DOES OBSERVING A PRIVATE PRACTITIONER IMPROVE RESIDENCY CHANCES?

I have had plenty of emails from readers asking if observing a private practitioner in USA, who is most often a relative or a friend of a relative, is a good idea and whether it will help improve chances for getting those residency interview calls.
I have a standard 5-point reply to that one :
1. It's better that nothing !
2. It certainly helps you to avoid clinical gaps on the resume
3. Grants you a US LOR (Residents tell me American MD probably more credible than an IMG MD -- aaah well, I don't know...)
4. You should continue to keep looking for observerships / externships at a more preferable place by using the physician's networks/connections of referrals from other MDs or Institutions.
5. One advantage of observing a private practitioner is that the camaraderie builds up much better between you and the physician - you may gradually be allowed to touch-n-examine patients rather than just observe, and your 'observership' may well be qualified to be called an externship ;-). Of course, I suggest you get an OK from the MD about calling the experience as an externship before putting it up on the Common Application Format (CAF) of the ERAS application. Hmmmm...as you hear often - in USA, do not undersell yourself...always oversell ;-)
While it may be the easiest 'observership' to setup and often highly convenient, observing a private practitioner would certainly be at the bottom of my preference list. Here's how the preference scale for a Observership Venue should look like:
University Residency Program > University-Affiliated Residency Program > Community Hospital Residency Program > Non-teaching Or Non-Residency Hospital > Private Practice Physician, Group Practice, etc.
The More well-known the place, the more impact will it have on your resume.
Many residency Programs explicitly mention on their websites that observing a private practitioner does not constitute clinical experience - but then again, as I said, it's better than absolutely no US experience and you can always keep looking for openings through referral MD contacts...
Psst...Psst : If the MD does see some of his patients at a good hospital facility and you observe him there too, you may instead mention that hospital as the venue of your observership on the residency application ;-)
Labels: Observerships, USCE
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Comments on "DOES OBSERVING A PRIVATE PRACTITIONER IMPROVE RESIDENCY CHANCES?"
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Digitaldoc, MD said ... (September 11, 2007 7:56 PM) :
Post Your Comment !educatedunemployed said ... (December 24, 2006 4:11 AM) :
Awesome Thanks for this post.I so needed to know that.It is definitely a burning question in my mind right now.
Digitaldoc, MD said ... (December 24, 2006 12:40 PM) :
The smoke is visible ;-) hehe
glad this helped :-) g/l
Anonymous said ... (December 24, 2006 8:40 PM) :
Hey this blog is a useful.I had wanted to know about it.
Digitaldoc, MD said ... (December 24, 2006 9:30 PM) :
Glad it is...:-)
Anonymous said ... (January 02, 2007 6:23 PM) :
I think half life goes in making up ur resume and by the time you come out of these you are done and quality of life is not far better then graduate who finish their graduation in 6 yrs and are ready with their job and are quite comfortable.I think we as doctor need to treat ourselves before we could think of our patient cos,I dont know how many out there are frustrated,depressed,feeling worthless inspite of their struggle for existence.Is our live all about that.I think we as Doctor need to give a good look at ourselves.
Digitaldoc, MD said ... (January 02, 2007 7:12 PM) :
Thats a good issue you have brought up and is totally true - and applies for anything in life that is very competitive. The 'opportunity cost' is often invisible and lotsa time is lost in 'getting there' - its a question of setting priorities straight. But again, since the whole process is so long (4 USMLEs , expensive applications) - the tendency is to keep trying rather than let all those efforts go waste.
Anonymous said ... (January 04, 2007 11:46 AM) :
I am planning to apply to Internal Medicine. I might get to shadow a US doctor, but the problem is that he is a pediatrician and not an internist. Does that matter if I apply to IM?
Digitaldoc, MD said ... (January 04, 2007 12:04 PM) :
pediatrics is still very much clinical and on ur Internal Medicine Personal Statement you can mention that it's clinical internal medicine flavour rather than the pediatrics aspect.
Anonymous said ... (January 07, 2007 11:45 AM) :
Once I am ECFMG certified, before residency, if some one is ready to sponsor me, can i work under that physician (as a house officer or whatever...) to get hands on USCE?
Digitaldoc, MD said ... (January 07, 2007 7:52 PM) :
not as a house-officer, for that you will need to formally into a residency program - as an extern, observer, assistant, yes
resi said ... (February 07, 2007 10:06 PM) :
Hello I need help...I have passed step 1 in 2002, now I am applying for step 2.. better late than never.. so help please.. what is the form 183 ''certification of Identification'' and form 186 ''certification statement'' .. do i need to submit these?
Digitaldoc, MD said ... (February 07, 2007 10:20 PM) :
U will get to those after you apply online for Step 1
Anonymous said ... (February 25, 2007 7:45 PM) :
i have a Q ...for how long can i shadow under private practioner..and if he has a clinic ..can i still call it an externship or just shadowing.
Digitaldoc, MD said ... (February 26, 2007 8:39 PM) :
All that really depends on what the doc lets you do and allows you to call it. Some people have know to shadow for more than 6 months - but I would rather keep searching for hospital experiences while shadowing the private clinician
eros said ... (April 23, 2007 10:49 AM) :
hi,my name is salman . iam cumin to usa for an observership at my uncle's clinic he is board certified in internal medicine and pulmonary medicine.he will be giving me a LoR ;-),i am confused after reding your blog,is it worth coming or not??????an early reply is required coz i am leaving soon
Anonymous said ... (April 23, 2007 11:08 AM) :
hi,iam looking for observerhip programm iam a 2nd yr mbbs student from pakistan.all the obsrvrshp links which u hav gvn need a step1 or step1 n step 2 score.Can i get an obsrvrshp without steps?if yes plz post links to the places offering such prgrms .thanx
Digitaldoc, MD said ... (April 23, 2007 6:55 PM) :
Answer 1: As I mentioned on this post, it surely is better that nothing and you can always be on the lookout for observerships / externships during your tenure here. List is maintained here
Answer 2: You are better off doing an elective during your 4th Year rather doing some observerships right now - Read about electives here
Anonymous said ... (May 27, 2007 2:31 PM) :
Hi digitaldoc!
Is it considered as Externship experience if someone practising such as history taking,physical exam in a private clinic without malpractice insurance?
It is sometimes said that externship is considered once it takes place in hospital, NOT in Private Clinic. Next, It is also heard that Externship is considered once one must have Malpractice Insurance. Then, Externship is said that it is given for only Medical Students, NOT Medical Graduates.
So, if someone, without Malpractice Insurance, practice in a private clinic with much hand on the patients, should he be allowed to fill his USCE in CAF of ERAS as Externship?
I will appriciate your advice!
Thank digitaldoc!
Digitaldoc, MD said ... (May 27, 2007 7:55 PM) :
Residency programs look at the kind of experience you had and not if you had malpractice insurance or not - there is no strict meanings for externships - indeed some places will call even clerkships as externships, while others will use it for medical graduates. Discuss the words with the physician giving you the experience - coz if at all the programs want to double check, they will check with your physician.
Anonymous said ... (August 16, 2007 11:12 AM) :
Is obsevership in Canada beneficial for US residency program?
Digitaldoc, MD said ... (August 20, 2007 4:11 PM) :
Have covered that on my USCE Blog - Click Here