David Eisenberg
  • Class of 2018
  • Furlong, PA

David Eisenberg of Furlong, other fourth-year medical students at Geisinger Commonwealth School of Medicine, celebrate successful Match Day

2018 Apr 2

David Eisenberg of Furlong, joined other fourth-year medical students at Geisinger Commonwealth School of Medicine (GCSOM) to learn their residency placements during the National Resident Matching Program's "Match Day," an event at which all fourth-year M.D. students around the country simultaneously open their envelopes to learn where they will spend the next three to seven years training in specialties. Eisenberg matched at Wright Center for GME-PA for Psychiatry . Residencies typically begin July 1.

"We are proud of the success of our Class of 2018," said Steven J. Scheinman, M.D., president and dean of Geisinger Commonwealth and executive vice president, Geisinger. "Again this year, our students matched into excellent local residency programs, as well as some of the most competitive and prestigious programs and specialties in the nation. I am also glad that, once again, our students chose primary care in large numbers," Dr. Scheinman said, pointing out that half of Geisinger Commonwealth's Class of 2018 matched into a primary care specialty - family medicine, internal medicine, pediatrics or obstetrics/gynecology.

Dr. Scheinman also observed that Geisinger Commonwealth applicants matched into some of the most competitive specialties in American medicine, including dermatology, radiation oncology, plastic surgery, urology, ophthalmology and orthopedic surgery. In addition to the large number of Geisinger Commonwealth students who will train at leading community-based programs, several students will go to residencies at highly competitive teaching hospitals, including those associated with Dartmouth, New York University, the University of Rochester, UCLA and the University of Chicago, as well programs at Jefferson, Temple and Drexel.

According to the National Resident Matching Program, the 2018 Match was the largest in history, with 37,103 total registrants competing for 33,167 positions. Among them were 18,818 fourth-year M.D. students who submitted their program preference lists, including the 97 from Geisinger Commonwealth.