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Hugs, high-fives, happy tears at Match Day

Medical students learn their destinations for residency training

by Kristina SauerweinMarch 19, 2019

Huy Mach/Gaia Remerowski

Match Day is like the Academy Awards for medical students. Nervous anticipation precedes a ceremonial unsealing of envelopes that often inspires cheers, clapping and tearful thanks to family and friends who provided emotional support.

The spotlight arrived Friday, March 15, at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, when physicians-to-be opened envelopes that revealed the names of the hospitals where they will train as medical residents after graduation. Along with the event came happy tears, hugs and high-fives.

“This is perhaps the most momentous milestone in medical school,” said Kathryn Diemer, MD, assistant dean for career counseling and a professor of medicine. She has been in charge of Match Day at Washington University since 2000.

Mark Hallett“This feels like my first Match Day,” Diemer said before the big event. “I feel the same anticipation, excitement and pride for these students every year. They work so hard, not only this year with the application process, the interviews and now the anticipation leading up to Match Day, but on all of their accomplishments throughout medical school. It’s inspiring. I will miss this class, but I know that on Monday, my calendar already is booked with appointments to help the Class of 2020.”

This year, 125 students at the School of Medicine matched.

They were among thousands of medical students nationwide participating in Match Day. However, medical schools celebrate in different ways. Some have students simultaneously open envelopes that divulge the names of the institutions where they will begin residency training in July. Others host formal brunches or informal gatherings at restaurants.

At Washington University, a big screen behind the stage at the Eric P. Newman Education Center recalls each student’s ambitions as first-year students and juxtaposes that past with the future. Students individually walk, strut or dance across the stage to theme songs each chooses. Some invite friends and families — including babies, toddlers and teens — to accompany them on stage. Each then reads out loud his or her match.

Among the university’s multitalented medical students, many will stay in St. Louis for residencies at Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children’s hospitals. Others matched at hospitals throughout the United States, including Massachusetts General Hospital and Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston; UCSF Medical Center in San Francisco; UCLA Medical Center in Los Angeles; the Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore; McGaw Medical Center of Northwestern University in Chicago; New York-Presbyterian Hospital, affiliated with both Columbia University and Cornell University; and hospitals affiliated with Stanford University in Palo Alto, Calif.

Highlights involving this year’s soon-to-graduate class:

  • Of the 125 medical students, 41 will train at Barnes-Jewish Hospital and two at St. Louis Children’s Hospital.
  • Besides Missouri, the most popular states where School of Medicine students will train include California, Illinois, Massachusetts, New York and Maryland. Altogether, this year’s class will be represented at hospitals in 21 states and Washington, D.C.
  • Twenty-nine students will train in surgery, including eight in general surgery; seven in orthopedic surgery; and six in plastic surgery.
  • The next largest group of students — 24 — will train in internal medicine, followed by 11 in obstetrics-gynecology and nine each in emergency medicine, psychiatry and dermatology.
  • Overall, the National Resident Matching Program recorded the largest match ever, with 38,376 applicants registered and 35,185 positions offered.

Editors’ note: This story has been updated for the addition of the class’s 125th matched student.

Kristina covers pediatrics, surgery, medical education and student life. In 2020, she received a gold Robert G. Fenley Writing Award for general staff writing from the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC), and in 2019, she received the silver award. Kristina is an author and former reporter for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch and the Los Angeles Times, where she was part of a team of journalists that won the Pulitzer Prize in 2004 for breaking news. Additionally, she covered the 2014 Ferguson unrest for TIME magazine and, for eight years, wrote a popular parenting column for BabyCenter.com.

Huy uses visual storytelling in his coverage of medical education, patient care, and research. He was part of a team of photographers at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch that won the Pulitzer Prize for breaking news photography in 2015. He has a bachelor's degree in photojournalism from Western Kentucky University.