Becoming A Resident Doctor In The US Just Got Easier – Meet Dr. Ngozike Orjioke | Welcome to Linda Ikeji's Blog

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Wednesday, 17 June 2015

Becoming A Resident Doctor In The US Just Got Easier – Meet Dr. Ngozike Orjioke

In 2014, 34,355 students applied to become residency doctors in the US, and many would have been successful if they had access to the right information and mentorship.


Pocket Presents,a Media events company in collaboration with BusinessDay Newspapers brings great news for Nigerian medical students and Doctors with hopes of becoming resident doctors in the US this year with a special event holding at the prestigious Four Points hotel in Lagos on July 4, 2015. (Sign up for the event hereà http://bit.ly/USMedicalResidency)

The event will be anchored by Dr. Ngozike Orjioke, a renowned U.S based medical practitioner who has helped many foreign applicants become medical doctors in the US through the US medical residency program. 
During her residency in Internal medicine, Dr. Orjioke was honored as Chief resident. She also served as Chief Fellow during her pulmonary critical care fellowship. She is a Pulmonologist-Intensivist at Atlanta Medical Center, Atlanta Georgia and a part time faculty in an Internal Medicine residency program in Atlanta. It was in these positions that she learned that it takes more than USMLE scores and a bag of dreams.



The quest to “become a doctor” in the US has been driven by several things such as the quality of the residency program, access to better funding for research, access to better medical facilities, and the importance the US government and private organizations have placed in ensuring the US is at the forefront of medical research and development in the world.


Attendees of the Pocket Presents and BusinessDay event will enjoy special sessions, insights and secrets that will help them achieve their dreams. Sign up for the event hereà http://bit.ly/USMedicalResidency. You can also follow Pocket Mobile on Twitter https://twitter.com/OnlyPocket and like their Facebook page here-à https://www.facebook.com/onlyPocket to get regular updates on the event.

21 comments:

Unknown said...

Nice.

CatwalkWithPAT (Please Click on my name) said...

Okay

Blog It With Olivia said...

That's cool







#ITwillONLYgetBETTER
#itMUSTendINpraise

Unknown said...

That's good.

Unknown said...

Nice one, thanks for sharing. Linda take note!




Okiie, notice to all LIBERs. Didn't want to do dis before but I gex I just have to do it as a disclaimer. One idiot on dis blog stole my identity, my name & signage. So please any negative comments on dis blog is not coming from me but from the thief cos I would neva say anything bad about someone or wish anyone evil. So I have gone back to using my old pix & my email address is (julie3er@gmail.com). Linda take note!

Ayodele Francis Oluwayomi said...

When medical students from Nigeria are all relocating to the US, wah have we got to the Nigerian health sector???

Unknown said...

Cool

Ozioko G said...

thanks for this information i love it

SHY2BABA said...

whats with all this brain drain syndrome?we need to focus on how to develop our health sector right here in Nigeria instead of luring our brightest minds into professional slavery abroad

Anonymous said...

Because what we need in Nigeria is more brain drain.

Anonymous said...

Really need the info. And to ayodele, the issue is Nigeria isn't given doctors the insensitive required to keep us here

...The doc

Anonymous said...

This is not good for us. This is typical brain drain. They create so called opportunities and take our best brains so we remain stagnant. Slave trade 2.

Abayomi_oluwaseun said...

How much does ur country Nigeria pay? lol.. I studied in a Country where I paid thousand of Dollars (averagely 15,000 per every 4 months) making 15K US dollars X 3 in a year that's 45K USD. And working in a delapidated health system like Nigeria's when will I get my Tuition back and start being a son to my beautiful parents who spent so much on me or how do I take care of my family when I eventually have one with hagered and inconsistent Doctors salary ranging from 120K naira for fresh Docs!!!

Unknown said...

Wonderful

Anonymous said...

Them no get enough doctors for US again? Why them they look for Naijas?

Anonymous said...

Just another way to chop Nigerians money.Plenty medical students in america cannot get residency to become doctors.Its now international doctors that will get the spots. Do not deceive them o.U people should just port someone else

Anonymous said...

To jump the USMLE hoop takes at least 5years. Then you wait for placement that may take another 2 years.Then you do your residency for at least 4years, earning minimum wage. So for the next 11-12years, don't think you will be swimming in money. These steps only qualify you for Gen.Practitioner. So intending migrants should take note. A lot of Nigerian doctors moved into physician assistant or nursing. It is not as easy as anyone may make it sound.

Anonymous said...

God bless you Joor,that's minus the time spent,then you would be owed on top

Unknown said...

That's because you chose to spend it abroad rather than Nigeria. You wouldn't have spent that much if you studied in Nigeria ,besides, be ready to spend a huge number of years paying off your debt except your parents are politicians

Unknown said...

In every profession, you start small, you don't expect to get a job of 1 million as fresh doctor without experience. You still need to study ,improve yourself and become a professional. Gone are those days, even patients are scared of fresh doctors.

Unknown said...

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