Fame & Shame
From: [Secured] Fame & Shame
✅ Fame (2)
1. I rotated here and honestly this was my favorite away – great culture, very nice PD/APD and faculty, and great vibes with the residents who were inviting and very happy overall. Well-rounded training with good mix of subspecialty clinics (rheum derm, cutaneous onc, peds, etc.), and this was echoed by the residents. They do very well in the fellowship match with the last 3 Mohs matches being at Harvard, UCSD, and UCLA. Dermpath was a weakness but I heard they were revamping and just got a heavy hitting new dermpath faculty there + other new faculty. Amazing location being in Boston, and also you get close interaction with the other Boston programs which is nice. I was initially concerned about the accreditation warning people were talking about, but it looks like in the newest ACGME data from 2026 they're fully accredited.
2. Echoing what was said above ^ Such a kind place and was my favorite away. I would be so happy to train here. Such a good group of people. Very well rounded program
✅ Fame (1)
1. Love love loved my away, standout culture for sure. Everyone was fun to be around and worked so well together.
❌ Shame (1)
1. Next to no skin of color, almost all skin checks all day everyday. Very high clinic volume and residents worked very hard while in clinic, lectures during lunch everyday, seems like little admin time. Location is very rough (there are no Ubers available).
✅ Fame (1)
1. Really enjoyed my away rotation here and would highly recommend for future applicants. Faculty are predominantly women and are all really nice and there's a diverse array of subspecialty clinics. Durham is lovely with lots to do. Everyone in the department was very welcoming and nice.
❌ Shame (2)
1. The chair situation reflects a much greater funding issue occurring in the department. There is a lot of discontent.
2. Residents have to travel between sites in the middle of the day. Mohs exposure is not very good, residents complained about it during my rotation
❌ Shame (1)
1. The male chair kept interrupting the female PD during interview day and it was uncomfortable to watch
❌ Shame (1)
1. Residents are on their own when it comes to studying for board exams and the program is sadly underresourced with no in-house dermpath. Have to share VA with other DC residency programs. Terrible salary that is not adjusted to high COL in DC.
❌ Shame (2)
1. almost pointless to apply here if you aren't a research fellow or have a strong connection. nepotism is worth more than anything else here
2. I was offered an away in June and had to decline it because in their offer email they stated that because of the "number of attendings we would be rotating with" we should not expect letters of recommendation nor ask for them.
💬 Comments (1)
1. seriously, why would ANYONE waste a signal here if you didnt do a RY with the department? 90-100% of their spots go to their own fellows.
❌ Shame (1)
1. Honestly so hit or miss with the faculty. Some are incredibly kind and some are so bizarre. During the interview, one of the Mohs surgeons just went on bizarre tangents, asked random unrelated questions, and I heard she did this to others too (someone said she made them sing on the spot during the interview??). One of the other interviewers just straight up NRMP violationed and asked me explicitly where I did my aways, if I was considering my hometown/undergrad institution for residency and if I applied there, which was super awkward to navigate. PD seems nice but also a little awkward. Tons of faculty turnover the last few years.
💬 Comments (1)
1. Makes sense that chasing prestige means you have socially inept or egotistic folks, who can get away with poor behavior because of entitlement and name brand. It's our job to avoid paying it forward and chase out toxicity+1 > Lol Hopkins as a derm dpt doesnt live up to its undergrad/med school rep. They've also lost some of their top tier faculty and are sorta in a rebuild phase. Anyone chasing Hopkins for the undergrad rep is kinda hilarious
✅ Fame (1)
1. The kindest and most down-to-earth department chair I have ever encountered. I regret not ranking them higher in hindsight.
❌ Shame (1)
1. You have to be one of Mangolds fellows to match here. It is a waste of 1 of 28 applications otherwise. The match history of the last however many years speaks for itself, but a current attending at Mayo AZ said to me (slight paraphrasing) “you just have to do what he says for a year and they’ll take you.”
❌ Shame (1)
1. 6:30 am lecture for didactics, parking super far walk or have to take bus
✅ Fame (1)
1. The faculty and residents are incredibly kind
❌ Shame (1)
1. Not their fault, but the commute between sites really sucks and is why I won't be ranking it higher. Most residents live in UES which is great but the commute is between 45 min to 1 hr 15 depending on what site you're at.
❌ Shame (2)
1. Formal between faculty and residents and tense. Not a relaxed feeling and some residents are standoff-ish and rude (some are wonderful, but it's very hit or miss). Generally not as social as they may seem. I was sad as this was my first choice in the beginning (esp given their social media) and I was a little shocked at how much I disliked it. I ended up ranking them very low after my interview. Also, only 1 resident has matched MOHs since 2019 and that match was back in 2020. One match in 2020? Are they not interviewing their own candidates? This was a red flag for me but if this is a consideration for you, maybe talk to the current residents to sus out program support. There do seem to be residents aiming for MOHs in the next classes, so hopefully their outcomes are better. Anyways, always try to get the most exposure to your top programs if possible, because they may surprise you in a bad OR good way. More info is better.
2. Have heard this is not a great program for Mohs since department is not as supportive in taking their own residents.
❌ Shame (1)
1. Call seems to be the worst out of all the New York schools. Great exposure but the residents seemed tired
✅ Fame (2)
1. The didactics and the faculty were top tier. Location is hard to beat and so is the salary and housing. Residents seemed happier here than any other program I rotated at. They don't pay much attention to medical students compared to other schools, but were very kind when I made conversation. Seemed that they just wanted to focus on their work. Ranking highly.
2. I feel like I had a totally different experience than the shame commenter in terms of training. The residents I was with did essentially all procedures in clinic and let me help with some. The faculty rarely if ever stepped in, and when they did I thought they offered helpful clinical pearls. I wonder if this is attending dependent. I also felt that the consult service is very reasonable for their volume (2-3 months/year with the other 10ish months spent on clinic) and is a significant pro of the program because of the variety of cases you will see
❌ Shame (2)
1. One of the most overrated programs out there where it's only saving grace is the name and location. One of the allergy attendings is incredibly rude (ifykyk) and it's clear he does not give a damn about medical students or even residents for that matter. He should not be working with rotators if he hates them that much. Despite being in the city, vibes are very weird if you're a POC. Training is abysmal, residents are micromanaged for simple procedures like biopsies and rarely get the autonomy to do any themselves. A ridiculous proportion of your training is spent doing consult medicine which 99% of applicants are not even interested in. I ended up ranking very low due to my eye-opening horrible experience there.
2. Residents are be a bit standoff-ish and seem stressed overall. They like each other but not the med students. For example, a resident said they left a room bc they didnt want to be in there with the med student. If you do the 2 week IM rotation, it'll be hard to get an II bc you see less faculty. The 4 week is better bc you rotate with different faculty & they send the II once you finish the away. Residents are not part of the interview process but they will report back to faculty if there's concerns. The allergy guy in the previous comment is likely Dr. Z. He's def just blunt at first but then on a good day, hes actually pretty nice and make jokes. Its very 50/50. Either way he doesnt contrib to the interview process. Its a huge faculty, but half of them dont even interview you so its very interesting. you dont rotate at lincoln memorial
💬 Comments (1)
1. Residents dont seem to like eachother. competitive vibes even among eachotehr > only did a 2 week away here so maybe i didnt get the full vibe as a 4 week away student, but the residents seemed to be good friends with each other. idk what theyd be competing for lol theyre already in residency
❌ Shame (1)
1. Very fucking weird vibes while rotating there. Attendings are nice to your face, harsh behind your back. Residents (including chiefs) are talking shit about certain nurses. Everyone can be super cold (esp some of the nurses? idk maybe just a NYC thing). Residents ask you to do little personal errands not related to patient care.
💬 Comments (1)
1. Might be a NYC thing with the nurses; they've been on strike in the past few months and tensions been building up. Frequent discussions on r/residency about the dynamic between NYC nurses and residents. > personal errands sounds like some bullshit > a friend who did an away there told me he was asked to help with picking up a resident's child lol > that's the stupidest thing I've ever heard respectfully a crazy thing to ask a med student
❌ Shame (2)
1. The only good thing i have to say about this program is that they have a diverse set of patients and strong med derm. But this school was awful and unfortunately disappointing and did not meet expectations for a supportive or learning environment.The faculty across the board does not like to engage w/ students (not sure if its the same for home students). Faculty doesnt make an effort to get to know rotators, and there's minimal investment in teaching. Residents are overall unapproachable or standoffish toward rotators (theres like 3-4 nice ones and you can easily tell who they are). One resident rolled her eyes at me when I introduced myself then another rotator told me that yelled at another rotator and made her cry bc of a silly mistake (wont go into details in order to not Doxx anyone). Away is easy to get, they will give an II, but they will take there home students.
2. Residents and attendings at this program also openly hate on other derm programs in the region in front of rotators. Very unprofessional.
❌ Shame (1)
1. Shithole hospital system. Residents are so dismissive of students and attendings won't even talk to you. Treat non-English-speakers poorly (most of the patients only speak Spanish) and will not address their concerns, will ignore their questions and just say what they want to say. Despite having to travel to NYC, most of your time there is online didactics. Only have maybe 12 hours of clinic time tops in a one-week period rotating there, almost none of which you get to participate despite being told otherwise. Residents are unresponsive to communication. PD is also kinda rude too. After travelling an hour from NYC to her clinic and doing a required PowerPoint presentation of my choosing at the end of the rotation, was told "okay well we have to do our resident meeting now" and dismissed me. No "good to meet you" or "thank you" or "good luck."
✅ Fame (1)
1. Hidden gem of a program. Affordable COL with easy access to NYC and Philly (1-1.5 hr away). Strong, well-rounded training with exposure to Mohs, gen derm, dermpath, peds derm (laser specialist), multiple Mohs surgeons, and a med spa for cosmetic exposure. Occasional speciality clinics like Rheum-derm, HS clinic, and Contact derm clinic. Great facilities. Surgical exposure early in training. Faculty are genuinely kind and supportive. PD is amazing and obviously truly cares about residents. Solid balance of clinic and didactics (M afternoon and F morning). Front-loaded inpatient months that gets lighter through the years. MAs scribe for residents, which makes a big difference day to day. Wide variety of pathology, including lots of skin cancer and even more rare conditions given local immigrant populations. Meaningful exposure to underserved populations in the area through a weekly clinic. I was truly impressed.
✅ Fame (1)
1. All of the hospitals are beautiful
❌ Shame (2)
1. I heard that their Peds Derm spot is guaranteed to whoever their current research fellow is, the nepotism runs deep. Good luck.
2. Most stressful interview day. No breaks between rooms. Rapid fire of very challenging questions and follow-ups. Felt very judged with every answer I gave. PD responded with rudeness after I asked a basic question.
💬 Comments (1)
1. well the shame is clearly not true as this year's peds match was not the research fellow +1. very organized interview day and responsive coordinator. > hated this interview day seemed like they were trying to see how you do under stress
❌ Shame (2)
1. Had an attending literally nodding off during interview. Heard this from other applicants as well. It was super jarring and distracting when being asked questions.
2. Their interview day ran over by an hour. It is very disorganized and you spend most of it sitting on a blank zoom screen. I wish they had more regard for applicants time. Absolutely DO NOT schedule another interview on the same day as this one and expect to make it!!!
❌ Shame (1)
1. Interview day was brutal and inefficient. 14 (!!) 8-minute interviews back-to-back with little break in-between. Program coordinator was super nice but disorganized and we ended up finishing almost an hour over time. Interviewers were super distant, most of them barely smiled when they met me, and seemed bored/uninterested the whole time.
❌ Shame (1)
1. Weird rotation mill. It's a one-week online didactics/informational session. It's an automatic silver signal for rotators, which pretty much means that a lot of people will be wasting their golds. Their new program director also a bit stuck up. I've heard from multiple students (me included) that her demeanor will change for ridiculous reasons. For me, she went from a warm smile to a look of annoyance after telling her I wished to practice dermatology for people who have been unable to receive care, then proceeded to take over the entire 15-minute one-on-one session, which she ended up cutting five minutes short.
✅ Fame (2)
1. Highly recommend rotating at/applying to this program for future applicants! The rotation exposes you to many subspecialty clinics and you get tons of practice presenting and working directly with the attendings (most days sitting side by side with them all day in the charting room). Would describe the culture as extremely healthy, residents and attendings were smart, chill, and overall fun to be around. No huge egos, just good vibes and good learning
2. Second this ^
❌ Shame (1)
1. Did an away here and one of the APDs is just incredibly inappropriate and unkind to patients behind their backs. Very weird vibes overall.
✅ Fame (1)
1. Dr. Maryam Asgari, the chair, is the BEST!!!
❌ Shame (1)
1. no one likes the dept chair
💬 Comments (2)
1. The fame and shame comments contradict each other lol > The Shame was there first Dr. Asgari I know you wrote the Fame>WRONG!!!!! I, an incoming resident, wrote this Frame. > maybe you may too change your opinion once you are a resident there and not an incoming one 🤷 or not who knows >> Incoming resident' LMAOOO+1<<Right! What a FOOL, at least I made it!! -1
1. The fame and shame comments contradict each other lol > The Shame was there first Dr. Asgari I know you wrote the Fame>WRONG!!!!! I, an incoming resident, wrote this Frame. > maybe you may too change your opinion once you are a resident there and not an incoming one 🤷 or not who knows >> Incoming resident' LMAOOO<<Right! What a FOOL, at least I made it!!
❌ Shame (3)
1. Very evident that this is a nepotism heavy program. They haven't taken their RY fellows in the past, so the program has a lot of pressure to match them. Highly favor PhD applicants, especially those from home, as you can tell from their resident roster that has 1 PhD every single year. The program coordinator was passive aggressive at times, and they handed out way too many away rotations when they knew from the beginning of the cycle who their picks were. This was evident because the interview attestation form was given out super late near the end of the cycle in February when most programs had you sign it before the interview day. No socials either, which is very rare for dermatology interviews that don't have second looks.
2. I enjoyed rotating here, but it's 100% a rotation mill. Sure, you'll get an interview from your rotation, but as many others have said on this spreadsheet UConn already knows who they want before interviewing. Don't waste your time if you're not a Quinnipac/UConn student, UConn research fellow, family friends with the program coordinator, or married to one of the residents
3. Unfortunately the rumors from the 2025-2026 spreadsheet are true. They already knew who they wanted prior to away rotators starting. They matched their internals (MD-PhD, two RYs and their fellow). They offer over 30+ away rotations and some in dermatopathology but it was clearly for show since they knew their rank list from their home and affiliate programs (fellows/Quinnipiac). I would be very cautious using an away here because it is based on nepotism. There is one very powerful faculty member at this institution that is very Pro-Trump and Pro-Zionist to the point where their scribe warns you beforehand working with them to not say anything and to let it happen. As a rotator I personally witnessed this faculty member get into a debate about politics while in the room with the patient who held an opposing view. There are no words to express the disappointment many rotators had for this away rotation seeing the match list prove these rumors true. Protect your feelings and do not trust this program to not match based on nepotism.
💬 Comments (1)
1. is the pro-trump pro-zionist a man or woman? I rotated here and didn't experience that lolol
✅ Fame (2)
1. Interviewers were super nice and interviews were low-stress and conversational. Very well-rounded program with robust surgical, cosmetic, and medical dermatology exposure.
2. Honestly such a hidden gem, so underrated, despite it's location so much exposure to so many different aspects of derm both medical and procedural. Great people within the program! Really not sure how this program doesn't have more hype!
❌ Shame (1)
1. To be transparent the parking situation really does suck, you have to park far away then shuttle into the hospital. Not ideal when it's dark and cold. Also Iowa City and the surrounding towns give a nice college town vibe but definitely not for everyone!
✅ Fame (1)
1. Incredibly well-prepared for its first cycle. Attendings were amazing, rest of staff were amazing, genuinely invested in mentoring students. Rotators got opportunities to get exposure in all aspects of dermatology. Work at a safety-net hospital, so great for those who want to work with an underserved population and not just bread-and-butter derm. Plenty of research options for those interested too.
✅ Fame (3)
1. One of the best well rounded training programs in the country. You'll work hard but come out really well trained especially in complex med derm. The best academic derms I've met have trained here. Plus it's in Miami lol (could be a con for the price and if you don't like big cities though). Some concerns for toxicity in the past but now have been vastly improved with new leadership who are super supportive of their residents. Residents also really echoed this during interviews. Really great interview day, faculty and residents seem very nice and happy to be living and training there. Away rotations are high yield here (auto IV). While Spanish is helpful, it's not absolutely required especially since its derm, but there is plenty of interpreter help available if needed (especially at the county hospital). PD and chair are amazing and constantly hiring new faculty both nationally and internationally. Many unique and rare specialty clinics. Pretty much every faculty does research. May not be the best program to go if you want a chiller schedule however.
2. Despite being one of the largest derm academic programs, their cosmetic training is really solid. Can't say the same for other big academic programs. Really strong surgical exposure too. Will get to manage conditions others only read about.
3. Fantastic away rotation experience. They spent a ton of time getting to know me and hear about my goals and how the department could support those goals. Also, extremely hands on rotation.
❌ Shame (1)
1. A true beacon of toxicity, from the students to the residents to the faculty. Workhorse program and hours. The pay is -not- enough for living reasonably in downtown Miami. The APD takes pride in the amount of inpatient hour and weekend calls this program has as if this is some kind of benefit/as if the majority of you will actually go into academic medicine or complex med-derm. The pro comment mentions "new leadership" but it has been the same 3 (chair, PD, APD) in charge for the last 4 or 5 years that pick favorites. This claim that the rigor will provide excellent training will frankly be disproven if you met any batch of the recently selected cohorts over the last few years. Rank high solely off location, but do not pretend the program is riding off anything but its name and the select faculty that are renowned.
“Agree on the pay to COL comment, but I personally only had great interactions with the faculty and residents so not really sure where your comments coming from. I won't dispute it though because everyone has there own experience, but I think its important for others to form their own opinion on people through in person interactions. Also, I personally found their residents to be incredibly well trained, and have worked with some of their alumni who are also leaders in the field. I think you're right to say they want those who are looking to stay in academia and advance the field, and that's honestly not the majority of derm applicants so its possible this disconnect is where the 'toxicity' is being referred to.”
❌ Shame (1)
1. Parking sucks; expensive at main hospital and even then, have to drive around to find a spot for a while.
❌ Shame (1)
1. The chair asked some interesting political questions during the interview. Overall most faculty very nice though.
✅ Fame (1)
1. Incredibly kind, warm, welcoming faculty and residents who genuinely support each other. Residents are also very collegial and seem close and happy. Least stressful interview day I had. Interviews were super conversational.
✅ Fame (1)
1. This program is a hidden gem!! They truly have everything you need to be successful and when on my away rotation I felt that I learned more here than anywhere else. The faculty is great and the residents are so inclusive! They also have a really really good fellowship match rate!
✅ Fame (2)
1. offered financial assistance to anyone who felt they needed it since the interview was in person!
2. This interview was in person and it was very well run and enjoyable felt like all the faculty really wanted to get to know me and the residents were very friendly! seemed like they were all friends with each other and were very supportive of and kind to me and the other applicants during "breaks"/downtime between interviews. I really liked the PDs and chair too. this dept comes off like they are very invested in each of their residents so if I end up matching here I get the sense they will really value me
❌ Shame (3)
1. Maybe not a shame but as a reminder doing an away here does NOT guarantee you an interview you truly need to shine and standout to get one and at least 5 other MS4s are rotating with you
“the comment regarding nepotism needs to be deleted as this is not true. please check facts before you make accusations and defame the currently matched students.”
1. in person interview and did not offer financial assistance to those in need
2. Insane nepotism Just matched the daughter of one of the Keck affiliated dermatologists. Such a joke of a program
❌ Shame (2)
1. I wouldn't waste my time rotating at this program, or even apply to it, if your scores are not above 270. This program only cares about scores and scores ONLY. A good portion of the program (residents and faculty) are nice to your face and then talk behind your back.
2. ^second above. Residents are very nosy and cliquey, and you can tell who they'll pick based on the demographics + high scores. Does not evaluate holistically, and I wouldn't recommend unless you have ties to san antonio or the military
✅ Fame (1)
1. Took more diverse class this time around
❌ Shame (2)
1. Really disappointed that they decided to not offer interview to away rotators that golded. This was one of the genuine programs I liked
2. The fact that they only took 1 home student is crazy
✅ Fame (2)
1. Faculty and interviewers were so warm and kind. They seem to be genuinely support of residents and their interests. Interviews were conversational and it was evident that they took the time to read my application and ask about my interests/hobbies. Residents also seemed super tight-knit and hang out alot outside of clinics.
2. Amazing program! Truly a gem, and I'm sad that I didn't match here. Faculty are world-class and leaders, great subspecialty clinic, and nice clinic spaces. The program leadership are all very welcoming and friendly, and you can tell that they really enjoy each other's company. Would highly recommend to anyone!
💬 Comments (1)
1. Very good culture, attendings and residents seemed very happy during interview. PD seems to advocate for residents. Not as much to do in Sac but very nice surrounding areas to visit (Napa!)
❌ Shame (1)
1. Long drive between sites, parking isnt free, and all that just to be treated like a scribe in clinic
💬 Comments (1)
1. Excellent training with exposure to many subspecialty clinics and attendings are great teachers. Matches well into fellowship. High volume clinics and exposure to wide range of pathology. Attendings have wide range of expertise. Location is beautiful and many of the facilities are very nice. Residents seem close > Also disagree with residents being treated as scribes, I did a rotation here and they all see pts independently and staff with the attendings just like at any other institution
✅ Fame (1)
1. great benefits that cover egg freezing
❌ Shame (3)
1. Elitist (to no one's surprise), and many faculty give preferential treatment to rotating medical students from more prestigious schools. As much as they emphasize being socially attuned and progressive, at the end of the day, they're just another ivory tower institution masquerading as a social justice warrior.
1. You don't actually HAVE to be a former pediatrician to apply for this and be considered. Wish I knew this earlier, I would have applied.
2. Interviewer made disparaging comments about where I went to school
💬 Comments (1)
1. It does say on their website "preferred but not required;" I wonder if they've taken applicants w/o previous peds residency. > guess we will find out soon > this is the first year of the track and it seemed like everybody was an MS4 during the interview +1
💬 Comments (1)
1. Interview was relatively conversational and nice compared to other interviews. Nice faculty, seem to be getting several new attendings who just completed residency (good culture?). Residents seem chill and nice. Amazing place to live, but high COL. > residents cold and awkward
✅ Fame (1)
1. Disclaimer I've never visited this program in person, but wanted to shoutout the great vibes and resources they seemed to have on interview day. Specialty clinics galore and exposure to what sounded like state of the art resources and research. Also tons of admin time, I think it was 2 or 2.5 afternoons off each week. Most importantly to me residents seemed super happy and got along great with faculty. Location isn't great compared to Boston or other cities but COL is good for the area. Sounds like they like away rotators though so I'd encourage doing an away there if you're intersted
✅ Fame (1)
1. Good vibes and program support seems solid, imo very collegial relationships between attendings and residents
❌ Shame (2)
1. 10 weeks of consults, covering VUMC + children's hospital. You're truly on your own, walking all over the place with no cap on number of consults. The consult room is a janky addition to the outside of a research building, with no access to running water. For some reason, the rest of the building is not directly accessible by card, and you have to go across the courtyard to the outpatient clinics for a bathroom. Two of the attendings are perfectionists for whom nothing you do will ever be good enough. Other than these 10 weeks during PGY-2, a relatively normal residency experience.
2. I think it's more than the 10 weeks during the second year of derm. during my away there was a second resident in a different year on consults too.
✅ Fame (1)
1. clinic locations are varied (detroit, troy, dearborn); diverse patient population
❌ Shame (4)
1. 3/4/2026 9:01 PM: Bizarre faculty, Chair makes sure at least 1/2 people match that share his country background, PD is fake nice, not kind, only cares about his career.
“Wow. Looked it up and you're so right. The chair's ethnicity represents <0.1% of Detroit (~0.2% of US population), but makes up 34% of residents and faculty. The breakdown is 35% of residents and 33% of faculty. Thats staggering and far more than just coincidence.”
2. This description of PD is 100% accurate. A narcissist in its truest form, unfortunately difficult for unfamiliar applicants to detect. Creates a toxic, competitive atmosphere with nothing but bad vibes. Avoid Avoid Avoid
3. sus rank list
4. one incredibly questionable attending, nice overall though many residents do not like one another, attended a conference hosted by this program and med students were placed outside to guide attendees to the entrance in the freezing cold
💬 Comments (1)
1. see this years match list, two siblings matched with no derm research and are reapplicants, very sus and shady
❌ Shame (1)
1. Chair was completely unprofessional during the interview. He had a broken leg, so I understand taking the interview from bed, but attitude was rude and cold and would challenge everything I said. Considering the interview is when faculty/chairs are supposed to be on their best behavior as well, I would not like to see his behavior day to day.
💬 Comments (1)
1. Covered cost of in-person interview including hotel and travel
❌ Shame (3)
1. Been waiting to drop this about Northwell (tried to post about this before rank lists were due but was accused of trying to manipulate others' rankings): during my rotation, I walked in on a faculty member/resident using a racial slur while referring to my co-rotator. the convo immediately stopped when I entered the room. I later reported the incident through Hofstra's official reporting channels, but nothing came of it. neither my co-rotator nor I ended up receiving interviews from the program (which is whatever). despite the program appearing to have a diverse group of residents, I would strongly caution against rotating at Northwell if you're a POC
2. Vibes were so odd on interview day, idk how to describe it but at best people just don't seem to actually be friends with each other, at worst actively dislike each other. Program itself seems fine but I wasn't comfortable ranking it highly based on the culture I experienced that day
3. Toxic culture where there are weird vibes between residents and attendings. Residents are treated more like cheap mid-level labor. Teaching faculty are very junior and did not appear committed to resident education, with mostly self-led resident lectures. Clinic volumes are high and seemed more like a private practice than an academic teaching environment. As a rotating student, I did not feel comfortable asking questions because of this environment. My perception was that I would be more of a burden to the resident and faculty for asking questions. I ignored the comments about Northwell in Name and Shame threads from years ago but I wish I had taken them to heart and rotated elsewhere.