School of Medicine

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Medical Students Matched to Residency Programs Nationwide
March 19, 2021

John Pisan and his fiancée Rebecca Loechli have matched together at St. Luke’s and will be spending the next four years training to be OB/GYNs right here in Bethlehem.

For decades, the tradition of celebrating Match Day – a medical student’s rite of passage into training or residency – brought together thousands of students and their families for celebrations across the nation. At the strike of noon on a set day, students eagerly tore into envelopes to discover where they would spend the next 3-5 years of their lives.

But like everything else, Match Day has gone remote.

Temple/St. Luke’s medical students will celebrate pandemic-style – from the comfort of home with select family – viewing their letters online instead of in person.

For Match Day coordinator and fourth year student John Pisan, today he will learn where he and his fiancée will live for the next four years as they both pursue residencies in Obstetrics and Gynecology.  They graduate in May, marry in June and will be starting their careers by July.**

“National Match Day is an unforgettable milestone for every medical student across the country,” said Shaden Eldakar-Hein, MD, St. Luke’s University Health Network and Senior Associate Dean and Associate Professor, Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University. “We are proud to have trained our graduating class of 2021, and we are extremely pleased to see our students moving on to some of the most highly regarded residency programs in the nation, including St. Luke’s.”

Fourth-year student Saira Agarwala from Center Valley is excited to celebrate with a group of fellow classmates and friends.  She is planning a career in Dermatology.  “At St. Luke’s, our class is small and tight-knit.  We’ve seen each other through a lot – including deciding what residencies we want to pursue.  I’m excited to see where everyone matches today,” she said.

St. Luke’s boasts 38 graduate medical education programs – residencies and fellowships – in a variety of fields including family medicine, emergency medicine, dermatology, neurology, cardiology and many others.

This year we interviewed and matched with many individuals with local ties, which is ideal because there is a stronger possibility of them staying here if they train here – meaning more physicians particularly in high-demand specialties to help care for our community,” said J.P. Orlando, Ed.D, St. Luke’s Chief Graduate Medical Education Officer.

“I’m excited for all of them,” Dr. Eldakar-Hein said. “Today is a tribute to the students’ hard work over the past four years and to the excellent teaching, advice and counsel of our faculty.”

“After working with these students the past four years, I look forward to seeing their growth into excellent, well-trained physicians,” retired dean, Joel Rosenfeld, MD added.  “Of those who leave us for their residencies, some will in just a few years return to the Lehigh Valley, infusing the region with new medical expertise that will improve the overall health of our community.”

Trina Wijangco reflects on her fourth year in medical school and the path that led her to St. Luke’s.  “I was fortunate to be part of St. Luke’s class. I applied to Temple because I’m a city girl and wanted to be in a metropolitan area but learning and living in Bethlehem has taught me a lot. I grew as a person and I know that I can go anywhere now.”

The Temple/St. Luke’s Class of 2021 will graduate May 7 in Philadelphia. The medical school will welcome the incoming Class of 2025 in August for its White Coat Ceremony.

For more information about Temple/St. Luke’s please see www.sluhn.org/som and for other graduate medical education programs at St. Luke’s University Health Network, please see www.sluhn.org/gme


Temple/St. Luke’s School of Medicine

Class of 2021 Matched Programs

 

Anesthesiology

NYP Hospital Weill Cornell Medical Center

University of Rochester/Strong Memorial

 

Child Neurology

University of Rochester/Strong Memorial

 

Dermatology

Temple University Hospital

 

Emergency Medicine

St. Lukes Hospital Bethlehem

University of Massachusetts Medical School

University of Kansas SOM Kansas City

 

Family Medicine

St. Lukes Hospital Anderson St. Lukes Hospital Bethlehem Thomas Jefferson University

 

Internal Medicine

Boston University Medical Center

Brown University/Rhode Island Hospital CMSRU/Cooper University Hospital ISMMS Mount Sinai Beth Israel

Rutgers- NJ Medical School

University of Colorado SOM - Denver


 

Interventional Radiology

Henry Ford Hospital

 

Neurology

SUNY Health Sciences Campus Brooklyn

 

Obstetrics-Gynecology

Pennsylvania Hospital

St. Lukes Hospital Bethlehem

 

Pediatrics

Medical College of Georgia

 

Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation

NYU Grossman School of Medicine

 

Psychiatry

St. Lukes Hospital Anderson

University of Pittsburgh Medical Center

 

Radiation Oncology

University of Arizona COM - Tucson

 

Surgery- Preliminary Year

Temple University Hospital

 

Transitional Year

Crozer-Chester Medical Center

St. Lukes Hospital Bethlehem