You can become a OBGYN and specilaize in maternal/fetal medicine.
If a Medical Student wants to be competitive for top residency programs, they usually require a 4.0 overall GPA. Residency Programs look at this the most. With a 4.0 overall GPA, you will be able to get into any residence program you desire.
When I applied to orthodontic residency programs, the top 5 were University of Washington, University of North Carolina, Conneticut, Michigan, and University of Southern California (USC). This was in 2003.
Sackler school of medicine Sackler school of medicine
an OBGYN needs to attend medical school and get a residency in Gynecology.
Unfortunately, there is no actual ranking system for pathology residency programs or pathology fellowship programs. However, there is a Pathology Resident Wiki (pathinfo dot wikia dot com) that has a complete pathology residency program directory and pathology fellowship program directory. Another good source of info is studentdoctor dot net.
There are literally hundreds of pediatric residency programs in the US.
an obgyn must have 4 years of undergrad college, 4 years of medical school and a 4 year residency (you are looking at 12 years of college). After you complete the residency, you will have to pass an ob/gyn board certification exam that will allow you to practice ob/gyn exclusively.
Yes, you will practice various clinical rotations in US Hospitals as a part of your residency.
OBGYN studiesFirst an MD (4 years after a Bachelors degree) Then a Residency (Generally 4 years)Then most go for 1-2 years of fellowshipFinally you pass the boardRevenues year 1 after all that 211K$ Max revenues: 417 K$
Four years of undergraduate, four years of medical, three years of residency. All together, 11. Four years of undergraduate, four years of medical, three years of residency. All together, 11.
Brigham Women's/Mass General Magee Women's UCSF UNC UT-Southwestern University of Colorado University of Alabama University of Washington Northwestern