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matchday

It's a match: Students find their match on Match Day

At noon March 21, 160 fourth-year students from Upstate Medical University’s Norton College of Medicine joined graduating medical students from across the country in learning where they will spend their first year of training (or residency) in their chosen specialty.

To see the annual Match Day video and a complete listing of where students matched, go here.

This annual rite of passage, Match Day, was established in 1952 by the National Resident Matching Program (NRMP) of the Association of American Medical Colleges. The program provides an orderly and fair way to match the preferences of applicants for U.S. residency positions with the residency program’s choice of applicants. It also provides a common time for the announcement of the appointments and an agreement for programs and applicants to honor the commitment to offer and accept an appointment if a match results.

At Upstate Medical University:

—82 medical students will enter the primary care specialties comprised of: internal medicine (42 students), pediatrics (13 students), family medicine (17 students), medicine/pediatrics (four students) and obstetrics and gynecology (six students).

—91 students will remain in New York state

—23 students will remain in Syracuse: 19 at Upstate University Hospital and four at St. Joseph’s Health.

Nearly all—99 percent—of Upstate’s medical students were matched. They will officially earn their doctor of medicine degrees at Commencement in May.

“Residency is maybe the most significant period for a doctor because it’s so intensive,” said Norton College of Medicine Dean Lawrence Chin. “The Match Day celebration, with family and friends, is a perfect way to showcase this amazing accomplishment in a medical student’s life.”

Since 1952, the NRMP has served as an initial indicator of the career interests of U.S. medical school graduates and other physicians who seek training in U.S. residency programs.

In the months before Match Day, students submit resumes and interview at hospitals. In February, both hospitals and students rank their choices for placement. The match process is conducted primarily through the Web—the National Resident Matching Program, a computer center in Washington, D.C., generates the matches.

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