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Phone: (850) 645-1255
March 17, 2005
by Nancy Kinnally FSU COLLEGE OF MEDICINE
ANNOUNCES MATCH RESULTS
TALLAHASSEE, Fla.- All 29 senior students in the
inaugural class of the FSU College of Medicine
received notification today of where they will enter
residency training this summer after graduation.
Twelve of the 29 graduating students, or 41
percent, are entering residency in primary care
specialties, including family medicine, pediatrics,
internal medicine and obstetrics/gynecology.
Other students matched in emergency medicine,
psychiatry, general surgery, orthopedic surgery,
urology and otolaryngology.
The 30th member of the inaugural class has been
participating in the prestigious Clinical Research
Training Program at the National Institutes of Health
this year and will complete his fourth year of
medical school during the coming academic year.
Fourteen of the students, or 48 percent, will
remain in Florida for their graduate medical
education. On average about 40 percent of students
graduating from allopathic medical schools in Florida
remain in the state for residency training, due in
part to a limited number of available residency
positions in state.
Of those matching outside of Florida, most will
remain in the Southeast, although students also
matched in California, New Mexico, New York and
Texas.
“We couldn’t be more pleased with our first match
results,” said College of Medicine Dean J. Ocie
Harris, M.D. “The fact that every student had a
successful match, and the high quality of the
programs at which our students have been accepted, is
a very strong indicator that we have developed a
first-rate medical education program here at Florida
State.”
The residency match, conducted annually by the
National Residency Matching Program, is the primary
system that matches applicants to residency programs
with available positions at U.S. teaching hospitals.
Graduating medical students across the country
receive their match information at the same time on
the same day.
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