Save the Date Your Single GME accreditation questions answered Learn about the progress of the Single Graduate Medical Education accreditation system in this upcoming webinar. Feb. 13, 2018Tuesday AOA Staff Contact AOA Staff Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email Topics single GME accreditation Stay up to date on the critical issues facing residents. The AOA is hosting a Single GME webinar answering common questions you may have at 6 p.m. Central on Tuesday, February 20. Moderators, Boyd Buser, DO, AOA past president, and Heather Ivy, DO, Oklahoma Osteopathic Association resident trustee and resident advisor on the AOA Board of Trustees, will provide thorough updates on the following topics: Progress of AOA programs transitioning to ACGME accreditation AOA board certification eligibility Osteopathic Recognition (OR) AOA fellowship eligibility The AOA’s commitment to protecting residents during the transition. Upon signing up for the webinar, residents will have the opportunity to submit questions for the moderators to address. You can register here. For additional reading: Single GME: Halfway through the transition ACGME offers new single GME accreditation transition resources Single GME update: Profession protects residents during transition More in Training 6 states in 12 months: A guide to life on the road during fourth year Fourth year is what you make it. Rachel Pray, OMS IV, shares how she embraced travel and adventure as much as possible during her fourth year. Being a DO in a heavily MD residency program: What surprised me I was incredibly nervous to join a large MD-dominant internal medicine residency, but I was pleasantly surprised by how much my osteopathic training helped me excel. Previous articleThe road to PyeongChang took years of hard work—for Olympic physicians too Next articleICYMI: community health, kratom and diversity in medicine
6 states in 12 months: A guide to life on the road during fourth year Fourth year is what you make it. Rachel Pray, OMS IV, shares how she embraced travel and adventure as much as possible during her fourth year.
Being a DO in a heavily MD residency program: What surprised me I was incredibly nervous to join a large MD-dominant internal medicine residency, but I was pleasantly surprised by how much my osteopathic training helped me excel.