercer University, Step 1: 239, Step 2: 241 03075, Florida State University, Step 1: 243, Step 2: 266 03080, Florida State University, Step 1: 243, Step 2: 266 03175, Anonymous, Step 1: 263 03724, Anonymous, Step 1: 261, AOA 03725, University of Vermont, Step 1: 261, AOA 03751, Anonymous, Step 1: 263 03954, Boston University, Step 1: 233, Step 2: 244
Interview Experiences Breakfast, presentation by chair and PD, 3 interviews, multiple resident presentations on life in Providence, political stuff, the residency, etc, lunch with residents (closed door, so you find out the real deal). well organized but alot of down time. Interview a lot of applicants per day. You sit in a large room with 1 resident and you each can ask him/her questions. PD rubbed me the wrong way Huge group of applicants, but well-organized. Long day though. Between interviews, residents talked about the program and life in Providence. Otherwise standard interview day. 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17
Program Advantages Nice hospital, though Rad facilities are not top notch, Great IR, hard work, politically active, close to Boston Residents were happy/friendly. More city type of people (which I'm not) Very hands-on experience. Promotes autonomy and independence, especially during night float. Lots of volume and pathology. Providence has a nice city feel (also 1 hr from Boston). Trains you well for both academic and private practice careers. Very good training. Pushes independence/autonomy. Good moonlighting. Great IR. Hardworking - great experience. Great reputation and teaching. Resident-run program, with very few fellows. Residents learn to be autonomous early. Probably the best moonlighting opportunities of any of my interviews. Great moonlighting. Solid training. 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17
Program Disadvantages MSK is weaker, cold climate Rads depts are distributed all over the hospital.
Rumors of malignant attendings - cannot verify
Hospital was too hot for me Some may find the autonomy/independence to be overwhelming. Not the nicest hospital. Hardworking (again, maybe not a bad thing). 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17
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