USMLE Forum Archives - Miscellaneous - About Americlerkships
About Americlerkships
sneha2712 - 03-02-10 22:23
I have heard of americlerkships .....they get us into observerships bt a bit expensive my friend is gonna do 6months of observership there it cost $10000 .....so i wanna know whether they r genuine .........pls, if u guys have any knowledge of them . pls advice
thank u soo much!
sneha2712 - 03-02-10 22:23
I have heard of americlerkships .....they get us into observerships bt a bit expensive my friend is gonna do 6months of observership there it cost $10000 .....so i wanna know whether they r genuine .........pls, if u guys have any knowledge of them . pls advice
thank u soo much!
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#1
Re: About Americlerkships
adonis123 - 03-04-10 00:04 
posted by sneha2712 on 03-02-10 22:23
I have heard of americlerkships .....they get us into observerships bt a bit expensive my friend is gonna do 6months of observership there it cost $10000 .....so i wanna know whether they r genuine .........pls, if u guys have any knowledge of them . pls advice
thank u soo much!
I have heard of americlerkships .....they get us into observerships bt a bit expensive my friend is gonna do 6months of observership there it cost $10000 .....so i wanna know whether they r genuine .........pls, if u guys have any knowledge of them . pls advice
thank u soo much!

It is a huge sum to be paid for merely an observership in which u just watch and do not do anything substantial.They just attach u with a private practitioner and give u evaluations and LORs later on.
Even if they r genuine despite that it is really a huge sum to be paid for just an observership.
In my opinion, u can find out free observerships by mailing or calling the different hospitals.
Here r some of the links where u can find a list of the hospitals which offer observerships:
http://www.usmletomd.com/tips4match/2007/09/hospitals-that-offer-observerships.html
http://www.usmletomd.com/usce/2006/12/alabama-al.html
Just send e.mails to the coordinators of the specialties u r interested in,and wait for their response.U can also call them.The second link mentioned above lists the USCE by State.
Good Luck!
#2
Re: About Americlerkships
sneha2712 - 03-04-10 08:53 thank u soo much for the advice..........i think this is the best forum for usmle ........
#3
Re: About Americlerkships
adonis123 - 03-13-10 05:35 
posted by sneha2712 on 03-04-10 08:53
thank u soo much for the advice..........i think this is the best forum for usmle ........
thank u soo much for the advice..........i think this is the best forum for usmle ........

Thanks a lot for the appreciation!
Good Luck!
#4
Re: About Americlerkships
tonysaba - 03-30-10 20:05 Hello Everyone,
My name is Tony Saba and I am the Online Public Relations Representative for Americlerkships Medical Society, and I have posted the following information on several forums due to the inaccurate information being presented to IMG's by forum goers. If you have seen this before please take is as true because i am presenting facts from credible sources to make sure the CORRECT information is being seen, heard and spread.
Per ECFMG, âthere continue to be obstacles and challenges for IMGs and those with whom they interact with respect to their full integration into American culture, American medical culture and the American healthcare system.â Reflectively, every year more than 3000 residents fail to finish residency, with anecdotal research that shows that the majority of such attrition may have been avoidable by simply providing a formal pre-residency acculturation orientation to our fellow international physicians. Additionally as clearly evidenced by the greater number of U.S. graduates seeking a relatively unchanged number of PGY-1 residency positions, IMGâs are finding it more difficult to secure interviews using USMLE scores and a recent graduation. Per Dr. Pedram Mizani, MD, a Family Physician and our Chief Clinical Officer, âWe have been noticing a growing trend of IMGâs with high USMLE scores (>90 and 1st attempt) remaining unable to secure sufficient number of interviews to statistically tip the match algorithm in their favor; the same applicants who could secure 7 interviews by applying to 70 programs are finding themselves applying to 150+ programs and securing just a handful of interviews, if fortunate.â This all means that all international physicians must step up their game, sharpen their focus and begin to learn what residency directors are looking for in residency applicants using 2010 evidence based research, including the significant emphasis thatâs being placed on revising the USMLE: http://www.usmle.org/General_Information/CRU/CRU-2009-06-19.html.
I believe that there are significant confusion circling what residency programs mean by requiring IMGâs to show sufficient proof of U.S. Hands-on Clinical Experience prior to applying. Please note the following facts and pearls of wisdom:
A. According to a 10 year retrospective research conducted by American Academy of Medical Colleges, 8 of the top 29 resident selection criteria by Residency Directors had to do with an applicantâs performance during their U.S. clinicals, including elective and core specialties
B. Equally as important as hospital experience is an IMGâs ability to manage a patient well in outpatient settings, and to help them avoid being hospitalized. This is a VERY important point as most IMGâs with little U.S. hands-on clinical experience over-emphasize the need for hospital exposure for the sole reason of obtaining âface-timeâ with residency decision makers. You must think outside of this box: show that you have U.S. clinical experience in all settings, including Nursing Homes, Intensive Care Units, underserved areas, home health visits (typically during Family Medicine clinicals) so that youâll be viewed as a âbalancedâ applicant.
C. It is up to the IMG to provide the best type of clinicals possible. The following is typically how clinicals conducted by IMGs are viewed (#1 being the most effective, and #10 as the least effective):
1. Current practicing physician (licensed MD returning to residency, current resident or a fellow)
2. Insured medical student U.S. clinical rotations/clerkships (greater flexibility and educational freedom/understanding, better access to medical facilities and contractual agreements with hospitals, ability to conduct more invasive training under the auspices of being a medical student who needs to learn)
3. Insured hands-on clinical experience (similar to student clinicals, but no invasive procedures or comments about patient chief complaints; cases are discussed with physicians who AT ALL TIMES supervise each trainee during their patient interactions. IMGâs do not refer to themselves as âDoctorsâ, or do anything that would give patients the indication that they are responsible in any way in providing care to that patient - in BOTH inpatient as well as outpatient settings)
4. U.S. clinical experience/externships in an ancillary healthcare career through formal U.S. college education (i.e. Certified Medical Assisting, Advanced Medical Assisting, Registered Nursing, paramedics, etc.)
5. Clinical exposure to U.S. patients in U.S. military settings (the physicians are trained in the U.S. and the facilities somewhat mimic our national healthcare infrastructure, but limited in cultural dynamics, insurance exposure and civilian style patient care)
6. Clinical exposure in English speaking countries (Canada, England, Ireland, Australia, etc.) that may or may not resemble the patient-centered type of medicine practiced in the U.S.) Please note that unfortunately, the U.S. is a highly litigious society, so your pre-residency training should include exposure and preparation for such events.
7. Clinical research (somewhat limited in exposure to a variety of patients, and variety of settings; typically single problem/subject focused)
8. Continuing Medical Education and retreats (https://nf.aafp.org/Cme/CmeCenter/Default.aspx?navid=cme+center; but limited in exposure to patients, if any)
9. Masters in Public Health or related fields (the clinical exposure has greater emphasis on the business of medicine and not the clinical aspects, which residency programs care about)
10. Observerships within renowned Graduate Medical Education Departments/residency programs
D. Donât overlook the importance of having your residency documents professionally reviewed, and corrected for accuracy and grammar. An applicant may have the GREATEST clinical experience and personal history, but it doesnât exist if itâs not effectively communicated in his/her residency application. A professionally put together application (including review of your Common Application Form and Personal Statements) is imperative to being considered as a viable candidate, versus one that looks identical to the other 30,000+ applicants!
E. NEVER COME IN CONTACT WITH A PATIENT WITHOUT INSURANCE; you should not even risk it as itâs not worth losing your entire career over it, when there are legal clinical placement services through organizations. Just remember that there are legal âwatch-dogsâ all over the U.S. waiting for someone to do the wrong thing; just click on http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&aq=0&oq=malpractice+&ie=UTF-8&rlz=1T4ADFA_enUS357US357&q=malpractice+suits+against+doctors for an example.
F. Do not obtain clinicals with a close friend or a family member (especially if they share your last name), as this may indicate that there wasnât a formal structure such as an affiliation agreement, goals and expectations, formal clinical evaluations and most importantly, insurance against medical liability cases.
G. Do build your network of physicians early, and begin to secure U.S. Letters of Recommendations by no later than 18 months before your planned residency start. According to the Journal of Academic Medicine, 73% of Internal Medicine Residency Directors found foreign Letters of Recommendation âuselessâ... so why waste your precious allocations of 4 Letters of Recommendation to documents that directors find useless? As a rule of thumb, you may solicit for one Letter of Recommendation per 4 to 6 weeks of hands-on clinical experience.
H. Observerships are just that: you observe! You donât speak, touch, discuss, or interact in any way with a patient. Some states may even forbid you to talk about a patient with the treating physician while the patient is still in the office/hospital (so that no one alters the decision making of a licensed physician). Therefore although this term is well known to all residency directors, it is not an experience that is highly sought after by them (least favourable clinical experience). Additionally, no research has ever been able to prove that conducting Observerships in a teaching hospital equals interviews at those hospitals, or residency placement security. Any LOR obtained will not be sufficient in the eyes of the Program Director because it does not show your clinical abilities and patient interaction skills in any way.
I. Pay particular attention to what LORâs you attach to each program youâre applying to: it is generally recommended that your LOR portfolio be relevant to the sequence of specialties that youâll be rotating through in your PGY-1. For example if applying to Family Medicine, send 2 LORâs from U.S. practicing Family Physicians, 1 LOR from a U.S. practicing Paediatrician or Psychiatrist, and 1 LOR from OB/GYN or Internist. Do not send all 4 LORâs from Family Physicians as this would make your application unbalanced.
J. You are applying for a job; donât forget this! Therefore, you will be expected to interview as you would if you were applying to any other professional position (with the exception that of course, you need to show medical expertise for the level that youâre applying to). The burden of proof is upon the applicant to show that he/she is not going to be a liability, but rather an asset. The biggest fear of Residency Directors (as put so well in a residency position job offer letter in the 2010 Scramble) is for the incoming intern to âNOT BURN OUR HOUSE DOWNâ i.e. have a great attitude and come with experience.
K. A record 16,000 U.S. senior medical students participated in the 2010 Match, with more than 9% increase in U.S. medical school seniors who will enter residency training in Family Medicine when compared to 2009 alone (http://www.aamc.org/newsroom/pressrel/2010/100318.htm). Additionally according to the NRMP, 2010 was the largest Match in history: 30,543 applicants participatedâ655 more than last year and 3,800 more than in 2006. However the number of residency positions has not increased at the same rate: there were 382 more first-year positions available this year than last year, and 1,150 more than were available four years ago⦠a 3:1 discrepancy when compared to the rise of residency applicants. More than 95 percent (21,749) of the first-year positions were filled during this Match. Therefore, pre-residency U.S. clinical experience is mattering more and more as the number of residency applicants competing for the same number of residency positions continues to increase.
L. Certain medical boards have strict limitations on what types of clinicals may be conducted by IMGâs prior to residency, if any. For example, California, Pennsylvania and Puerto Rico strictly forbid IMGâs from conducting any sort of clinicals by IMGâs, unless in a formal teaching institution or in a certified profession (i.e. Registered Nursing, Medical Assisting, etc.)
M. Research shows that physicians tend to end up practicing within 20 miles of where they establish their physician mentor network, so pay particular attention to where you would like to ultimately practice medicine in relation to where you request to conduct your clinicals. AmeriClerkships Medical Society members has more than 550 Affiliations with U.S. clinical sites, including formal agreements with hospitals, teaching hospitals, nursing homes and surgical centers so to be able to provide you with the most well balanced combination of clinicals as possible. Our trainees get to choose where theyâd like to conduct their clinicals, therefore the statements made by the previous writer/post alleging that âIMGâs will be in a rural areasâ is not true (at least not true for Americlerkships Medical Society). The only place we cannot provide hands-on clinical experience is in California, Puerto Rico and Pennsylvania, due to state specific regulations in accordance with the limitations imposed by their respective Medical Board.
N. Contrary to common belief, insured U.S. hands-on clinicals are VERY AFFORDABLE and the MOST EFFECTIVE measure an IMG can take in order to distinguish him/herself from the record number of residency applicants: at an average out of pocket cost of $8.50/hr (which includes IMG specific hands-on medical liability insurance and clinical coordination/scheduling/management), an IMG is able to gain immediate access to fully supervised clinical settings and begin their U.S. clinical experience, while letting AmeriClerkships manage the relationships, agreements, insurance and logistics of each clinical assignment.
O. Not all medical liability insurances are the same: we have seen insurance companies selling âAncillary Healthcare Medical Liability Insuranceâ to MEDICAL GRADUATES, as if they were medical students, nursing students or medical assistants. This will not provide you coverage for hands-on clinicals as someone whoâs already graduated from medical school. Make sure that your insurance binder provides explicit language for protecting you against any negative event during your clinicals as a Graduate, and during âhands-onâ experiences (not just Observerships). Also, the medical malpractice insurance of your supervising attending physician will not cover you; it only covers the licensed physician.
P. Last but not least â according to the Journal of Academic Medicine, there are 3 Main IMG Internship Performance Indicators: performance on standardized examinations (USMLEâs), type and qualify of clinical exposure during the 24 months immediately preceding your anticipated residency (please refer to the 10 types of clinicals above), and your performance during the actual interviews. Do well in all 3 and you should be considered as a top contender for any residency position.
Q. Ask, if you have any questions: Its always free to ask any of AmeriClerkships
Therefore please, PLEASE get professional help if you donât know the U.S. healthcare system and the process of residency entry (plus all the newest tips). Donât attempt to set up clinicals on your own as most likely youâll end up regretting your decision, since not all physicians are friendly to the concept of IMGâs conducting hands-on clinicals. Please always ask physicians who recently secured residency positions about residency; a physician who secured a residency 15 years ago and is not currently a player in the field of medical education/residency will most likely have out-dated information. Last but not least, you can always contact us for free help and direction; I do not suggest you go about getting into residency on your own.
Best wishes to all aspiring physicians.
Tony Saba
Online Public Relations for Americlerkships Medical Society:
- Americlerkships Inc.
- Advanced Colleges of America
- ResidentRecruiters.com
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