What does a two class system for competition among Canadians look like?
BY Rosemary
ON
February 18, 2014
POSTED IN Uncategorized
What a Two Class System Looks Like
2013 BC Residency Competition Streams
A. The First Class Stream for Canadians who are CMGs (Canadian and American Medical School Graduates):
- 274 residency positions :
- 107 family medicine residencies
- 167 specialty positions (all 64 specialty disciplines available for competition)
- 256 UBC graduates
- Competition as of right to CMGs with no conditions or obligations attached.
- No return of service obligations. This is true even of those medical school applicants who entered UBC medical school with low MCAT scores and GPAs as low as 70% because UBC considered them good candidates for rural practice.
5. CSAs and other IMGs are prohibited from competing against CMGs in the first round to ensure every CMG is protected and preferred over other Canadians who chose to study medicine overseas.
6. CSAs can only compete for the crumbs leftover, after CMGs have completed their first round of competition in this stream.
B. The Second Class Stream for Canadians who are CSAs or other IMGs (International Medical Graduates):
- 34 residency positions:
- 28 family medicine residencies
- 6 specialty positions (only 3 out of 64 recognized specialty disciplines available: psychiatry, internal medicine, pediatrics)
- Approximately 350 applicants in 2013;
- Ability to compete in this stream is tied to conditions.
- Ability to compete is contingent on agreeing to enter into an indenture agreement whereby one must work where (s)he is told for 2-3 years after becoming fully licensed.
- This stream was designed as an affirmative action stream to allow immigrant physicians with language and cultural barriers, an opportunity to become qualified as medical doctors, therefore discreet barriers were put in place to exclude CSAs from competition.
- As a result few CSAs are admitted into residency jobs through the IMG streams. Demands for the precise number have been denied by UBC on the premise that this is not a statistic that UBC is interested in processing.
Comments are closed