Transition to Fellowship
Supporting August 1 Fellowship Start Date
ACOG and CREOG have engaged the resident and fellowship communities in a collaborative, consensus building process regarding this important topic.
Easing the Transition
Read our Statement of Support from ACOG and subspecialty organizations for August 1 fellowship start date.
Scheduled Fellowship Start Dates*
Academic Year 2023–2024
- Complex Family Planning
- Gynecologic Oncology
- Maternal Fetal Medicine
- Minimally Invasive Gynecologic Surgery
- Pediatric and Adolescent Gynecology
- Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility
- Urogynecology/Reconstructive Pelvic Surgery
*These lists are updated quarterly as new fellowship start dates become available.
Ob-Gyn Fellowship Start Date Frequently Asked Questions
Feedback from residents and fellows regarding this change has been overwhelmingly positive. Concerns regarding the loss of salary, visa limitations, and health insurance coverage have been raised. These frequently asked questions address those concerns and others to assist programs and fellows with the recommendation of a delayed fellowship start date.
Read the frequently asked questions below, or download as a PDF.
Questions
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No, ACGME accreditation is based on compliance with ACGME requirements. ACGME mandates a set length of training, but not a particular start date.
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Many programs have made accommodations to allow senior residents to use the last week/s of their training to do board prep, and for relocation purposes. However, this is not a universal policy and often mandates residents use their own personal time off or unpaid leave time to accommodate. It also diminishes the residency experience. This change will allow graduating residents to focus on reviewing for the qualifying exam and the end of their residency program and decreases resident concerns about relocation prior to starting their fellowship.
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Perhaps, but only for the 1st year. After that, the graduating fellows will be on a new cycle that will provide similar attendance as before. For example, a fellow who started on August 1 would graduate on July 30 upon completion of their fellowship. As any gap in coverage will be known in advance, programs will be able to plan for the transition.
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Perhaps. This gap may be up to 6 weeks depending on the particular pay period cycles of their residency and fellowship sponsoring institutions. However, many residents will receive a final paycheck 2-4 weeks after their last day of employment according to their resident employment contract. Regardless, trainees would be able to plan far in advance. In surveys, residents overwhelmingly prefer a brief gap in pay and insurance to the gain in time to prepare for fellowship. In fact, most residents entering employment choose to take off more time than this between residency and the start of their new job resulting in a similar or longer pay.
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There are options for residents to maintain or obtain health insurance in the gap between their graduation from residency and start of fellowship.
- Typically, health insurance lasts through the final pay period. If their pay from residency extends past their end date (such as if their final paycheck is a week or two after their last day of work, then their health insurance should continue through that last pay period).
- Residents also have the option to obtain their own insurance through the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (COBRA). Coverage with COBRA can be obtained retroactively so the costs would only be incurred if needed during the short time period between residency and fellowship.
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Sponsoring institutions have their own approach to orientation and "boot camps." If fellowships within a single institution have different start dates this may impact the ability to provide a collective simultaneous orientation. However, the onboarding process is becoming more fluid and many institutions are utilizing virtual or remote orientation. With a larger proportion of our senior residents graduating off cycle, there are typically multiple orientation cycles occurring in the same institution to accommodate later-starting fellowships. There are other fellowships (surgical and pediatrics) with similar delayed start dates, and institutions and DIOs have adjusted to that.
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Each year, many international graduates enter GME programs in the United States. This begins an endeavor to secure and/or maintain an appropriate visa status that will allow for clinical U.S. training. The visa application process may be complex, and it is important to know regulations, requirements, and timelines. Common issues that foreign national physicians may encounter during the visa application process and general solutions are listed on the ECFMG website.
Since U.S. surgical fellowship programs begin on August 1, there is an approximately 30-day gap between the completion of a residency and entry into fellowship training. This has an impact on ECFMG-sponsored surgical trainees as J-1 regulations require full-time participation in a program of graduate medical education (GME). To address this issue, the U.S. Department of State (DoS) has instructed ECFMG that J-1 surgical trainees can formally seek to maintain J-1 status during the gap between training programs through submission of a formal “sponsorship authorization (SA)” request.
Each sponsoring institution may have their own approach to visa situations and incoming fellows with visa concerns should proactively reach out to their fellowship programs to learn what they need to do for that sponsoring institution. Some sponsoring institutions have access to immigration lawyers to help incoming fellows if this is needed.
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CREOG recognizes that there may be other concerns that have not been addressed or fully vetted. In an effort to promote a universal approach please raise concerns with CREOG leadership through correspondence addressed to [email protected] at CREOG/ACOG. During the COVID-19 pandemic, many fellowships adjusted to virtual orientations, the delayed qualifying exam, and a later start, and found it to be more feasible than expected.