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Fourth-year medical students celebrate Match Day 2021

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The UTRGV School of Medicine students, faculty, and family members celebrated Match Day 2021 in Edinburg on Friday. Celebrating his accomplishment is Michael Rotko, a UTRGV medical student who matched with Schwab Rehab Hospital in Illinois for the Transitional Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation program. (UTRGV Photo by Carlos Sanchez)

Texas Border Business

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By Dimitra Trejo

RIO GRANDE VALLEY, TEXAS – The UTRGV School of Medicine’s Class of 2021 celebrated a memorable Match Day on Friday, with 50 medical students matching to residency programs around the country.

UTRGV’s second class of medical students will graduate in May. More than half of ​the soon-to-be graduates will stay in Texas for their residency. In all, 29 of the 50 matched to programs in Texas, and nine will participate in residency programs in the Rio Grande Valley. 

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Match Day is a national day of transition, when fourth-year medical students open and read their letters from the National Residency Matching Program (NRMP). The NRMP program ​matches graduating students with available training positions at ​health systems around the country. 

UTRGV students ​will train through residencies in primary care ​and medicine, ​as well as in procedural specialties such as orthopedic surgery, anesthesiology, general surgery, ​otolaryngology – head and neck surgery, dermatology, emergency medicine, psychiatry and radiology. Students matched to a number of prestigious residency programs, such as UT Southwestern, Cleveland Clinic, Massachusetts General Hospital, New York Presbyterian Hospital – Columbia University Medical Center, ​the University of Washington and the University of Virginia, among others.

This year marked a special match day for UTRGV fourth-year medical students, as they joined their classmates and closest family members for the school’s first in-person event since the pandemic. Masks and other safety guidelines were observed. The event also was livestreamed.

Dr. John H. Krouse, dean of the UTRGV School of Medicine and executive vice president for Health Affairs, said medical students exceled this year, despite setbacks and challenges during the COVID-19 pandemic.“No one could have predicted the events of the last 12 months. Clearly it was unprecedented in medical education and it was unprecedented in clinical care,” Krouse said. “And you, our medical students, were in the midst of it, trying to learn clinical medicine deep in a pandemic. That has not happened in a century in this country, and your lives will forever be touched by the experiences you’ve had in the last year. It’s been a remarkable time.”

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The UTRGV School of Medicine’s Class of 2021 celebrated Match Day on Friday, with 50 medical students matching to residency programs around the country. Annalisa Lopez matched with The University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston for its Plastic Surgery (Integrated) program. (UTRGV Photo by Carlos Sanchez)

FOURTH-YEAR STUDENTS, NOW RESIDENT PHYSICIANS

Patrick Ojeaga, UTRGV fourth-year medical student as well as student regent for the UT System Board of Regents, participated in Match Day along with his brother, Macaulay Ojeaga, a student in the same class.

“Attending medical school with my brother, Mac, has truly been an unforgettable experience,” Patrick Ojeaga said. “It was great to be able to pursue our goal of becoming physicians together. Having each other as a support system for four challenging years of medical school was a major bonus.”

The brothers, originally from McAllen, opened their letters at exactly 11 a.m., like thousands of fourth-year medical students across the country, to learn that they had been accepted to the residency programs they preferred.

“I feel overwhelmed with gratitude for everyone who has helped me along this journey, and I cannot wait to begin serving patients and the community,” Patrick Ojeaga said. “I have matched to the University of Texas Southwestern Medical School’s residency program, where I will be focusing on orthopedic surgery.

“And I’m proud of my brother, who matched to the University of Kansas School of Medicine in Kansas City for their otolaryngology residency program.”

Fourth-year medical student Lauren Bayliss, from Seguin, Texas,said she was grateful to have participated in the traditional Match Day event, especially after the challenges of the past year.

“I’m glad to be moving forward in my medical career,” said Bayliss, who now heads to the University of Texas Medical School at Houston as part of the school’s Emergency Medicine residency program. 

“My attraction to fast-paced environments and the appeal of a broad scope of practice confirmed that emergency medicine was the career for me,” Bayliss said.

In all, 29 of the 50 UTRGV medical students matched to programs in Texas, and nine will participate in residency programs in the Rio Grande Valley. Match Day is a national day of transition, when fourth-year medical students open and read their letters from the National Residency Matching Program. UTRGV medical student Adedayo Okanlawon, from Houston, is headed to Massachusetts General Hospital to participate in the Internal Medicine program. (UTRGV Photo by Carlos Sanchez)

Matching with his chosen internal medicine program was fourth-year UTRGV medical student Adedayo Okanlawon, from Houston, who is now bound for Massachusetts.

“Massachusetts General Hospital is the teaching hospital of Harvard Medical School,” Okanlawon said. “I am very honored and excited for the opportunity to go there and learn from some of the greatest minds in medicine.”

Dr. Leonel Vela, UTRGV senior associate dean for Educational Resources and senior associate vice president for Education, recalled the long journey students experience to make it to Match Day, not just this year, but every year.“I remember vividly the White Coat Ceremony in 2017 that welcomed this class into the medical profession, as they prepared for the journey to becoming practitioners of the art and science of medicine,” Vela said. “Match Day celebrates a wonderful and significant achievement as students enter the next phase of their medical education journey, as they transition to residency programs for training in their chosen medical specialties.”

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