[Text on screen: The Ohio State University - WEXNER MEDICAL CENTER] [Text on screen: Wes Godfrey, MD] Wes Godfrey, MD: I chose to come to Ohio State for my residency training. I'm from the west, and so I didn't really have any connection to Columbus, but for me, this was truly the difference in terms of primary care training. [Videos of Columbus and The James Cancer Hospital] I looked from literally the east coast to the west coast, all the way from Maine to California, and interviewed at too many programs, probably. And ultimately, the program that had a comfortable feel and had the patient demographic that I wanted, had the academic rigor that I thought was necessary, as well as the structure that would provide both an inpatient and outpatient training that I thought was ideal. [Video of The Ohio State University medical campus] My wife and I came here without knowing anybody for the program, and we feel like it's one of the best decisions we've ever made. [Text on screen: Tran Nguyen, MD] Tran Nguyen, MD: One of the reasons why I chose Ohio State is because of the alternating clinic and hospital curriculum. [Video of two medical professionals entering a patient's room and checking the patient's vitals using a stethoscope] I think it's extremely unique from all the different types of primary care track that I've interviewed at. [Video of Nguyen, MD, walking with another medical professional] This curriculum really allows you to have that continuity with your patients, as well as still maintain that inpatient exposure. [Video of medical professional explaining a sonogram to a patient] And I think one of the special things about this primary care track is that while you're having the outpatient continuity of clinic experience, you also have a lot of exposure to different subspecialties. [Various videos of medical professionals interacting with each other and with a patient] So you really get to hone in on the different fields, the different medical diseases, that allows you to better take care of your patient, both in a primary care setting as well as in an acute inpatient setting. Godfrey, MD: When I found Ohio State, I was a kid in a candy shop, because it was the being able to do internal medicine, preparing me very well for older adult care with an outpatient-centered focus that was every other month, and provided me the continuity with my patients that I felt like most other programs tried to simulate but didn't necessarily achieve. From day one, I had my patient panel, and now coming up on year, you know, two and a half, I've known some of these patients for two and a half years. You know, they're my patients, they know me. And so when I see a message come across, it's oh, it's this person. It's not a question of, like, who is this person again, who am I covering, whatever, like I already know everything about them, and I can answer their question, or I can refill their medicine or anything. And I guess every other program that I saw worked to simulate that in various ways, but Ohio State nailed it. I mean, this every other month thing is just, I thought was perfect. [Video clips of medical professionals working together in various hospital settings] Nguyen, MD: I think that we are prepared to take care of patients in an acute inpatient setting extremely well, despite the fact that only half of our training is inpatient and the other half is in the outpatient clinic. [Video clips of The Ohio State University medical campus] One of the major reasons being is we have our own clinic as well as subspecialty clinics with those fields in pulmonology, and cardiology, and rheumatology. [Video clips of medical professionals talking] We work with attendings who often work inpatient, and we see a lot of different types of cases, both common and rare, in all of those specialized fields. So we get a huge spectrum of disease process, and I think having a full understanding of the disease spectrum allows us to better acutely take care of patients as well as develop a long-term medical management so that they have a strong regimen to go home after they're done. [Video clip of a medical professional interacting with a patient in their hospital room] The reason that the patient population in the primary care track is so special to me is that many of them come from all over Columbus, but the majority of them come from the underserved population as well as the refugee populations, and those are the populations that I would want to work with. They come from all sorts of different backgrounds, different cultures, and it's a great opportunity and great exposure to get to know them both from a complex medical standpoint as well as from a cultural background. And it allows me to understand all the different types of social determinants of health and take care of them on both a medical level as well as on a personal level. [Video clip of four medical residents standing side-by-side spelling out "OHIO" with their arms] [Text on screen: The Ohio State University - WEXNER MEDICAL CENTER]