Friday, February 06, 2009

The IMGs

IMG stands for International Medical Graduate. In the U.S. medical system, it used to identify a physician who went to medical school outside the United States. A subset of this group is sometimes identified as FMGs (Foreign Medical Graduate) -- to distinguish 'Americans' who studied outside the United States from foreign nationals who did their medical training elsewhere (often their home country) and who have come to the United States to pursue residency and perhaps fellowship training and perhaps to stay on and practice in the U.S.

I am an IMG. In the eyes of some, IMGs are viewed as somehow being inferior in their training and abilities to practice medicine in the U.S. As I finish residency training, I want to highlight a few of the IMGs I know...

Dr. RD is from Sri Lanka. He went to medical school in St. Petersburgh in the former Soviet Union. After completing his medical training, he returned to his country and pursued post-graduate training as a surgeon. He then served in their army as an Army Surgeon. He saw 'action' in the civil war. He subsequently came to the U.S., trained in Internal Medicine in New York state, and is now a board-certified Hospitalist.

Dr. MS studied medicine in her native India. She went on to do post-graduate training in Obstetrics and Gynecology and practiced as an OB/GYN for several years thereafter in India and the Caribbean. She came to the U.S. and started a residency in Pediatrics and is now a fellow in Pediatric Neurology in Boston.

Dr. NG is also from India. After completing medical school and post-graduate training in Dermatology and Venerology, he went to the United Kingdom. He practiced as a House Office there and became certified as a Member of the Royal College of Physicians. He is completing his residency training in Internal Medicine now.

Innumerable others trained in India, Palestine, Austria, Russia, the Ukraine, Sudan as physicians, surgeons, anesthesiologists, Internists, Cardiologists, Ophthalmologists and came to the States to train again, often in other specialties because their specialty would not accept but the rare IMG. Others have served in wars in Bosnia, Kosovo, Darfur and the Congo. Some have studied Russian, Serbian, German and French to be able to study medicine. A few have worked at gas stations and convenience stores while studying for U.S. board exams to get into residency training. Some have done Masters and Doctorates in Public Health, Microbiology and other subjects in order to have a visa to interview and study for entry boards before residency.

When you meet these physicians, you will not hear these stories. There is no sense of entitlement or pride or sacrifice. You will not hear about the number of times they have started from scratch, been discriminated against, been judged or slighted, often by those with much less training and experience than they have. You will only see them try to fit in and do right by their patients, bringing to the doctor-patient encounter a world (pun intended) of experience.

As I have rubbed shoulders with these physicians in training and learned from their cross-training, international exposure to medicine and marveled at their multi-lingual and multi-cultural sensitivity and competency, I cannot help but feel that once again, the United States is gaining the best. The shame and modest reticience I felt in identifying myself as an IMG when I began residency is gone now.

I am an IMG.

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