Just Sign on the Dotted Line…
by Ivan Edwards, D.O., USAFR MC (CAPT)
SDN Staff Writer
The contract provisions couldn’t look any better:
- $ 300,000 annual salary guarantee
- sustained by hospital/practice
- forgiven over 5 years
- phased out beyond 15 months to full productivity remuneration
- $10,000 sign on bonus
- $20,000 relocation expenses
- 3.5 weeks annual vacation
- 2 weeks annual sick time
- 10 days paid CME
- 401K investment
- Profit sharing/open partnership in 12 months.
But before signing the dotted line, take the contract home, read it carefully and understand it. Equally importantly, get to know the people behind it.
For many doctors soon to complete their residencies, one final round of interviewing is underway. This time, unlike prior interviews, it is an audition for your job post-residency, in your chosen profession. Finally! Read more »
Kaplan Announces New Step 2 CK Qbank!
PRESS RELEASE
Kaplan’s NEW Step 2 CK Qbank is coming soon! Kaplan’s new and improved Step 2 CK
Qbank will be available starting May 14th with important new features like a Score Estimator - able to predict your USMLE score based on your Qbank performance - and 500 never-before-seen exam-like questions created by Kaplan Medical’s expert faculty and reviewed by top-performing test takers.
Learn more about the important upgrades to Kaplan’s Qbank and see how you score on a Qbank Challenge at http://www.qbankchallenge.com/step2. You can lock in the low price of Qbank today – buy now and delay your start date up to 90 days!
Only on SDN - Enter to win Kaplan’s new Step 2 CK Qbank!
Kaplan is giving away a Step 2 CK Qbank to the first 100 SDN members. Check the Step 2 forum on Thursday, May 1st to learn how to win a FREE 3-month Step 2 CK Qbank!
Pre-Med Preparation: Getting Letters of Recommendation
by Christian Becker, Author of The Official Student Doctor Network Medical School Admissions Guide
In my last article for SDN, I addressed the importance of physician shadowing and clinical
experience. This time, I want to focus on recommendation letters.
Recommendation letters are used by admission committees and are part of your application. To get good letters, participation in extracurricular activities and positive interactions with faculty and physicians are important.
Admissions committees see on the application what activities you have listed, but recommendation letters tell them how you interact with people, what type of person you are, and (hopefully) stress your good qualities and support your application to medical school. Read more »
Why Study Medicine? Pre-meds not in it for the money, survey says
by Charles Daniel and Michael O’Brien
SDN Staff Writers
For some, the answer to the question, “Why do you want to study medicine?” is a simple one: to make money. These individuals, however, are in a shrinking minority, a recent survey has found. Kaplan Test Prep and Admissions examined the responses of 914 students in its medical and law school preparatory courses to examine their motivations for professional study. It seems that even as the traditional financial windfalls associated with medicine continue to wane, students’ passion for medical study is as fiery as ever. In fact, less than half of pre-med respondents indicated their future earning potential “very much” or “somewhat” influenced their decision to study medicine. But what does this mean? Pre-professional students are notorious for their exaggerated claims of altruism while the true and ulterior motivation remains the big salary. …or at least that was the belief. Read more »
Call for Submissions: U.S. Public Health Service Scientific & Training Symposium
NEWS RELEASE

Students enrolled in a full-time health or health-related undergraduate or graduate course of study are invited to submit a poster presentation for the 2008 U.S. Public Health Service Scientific and Training Symposium. The conference will be held June 9-12 at the Tucson Convention Center. More than 1,000 public health administrators, providers, clinicians, professors and representatives from business employing public health professionals are expected to attend. This is an excellent opportunity to obtain experience presenting and to network with others in the field. Read more »
SDN Announces First docLive Chat — Harry Rosen, MD
Press Release
In our first docLive chat, Dr. Harry Rosen, author of The Consult Manual of Internal Medicine, will lead a live discussion wherein he will answer your questions about surviving
3rd year medicine clerkships. During this Sunday, April 20th session, participants will be able to ask Dr. Rosen their questions and receive real-time responses.
The chat session will take place at 8:00pm Eastern Time on SDnet, the SDN Chat Server. A temporary link to the docLive web client will appear in the Clinical Rotations forum at 7:30pm ET. For those wishing to use their own chat client, simply point it to irc.studentdoctor.net:6667 and join #doclive.
Please post in this SDN Forums thread to indicate your plans to attend, as space is limited. Come meet Dr. Rosen and walk away with strategies to make your Medicine rotations go much more smoothly!
Community-Based Education: Gerard Clancy, MD
With this interview, Student Doctor Network begins a new series of interviews relating to “community-based medical education” and with it a new forum on this subject. To launch the series, we interviewed Gerard Clancy, MD, the Dean of the newly established University of Oklahoma (OU) School of Community Medicine in Tulsa.
SDN: Dean Clancy, how do you envision your School of Community Medicine in Tulsa differing from a typical medical school?
Clancy: First, it is important to recognize that all the students in OU’s Community Medical School in Tulsa will graduate with the same MD degree as the students in OU’s traditionally organized medical school in Oklahoma City. They will learn the basic core information about medicine that they need to be successful as a physician. Read more »
The Successful Match: The Importance of Mentoring
by Samir P. Desai, M.D., and Rajani Katta, M.D., authors of The 250 Biggest Mistakes 3rd Year Medical Students Make And How To Avoid Them
In researching our book, we asked applicants what they found most difficult about the
residency application process. A number of applicants commented on the same issue. “There’s so much conflicting information out there. How do you know what to believe? Who should you listen to?”
Applicants with mentors have a decided advantage. A joint committee of the National Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering, and the Institute of Medicine described a mentor as “someone who takes a special interest in helping another person develop into a successful professional.”¹ In defining the term, the committee described a fundamental difference between mentoring and advising. Read more »
Pre-Med Preparation: The Importance of Physician Shadowing
by Christian Becker, Author of The Official Student Doctor Network Medical School Admissions Guide
Physician shadowing, in my opinion, is one of the best extracurricular activities in which a pre-medical student can engage for several reasons:
1. It provides you with clinical exposure and stories to talk about in the admission interview.
2. Shadowing allows you to see what medicine and a physician’s life are like every day.
3. You will quickly discover if medicine is really for you.
4. It’s easy to set up and do.
5. It’s one of those “intangible” (and unofficial) requirements to get into medical school.
For purposes of this discussion, shadowing really boils down to one thing: clinical exposure. If you already have worked as a nurse or medical assistant with ample patient and physician contact and interaction, you really don’t need any shadowing, or at least not much. It’s an easy way to get that important clinical exposure that can make or break your application. Read more »
SDN Charts New Frontiers in Partnership
Press Release
The Student Doctor Network would like to welcome its two newest site partners, Medpod101 and My Medical Career.
Medpod101 is a physician run podcast site which offers medical students a new way to
learn medicine – on the go. Case-based podcasts can be downloaded for play on your iPod or computer.
My Medical Career is an online career planning portal for Australian medical students and junior doctors. Created by young doctors with the input of senior clinicians, My Medical Career aims to provide users with up-to-date information about different career options. Their goal is guide you through the process of selecting and achieving a career which best suits your interests, skills and lifestyle needs.


