One aspect of UNIBE that does not get discussed enough on this forum is its Tropical Medicine and Global Health Institute. Unlike most Caribbean medical schools, UNIBE has a dedicated research and clinical infrastructure around tropical and vector-borne diseases, neglected tropical conditions, and global health systems, which is a natural extension of being based in the Dominican Republic. For students thinking about research productivity, thesis requirements, or simply wanting something meaningful on their residency application beyond board scores, this institute represents a genuine opportunity. We want to hear from students and graduates who engaged with the institute in any capacity: did you use it for your thesis, pursue a research project there, present at a conference, or collaborate with faculty on a publication? And critically, did program directors at residency interviews actually notice or ask about it? Share your experience so prospective students can understand what this resource realistically offers.
I’ll start since I just went through the match cycle. I did my thesis through the institute on dengue seroprevalence in a rural province in the Dr.. It was a real field study, not just a lit review, and I ended up with a co-authored publication in a public health journal before I applied. I matched into internal medicine at a community program in the midwest and I can tell you that at three of my seven interviews the program director or a faculty member specifically brought up the tropical medicine research. One of them had a global health track and basically said it was a differentiating factor for them. I genuinely think it helped.
Congrats on the match. Can I ask how you actually got connected with the institute? Like did you have to seek it out yourself or is it something that gets presented to you during orientation or preclinicals? I worry about being at a foreign school and not knowing what resources exist until it’s too late to use them.
Honestly a bit of both. They do mention it early on but it’s kind of buried in the general orientation info dump. The students who actually used it were mostly the ones who asked around or had an upperclassman tip them off. I’d say go in knowing you want to find a research faculty member in year one and just email directly. The institute faculty respond, they are not the type to ignore a motivated student. Don’t wait for it to come to you
Resident now, UNIBE grad from 2023. I used the institute for my thesis on leptospirosis exposure among agricultural workers. The access to actual patient populations and community health data that you just cannot get at a US school doing a standard research elective is what made it worthwhile. My thesis advisor had published in Lancet Infectious Diseases which also looked good on the acknowledgments section of my paper. During residency interviews I got asked about it probably four or five times and every single time it opened up a real conversation rather than the usual generic interview back and forth. Hard to put a number on how much it helped but I’d do it again without hesitation.