Cheers, tears and champagne toasts rang across the Harry and Celesta Pappas Quad in the morning sunshine as the Keck School of Medicine of USC’s class of 2017 learned where they would be spending their next few years of training as medical professionals.
Coordinated by the National Resident Matching Program (NRMP), thousands of graduating medical students opened envelopes at the same time across the country on March 17, to find out where they will be spending their residency.
Maria de Fátima Reyes stood on the quad steps with her beaming father and proud sister who had joined her to celebrate the day. Minutes before picking up the envelope with her residency information, Reyes said that no matter what the results, she was thrilled and honored to have reached this milestone.
“I’m from here, I grew up here and of course I would love to stay here (in California), but my real dream is to be able to bring medical care to communities that don’t usually have access to that care,” she explained.
One of the programs on her list was located in Kansas.
“It was a great program,” she recalled, “and I was honestly surprised. I didn’t really know anything about Kansas but I found a ton of Latinos there and not a lot of people in the medical community who really understood and supported that culture.”
Kansas, however, will have to make do with another resident, as Reyes is staying in California to complete her OB/GYN residency.
Opening remarks were led by Donna Elliott, MD, EdD, senior associate dean for student and educational affairs, who also is on the NRMP board of directors. Rohit Varma, MD, MPH, dean of the Keck School and director of the USC Gayle and Edward Roski Eye Institute, offered the day’s toast.
“I am delighted to be here with you on this exciting day,” he told the assembled crowd. “The Class of 2017 will always hold a special place in my heart, as you are the first class I have the privilege of toasting on Match Day in my new role as dean.
“I want to offer my sincere congratulations to all of the students and your families who are joining us,” he continued. “Today is the culmination of all your hard work and I am so very excited for each and every one of you as you open the envelopes that will signal the beginning of the next step of your lives.”
[/fusion_builder_column]For married couple Julie Jang and Brian Wu, who both matched locally, Match Day marked the first time they would be able to make plans for their family, which includes 2-year-old Julian Wu.
“Now we get to pick out a school for him and decide what to do,” said Jang, who will be in the radiation oncology program at Los Angeles County + USC Medical Center and White Memorial Medical Center while her husband will be in the psychiatry program at LAC+USC. “We have a house in a great school district so we were already kind of settled, so we’re glad it worked out.”
Class of 2017 by the numbers
caption id=”attachment_19278″ align=”aligncenter” width=”600″] Medical school students mark where they will be completing their residencies during Match Day celebrations. (Photo/Ricardo Carrasco III)[/caption]
Donna Elliott, MD, EdD, senior associate dean for student and educational affairs at the Keck School of Medicine of USC, began her remarks during the annual Match Day celebration with some statistics. Of the 204 students in the class of 2017:
- 11 students matched in the early matches for the military, urology and ophthalmology
- 198 students participated in the main National Resident Matching Program (NRMP), which saw 18,539 students participating
- 71 percent of the class will complete all or part of their training in California
- 26 percent will complete all or part of their training at Los Angeles County + USC Medical Center
- 64 will train outside of California, with New York welcoming the largest number of Keck School students (10)
- 48 students will complete their training in internal medicine — the largest number of students in any specialty; and 16 of those students will be staying at LAC+USC
- 20 students will specialize in emergency medicine
- 17 students will specialize in pediatrics
- 15 students will specialize in family medicine
- 14 students will specialize in anesthesiology
- 13 students will specialize in general surgery
By Leigh Bailey