College

Attend a 4-year college or university and graduate with a degree. Consider holding a job or participating in volunteer work related to the medical field. Begin to look into which medical schools you will apply to and learn about their acceptance requirements.

 

Medical School

In the US, you can attend an allopathic (MD) or osteopathic (DO) medical school. If you are interested in neurology, look to see if the school offers a neurology clerkship. Consider doing an away rotation in neurology for further exposure.

 

Residency

A neurologist’s training includes a one-year internship in internal medicine (or two years of pediatrics for child neurologists) and at least three years of specialized residency training in neurology. Adult neurology training may be obtained through a categorical program, (one that includes four years of training), or an advanced program, (one that includes three years of training after completing a separate one-year internship). The training program requirements for residencies are set by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME). Fellowship and subspecialty training requirements are set by the ACGME or the United Council for Neurologic Subspecialties (UCNS).

Fellowship

Many neurologists invest one or two additional years of training in a wide variety of subspecialties. Once a physician passes the written examination as administered by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology (ABPN), he or she is granted board-certified status in neurology. Once this is achieved, certification in a subspecialty can be pursued, if desired. Subspecialty certification is obtained from the ABPN or UCNS.

Major subspecialty concentrations and fellowship options include:

  • Autonomic Disorders (UCNS)
  • Epilepsy (ABPN)
  • Behavioral Neurology and Neuropsychiatry (UCNS)
  • Brain Injury Medicine (ABPN)
  • Headache Medicine (UCNS)
  • Clinical Neuromuscular Pathology (UCNS)
  • Clinical Neurophysiology (ABPN)
  • Geriatric Neurology (UCNS)
  • Neural Repair and Rehabilitation (UCNS)
  • Neurocritical Care (UCNS)
  • Neurodevelopmental Disabilities (ABPN)
  • Neuroimaging (UCNS)
  • Neuromuscular Medicine (ABPN)
  • Neuro-oncology (UCNS)
  • Sleep Medicine (ABPN)
  • Vascular Neurology (ABPN)

Profession

With new therapies and imaging techniques on the horizon, neurology offers many exciting career options, whether in the academic sphere (clinical or research-based roles), private practice, or industry:

  • Solo practitioner
  • Neurology group
  • Multi-specialty group
  • Academic-based
  • Hospital-based
  • Government-based

WHAT CAN YOU DO NOW IF YOU’RE ALREADY INTERESTED IN NEUROLOGY?

HOW TO BECOME A NEUROLOGIST

Ready to become a neurologist or just curious as to what it would take?

  • The general path to becoming a neurologist includes: degree from a 4-year college, MCAT exam, medical school attendance, residency, board certification, and fellowship followed by a diverse professional career.
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