2011 APPIC Match - Phase I
Statistics for Couples
February 25, 2011
This year, a total of 42 applicants participated in Phase I of the Match as 21 "couples." Seventeen of these couples had both partners successfully matched to an internship program, while four couples had at least one partner who was not matched.
For four couples, both partners matched to programs at the same internship site.
Following is a breakdown of the Phase I Match results for the 21 couples based on distance between matched programs:
NUMBER OF COUPLES | DISTANCE APART |
5 | Same City |
2 | Less than 50 miles apart |
3 | 50-100 miles apart |
2 | 100-150 miles apart |
2 | 150-500 miles apart |
1 | 500-1000 miles apart |
2 | Over 1000 miles apart |
4 | At least one partner unmatched |
INTERPRETATION NOTE: Most couples used the couples match in an attempt to be together during their internship year, and most tended to rank highly those program pairings that are located in the same geographic area. However, it should be noted that some couples had very highly-ranked program pairings that were hundreds or even thousands of miles apart, and some couples had very highly-ranked pairings where one partner chose to be unmatched. Thus, if a couple was matched to programs in distant cities or had one partner unmatched, we should NOT assume that this result was a lower-ranked pairing on their list.
Following are the Phase I Match results based on where a program pairing was ranked on couples' Rank Order Lists:
RANK | NUMBER OF COUPLES |
1 | 4 |
2 | 3 |
3 | 1 |
4 | 0 |
5 | 3 |
6 | 0 |
7 | 1 |
8 | 0 |
9 | 0 |
10 | 0 |
11 to 15 | 3 |
16 to 20 | 0 |
21 and over | 4 |
INTERPRETATION NOTES: A paired Rank Order List submitted by a couple could have been very lengthy, particularly when a couple chose to submit most or all possible combinations of programs. Ten couples had Rank Order Lists that exceeded 100 pairs of programs, and five of these couples submitted more than 200 pairs of programs. One should not directly compare the results above with the results achieved by individual applicants (e.g., because 48% of individual applicants received their first choice, and 19% of couples received their first choice pairing, one should NOT conclude from this data that individual applicants "do better" than couples).