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ribbit
05-11-2006, 05:23 PM
How long does the approval last before the school gets another visit. Is it a standard (set) time for all schools. Or does it vary from school to school.? Thanks

Haystack615
05-11-2006, 08:07 PM
well mua got a visit from ny in november and just got the go ahead this past april. so around 6-7 months.

McGillGrad
05-26-2006, 02:26 AM
Regular visits to make sure

sukhtinder
05-26-2006, 02:01 PM
Many years since I was here
On the street I was passin' my time away
To the left and to the right
Buildings towering into the sky
It's outta sight, in the dead of night
Here I am, and in this city
With a fistful of dollars
And baby, you'd better believe

[Chorus]
I'm back, back in the New York Groove
I'm back, back in the New York Groove
I'm back, back in the New York Groove
Back, in the New York Groove, in the New York Groove

In the back of my Cadillac
A wicked lady, sittin' by my side, sayin' 'Where are we?'
Stop at Third and Forty-three, exit to the night
It's gonna be ecstacy
This place was meant for me
Feels so good tonight
Who cares about tomorrow
So baby, you'd better believe...

[Chorus]
I'm back, back in the New York Groove
I'm back, back in the New York Groove
I'm back, back in the New York Groove
Back, in the New York Groove, in the New York Groove

I'm back, back in the New York Groove
I'm back, back in the New York Groove
I'm back, back in the New York Groove
I'm back, back in the New York Groove
I'm back, back in the New York Groove
I'm back, back in the New York Groove
I'm back, back in the New York Groove
I'm back, back in the New York Groove

-Ace Frehley

sukhtinder
05-26-2006, 02:02 PM
I.
Grim-faced and forbidding,
Their faces closed tight,
An angular mass of New Yorkers
Pacing in rhythm,
Race the oncoming night,
They chase through the streets of Manhattan.
Head-first humanity,
Pause at a light,
Then flow through the streets of the city.

They seem oblivious
To a soft spring rain,
Like an English rain
So light, yet endless
From a leaden sky.

The buildings are lost
In their limitless rise.
My feet catch the pulse
And the purposeful stride.

I feel the sense of possibilities,
I feel the wrench of hard realities.
The focus is sharp in the city.

-Neil Peart

MYMD
06-11-2006, 01:32 PM
So many are worried about NY approval but isn't that just for clinicals while in school? Does it also have to do with residency? Cause I read the laws and rules and saw nothing about residency. I may have missed something?

What is the big deal? Isn't Texas and Cali more important approvals?

drj2b
06-13-2006, 01:12 PM
approval allows you do a residency in NY. you were only allowed to do something like 12 weeks of rotations in NY prior to approval. now you can do all your rotations in NY.

MYMD
06-13-2006, 04:40 PM
approval allows you do a residency in NY. you were only allowed to do something like 12 weeks of rotations in NY prior to approval. now you can do all your rotations in NY.
See your mixing up rotations which are clinicals with residency? I was asking, As far as I can see you can do a residency? WHeres it written you can not?

Residency and clinicals are different. Please clarify.

Thank You.

boukies
06-13-2006, 05:44 PM
WITHOUT NY APPROVAL- Schools lacking NY approval can only do 12 weeks of rotations there and are NOT eligible to do a residency in NY.

WITH NY APPROVAL- students can more than 12 weeks of clinical rotations in NY and also apply for residency in NY.

MDXRS22
06-13-2006, 07:00 PM
AUA just got its approval from NY.

drj2b
06-13-2006, 10:26 PM
See your mixing up rotations which are clinicals with residency? I was asking, As far as I can see you can do a residency? WHeres it written you can not?

Residency and clinicals are different. Please clarify.

Thank You.

No. What I am saying is that you can only do 12 weeks of YOUR clinicals/rotations without approval, and YOU'RE not elgible for residency.

MYMD
06-14-2006, 12:54 AM
No. What I am saying is that you can only do 12 weeks of YOUR clinicals/rotations without approval, and YOU'RE not elgible for residency. I went back to the site for the laws and rules and it said nothing about that at all ( I know about the 12 wk rule it was there plain as day)? Where is it in the rule and laws? Posting you can't doesn't cut it. :confused: Please tell me where it says that so I can have the proof.

Thanks!

medstud2b
06-18-2006, 04:41 PM
Very Interesting!

josephmedman
06-27-2006, 06:17 AM
without NY state approval you CANNOT do residency in NY state..that is 100 percent..you CAN however PRACTICE in NY state after completing residency outside of NY state if you are at an unapproved school..this is 100 percent for sure..if you want proof..the best thing is to call up NY state authority yourself but i am POSITIVE of this fact..if you ask any residency program director they will tell you the same..most schools are approved by NY except for some carib schools..most schools of countries outside of the US foreign language programs are automatically approved which does not mean they are approved for over 12 weeks of clinical rotations, however, they ARE approved for residency and licensure..but if your school is NOT approved, there is absolutely NO WAY of doing residency in NY state..that is a fact..

zeus77
06-27-2006, 07:51 PM
There is nothing on the new york state board website about requiring the school to be approved in order to do residency there. I also called the state board a few times and have gotten vague responses. Some say that it is required and some say that it is up to the hospital. You do not need ny licensure in order to start residency in ny , so the board doesn't have anything to do with you. I think the only risk that you run into is applying for licensure after residency (if residency is done in ny, and school unapproved). Also there are many residents that are currently in ny from non approved schools. Below is a link of the residents in Stonybrook family med NY and one of the second yr residents is from st. james school of med which is NOT approved by ny state.

http://www.hsc.stonybrook.edu/som/fammed/current_residents.cfm

geetsny
07-21-2006, 06:59 PM
About three years ago, when I first came to a carib med school I got in touch with the NYS board. I spoke to someone from the Dept of Comparitive Education. I was told that if I wanted to apply for residency I would have to complete all core rotations in the country where the school is chartered. However, I would be allowed to complete my elective rotations at the hospitals of my own choosing.

I am currently close to finishing my cores in the country of charter and am planning on doing my electives in the states.

I tried getting back in touch with NYS board to confirm what I was told so long ago - but it seems as though no one has the time anymore to answer questions there.

I am still following the rules I was told of earlier. And will update ppl as to what happens once I have either been rejected/accepted by NYS. :)

If anyone finds out any relevant information in the meanwhile please do take a moment to PM or email me.

:):confused::)

Isn't everything just a bit too confusing??