Below is a list of the results for our match results for the December 2018 season. Our match rate is exceptional.
December 2018 Match Results
Here is our match list compiled over the past few years:
Where are they now?
The list below shows what residents have done after residency, including fellowships and jobs. As you can see, our residents have an outstanding track record of matching into subspecialty training programs, including those in the most competitive fields and at top institutions.
This list also gives a good idea of what you can do after graduating from our program – which is just about anything! There is a great balance of subspecialists, hospitalists, and primary care physicians working in a wide variety of practice settings—rural, urban, university, community, and VA. Many of our graduates have gone on to be clinician-educators for medical schools and residency training programs, and others are successful faculty researchers and educators.
Note: Those marked with ** indicates a faculty teaching position.
Class of 2019
Class of 2018
Class of 2017
Class of 2016
Class of 2015
Class of 2014
Class of 2013
Class of 2012
Class of 2011
Class of 2010
IDHEAL Fellowship
IDHEAL stands for International and Domestic Health Equity and Leadership. The section mission is to define and promote the role that academic emergency medicine can play in the promotion of health equity and the elimination of health disparities, locally, nationally and globally. To do so, we address the social, economic, environmental, and legal determinants of health by partnering with non-traditional allies, such as community based organizations, in order to understand and treat patients in the context of their communities and their lives. The section is an umbrella for collaboration of faculty and mentorship of trainees on projects within the realms of international emergency medicine, population health, migrant health, and social emergency medicine. We frame this as a section of “Health Equity” rather than a traditional section of International Emergency Medicine to emphasize the similarities between these disciplines and the common goal of health equity on a global scale.
For more information on the IDHEAL section, click here.
InstitutionsOlive View-UCLA Medical Center
Olive View-UCLA Medical Center is a public, acute care hospital that serves the San Fernando, Santa Clarita, and Antelope Valleys under the Department of Health Services of Los Angeles County. The hospital was founded in the 1920’s as a tuberculosis sanatorium. After drugs were discovered and began to be used in the 1950’s to cure tuberculosis, Olive View became a general hospital. The current hospital building was opened in 1987. Olive View-UCLA Medical Center is a teaching hospital affiliated with the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. The hospital trains medical residents in 22 medical specialties. Olive View combines the traditional 'Big County' service mission to the underserved with a modern high tech facility and a world class full time academic faculty from the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. The hospital serves a very diverse population and prides itself on providing care for all.
Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center
The Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center (RRMC) is located at the southern end of the beautiful UCLA campus in Westwood. It is a state-of-the-art 520 bed academic medical center that offers a full range of medical and surgical services from primary to sub-specialty care. The one million-plus square foot, 10-story structure encompasses the operations of Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center, the Stewart and Lynda Resnick Neuropsychiatric Hospital at UCLA and the Mattel Children's Hospital.
The Medical Center is one component of UCLA's Center for the Health Sciences, which includes the Schools of Medicine, Nursing, Dentistry, and Public Health; the Jules Stein Eye Institute; the Clarence E. Reed Neurological Research Center; the Brain Research Institute; the Biomedical Cyclotron; the Jerry Lewis Neuromuscular Research Center; and the Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center.
US News and World report has ranked RRMC as the number one hospital in the West and a top 5 hospital in the United States for over twenty years.
The 41-bed Emergency Department treats 52,000 patients per year and serves as a Level 1 Trauma center, as well as Stroke, STEMI, and Pediatric Critical Care center.
CurriculumEducational Objectives
The objective of this fellowship is to produce leaders in academic emergency medicine who have the appropriate academic, research, public health and advocacy tools to successfully embark on a career devoted to the reduction of health disparities. This includes an understanding of how social forces impact health on the local, national, and international level.
Experience
The curriculum aims to develop skill sets required to succeed at health equity and population health related projects. This includes two categories of skills - those necessary to understand questions of health equity, the background of the social forces that impact health, and general academic skills that are necessary to compete for funding, evaluate interventions, and present results. Depending on the fellow’s interest, an individual academic plan will be developed between the fellow and mentor that suits the goals of the fellow. This will be continually revised during mentor meetings (which occur every two weeks) to assure that objectives are achieved by the end of the fellowship.
The core of each fellow’s curriculum will focus on the following eight elements:
Professional Development
The fellow will have the opportunity to obtain a Master’s degree in Public Health from the UCLA Fieldling School of Public Health.
Expanded Outcomes
At a minimum, fellows must:
Project
Fellows are welcome to participate in the faculty’s ongoing projects as a mechanism of learning these skills and perspectives, but we also welcome fellowship candidates who have their own projects in initial stages that need mentorship in order to grow.
Clinical
Program Faculty
Stipends and Benefits
To Apply
Interested applicants should send Curriculum Vitae and three letters of reference, including one from your current residency director to:
Breena Taira, MD, MPH
Section Chair, IDHEAL Olive View-UCLA Medical Center Department of Emergency Medicine, North Annex 14445 Olive View Drive Sylmar, CA 91342 (747) 210-3107 ude.alcu@ariatb
Interviews will be granted to qualified applicants by invitation.
Applicant Requirements
Current Fellows
Hemang Acharya, MD 2018-2019
Ucla Olive View Fellowship Match Today
Residents are paid by UCLA and are bound by conditions of employment at the UCLA Medical Center. For a detailed description of housestaff policies and procedures, please see David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA Graduate Medical Education.
UC Resident Salaries for 2017-2018:
Resident Physician I: $55,566
Resident Physician II: $57,408 Resident Physician III: $59,633 Resident Physician IV: $62,018
Health Benefits:
UCLA Medical Center provides residents and their families with medical, dental, and vision insurance at no cost to the resident. If you seek health care through UCLA facilities, there are no co-payments on office visits and prescriptions are free of charge. Life and long-term disability insurance are also provided to UCLA House Staff Residents at no cost.
Ucla Olive View Fellowship Match Schedule
Leave & Vacation:
Vacation Policy: 20 work days per year
Sick Leave: 12 work days per year
Nexus fallout 4 place anywhere. Parental Leave: 2 weeks of parental leave + 2 weeks sick leave + 4 weeks of vacation leave (total of 8 weeks compensated). Additional uncompensated parental leave may be negotiated with the residency director.
Meal Card:
All residents receive a badge from Olive View-UCLA Medical Center and a food stipend to help cover meals purchased in the Olive View cafeteria.
Retirement Plans:
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Residents participate in the UC Retirement Savings Program and have multiple options for investing their retirement savings through an online account managed by Fidelity Retirement Services. For more information, visit UC Human Resources & Benefits.
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UCLA BruinCard, Recreation, & Events:
All residents receive a BruinCard, which serves as your official University identification card/badge. This card permits access to facilities and special events and can be used to purchase goods and services throughout the University, Medical Center, and Health System. Residents may also purchase discounted access to UCLA recreational facilities through UCLA Recreation. For more information on UCLA-sponsored sporting and entertainment events, visit the UCLA Central Ticket Office.
Funds for Travel for Professional Meetings:
Ucla Olive View
The administration makes every effort to underwrite expenses for residents presenting papers or posters at national meetings. The administration encourages the involvement of residents in local and national psychiatric organizations and will support such activities as the budget allows.
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