"Nearly 13,000 graduates (84.6 percent) of allopathic medical schools in the U.S. landed one of their top three choices for a first-year residency slot, according to the National Resident Matching Program (NRMP)."
Out of "15,242 U.S. graduates, 14,359 won residency positions," and of these, the "first choice of residency went to 59.9 percent of U.S. graduates, second choice to 15.8 percent, third choice to 8.9 percent, and fourth choice to five percent."
NRMP data also indicated that there "were 30 [for a total of 2,636] more family medicine residencies available this year than in 2007, the first increase since 1998."
Overall, 10,341 students graduated from "international medical schools, nearly 3,000 them U.S. citizens."
But, "[f]ewer than half of the non-U.S. medical graduates were matched to a residency."
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