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» Home » News » Next stop: Residency

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Communications
UBC Faculty of Medicine
Email: communications.med@ubc.ca
Office: 604.822.2421

Next stop: Residency

By bkladko | March 6, 2013

A record number of medical school graduates from across Canada will soon commence their residency training at teaching hospitals and clinics around the province through the Faculty of Medicine’s postgraduate medical education program.

Ninety-five per cent of the 308 postgraduate positions were filled in the first round of the Canadian Resident Matching Service (CaRMS), which matches graduating MD students with postgraduate programs nationwide. UBC has increased entry-level residency positions from 163 in 2003, to 308 in 2013.

Match day_02

MD students’ t-shirts proclaim their specialty and destination. L-R: Jamie Gooderham, Navraj Chima, Chris Nixon-Giley, Clark Funnell, Andrew van der Westhuizen.

“Medical trainees are more likely to practice in the communities they trained in,” says David Snadden, Executive Associate Dean, Education. “This is why, as part of our overall strategy to increase the number of doctors in B.C., UBC’s Faculty of Medicine has dramatically increased the number of residency training positions and distributed them across a wide range of settings from urban hospitals to rural community health clinics.”

To become a doctor, students complete four years of undergraduate medical education, followed by postgraduate training, which ranges from two years for family medicine, to seven years for specialties. In the past 10 years, the Faculty of Medicine has more than doubled the number of undergraduate medical students and created clusters of academic and clinical learning on Vancouver Island, in Northern B.C., the Interior and the Lower Mainland. Postgraduate residencies have also increased around the province.

“We have increased positions in Family Medicine, and generalist specialties, such as Internal Medicine, in response to B.C.’s most urgent needs. And we are also adding positions for International Medical Graduates,” Dr. Snadden says.

The expanded Family Medicine program will train more than 100 new residents across B.C., and new training sites in Fraser Health (Emergency Medicine), Vancouver Island (Emergency Medicine and Internal Medicine) will receive their first residents in the coming year.

Of UBC’s 256 graduating medical undergraduate students, 96 per cent have matched to postgraduate training programs in the first round, with the largest percentages matching to family medicine (40 per cent ) and generalist specialties, internal medicine (18 per cent), and pediatrics (18 per cent) – areas identified by the Ministry of Health, health authorities, and UBC as a priority for improving BC health care.

More than 50 per cent of Island Medical Program and Northern Medical Program graduates matched to family medicine.

A second round of the CaRMS match for the 16 remaining unfilled positions will be held in April.

Contact Information

Communications
UBC Faculty of Medicine
Email: communications.med@ubc.ca
Office: 604.822.2421
Faculty of Medicine
317 - 2194 Health Sciences Mall
Vancouver, BC Canada V6T 1Z3
Tel 604 822 2421
Website www.med.ubc.ca
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