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Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-41297

ABSTRACT

In the past 2 decades, international medical graduates (IMG) were needed to fill graduate medical education (GME) positions in the United States (U.S.). The author built a database of Thai medical graduates in accredited U.S. residency systems between 1988-2003, and analyzed the trend and opportunity for Thai IMG. During the 16-year study period, there were 281 Thai medical graduates who successfully entered residency in the U.S., with a rising trend that reached a peak between 1993-1994, and subsequently declined to about 10-15 per year Thai physicians entered U.S. residency program 4.2 +/- 3.3 years after medical school graduation. Thai IMGs were mostly in internal medicine (N=153, 54.4%) and pediatric residency programs (N=76, 27.1%), with much fewer in psychiatry (N=10), surgery (N=9), neurology (N=8), anesthesiology (N=7), and other specialties (N=18). Thai medical graduates tended to be clustered in a few residency programs. Half of the Thai graduates in the U.S. internal medicine residency were accepted in 9 programs; the largest were Texas Tech (Lubbock, N=18), Albert Einstein University (Philadelphia, N=14), and University of Hawaii (Honolulu, N=13). For pediatric residency, about half of the Thai graduates (56.6%) were in 6 programs; the largest were Christ Hospital (Oaklawn, N=11), University of Illinois at Chicago (N=11), and Jersey City Medical Center (N=9). After residency training, most Thais (94.5%) chose to do subspecialty training. The most popular medical subspecialties were cardiology, nephrology, and hematology-oncology. The most popular pediatric subspecialties were allergy-immunology, endocrinology, and cardiology. In conclusion, there are too few Thais in the U.S. residency system. This information may be helpful for Thai medical graduates who seek residency abroad.


Subject(s)
Foreign Medical Graduates/statistics & numerical data , Humans , International Educational Exchange/statistics & numerical data , Thailand , United States
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