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INTERNSHIPS-Reply

JAMA. 1949;139(16):1102. doi:10.1001/jama.1949.02900330054025.
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ABSTRACT

To the Editor:—  The data furnished by Dr. Read for twenty-eight hospitals in New Jersey are in essential agreement with the statistics presented in the Internship and Residency Number of The Journal, May 1, 1948, which indicated that the majority of small nonteaching hospitals are having difficulty in filling their internships.The Uniform Intern Placement Plan was adopted to eliminate the practice of offering appointments to medical students early in their undergraduate course, in some instances as early as the sophomore year. It was the general feeling of medical educators and hospital administrators that if this practice were allowed to continue, the entire system of intern appointments would become chaotic to the point of prejudicing the interests of interns and hospitals alike. The plan does not and cannot assure the participating hospitals a full quota of interns. It is recognized that violations of its regulations exist which tend to undermine

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