Feature

New residency matching sets record, says NRMP


 

The 2020 Medical Specialties Matching Program (MSMP), a division of the National Resident Matching Program, matched a record number of applicants to subspecialty training programs for positions beginning in 2021, the NRMP reported.

“Specifically, the 2020 MSMP included 6,847 applicants submitting certified rank order lists (an 8.9% increase), 2042 programs submitting certified rank order lists (a 4.3% increase), 5,734 positions (a 2.8% increase), and 5,208 positions filled (a 6.1% increase),” according to a news release.

The MSMP now includes 14 internal medicine subspecialties and four sub-subspecialties. The MSMP offered 5,734 positions this year, and 5,208 (90.8%) were successfully filled. That represents an increase of almost 3 percentage points, compared with last year’s results.

Among those subspecialties that offered 30 positions or more, the most competitive were allergy and immunology, cardiovascular disease, clinical cardiac electrophysiology, gastroenterology, hematology and oncology, and pulmonary/critical care. Each of those filled at least 95% of available slots. More than half of the positions were filled by U.S. MDs.

By contrast, the least competitive subspecialties were geriatric medicine and nephrology. Programs in these two fields filled less than 75% of positions offered. Less than 45% were filled by U.S. MDs.

More than 76% of the 6,847 applicants who submitted rank order lists (5,208) matched into residency programs.

The number of U.S. MDs in this category increased nearly 7% over last year, with a total of 2,935. The number of DO graduates increased as well, with a total of 855, which was 9.6% more than the previous year.

More U.S. citizens who graduated from international medical schools matched this year as well; 1,087 placed into subspecialty residency, a 9% increase, compared with last year.

A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.

Recommended Reading

Dangers of a medical board investigation: How to protect yourself
MDedge Internal Medicine
AMA takes on vaccine misinformation, physician vaccines, racism
MDedge Internal Medicine
Patient health suffers amid pandemic health care shortages
MDedge Internal Medicine
Are more female physicians leaving medicine as pandemic surges?
MDedge Internal Medicine
CMS launches hospital-at-home program to free up hospital capacity
MDedge Internal Medicine
Pandemic increases need for home-based care with remote monitoring of patients
MDedge Internal Medicine
Colchicine a case study for what’s wrong with U.S. drug pricing
MDedge Internal Medicine
Medicare finalizes 2021 physician pay rule with E/M changes
MDedge Internal Medicine
How Twitter amplifies my doctor and human voice
MDedge Internal Medicine
Biden chooses California Attorney General Xavier Becerra to head HHS
MDedge Internal Medicine