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The Wright Center for Graduate Medical Education welcomes 62 new resident physicians on Match Day


Match Day 2026 collage

The Wright Center for Graduate Medical Education welcomed 62 new resident physicians into residency programs on National Match Day for aspiring doctors on March 20.

The National Resident Matching Program’s Match Day is held annually on the third Friday of March. Medical students nationwide and around the world simultaneously learn which U.S. residency program they will train in for the next three to seven years. It is one of the most important and competitive processes in the medical school experience.

The Wright Center for Graduate Medical Education eagerly anticipates Match Day each year, when it learns which medical school graduates will continue their training in its residency programs accredited by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME). The Wright Center is among the nation’s largest U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA)-funded Teaching Health Center Graduate Medical Education Consortiums, training nearly 200 physicians annually.

The Wright Center matched resident physicians in the following regional programs: Internal Medicine Residency (43), Family Medicine – Scranton (6), and Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation Residency (7). Two resident physicians were also welcomed into the Internal Medicine-Geriatrics Integrated Residency and Fellowship Pathway, commonly known as the Combined Med-Geri Pathway, and four residents will join the Family Medicine – HealthSource of Ohio Residency Program, a collaboration between The Wright Center for Graduate Medical Education and HealthSource of Ohio in Hillsboro.

The new resident physicians will begin their program on July 1. The incoming residents hail from 14 countries: Pakistan (17), the United States (17), India (7), Jordan (6), the United Arab Emirates (4), Egypt (3), and Canada (1), Georgia (1), Ireland (1), Kazakhstan (1), Lebanon (1), Nepal (1), Nigeria (1), and Turkey (1).

The Wright Center received 11,019 applications and interviewed 574 candidates, or about 5.2% of the applicants. The National Resident Matching Program makes residency matches, using a mathematical algorithm to pair graduating medical students with open training positions at teaching health centers, educational consortia, hospitals, and other institutions across the U.S. The model considers the top choices of both students and residency programs.

“Match Day is always a highlight – a celebration of our learners’ hard work, resilience, and the bright futures ahead of them,” said Jumee Barooah, M.D., FACP, senior vice president of education and designated institutional official at The Wright Center for Graduate Medical Education. “This special day represents not only the next chapter for our new resident physicians, but also our ongoing commitment to our mission that strengthens community health by improving the health and welfare of our communities through responsive, whole-person health services for all and the sustainable renewal of an inspired, competent workforce that is privileged to serve.”

The Wright Center is celebrating its 50th anniversary in 2026. Founded in 1976, The Wright Centers for Community Health, Graduate Medical Education, and Patient & Community Engagement are a physician-led, community-owned nonprofit and a cornerstone of health care in the region. The organization employs more than 665 professionals and trains more than 200 interprofessional health care learners each year.

Dr. Jumee Barooah

Dr. Jumee Barooah

The Wright Center for Graduate Medical Education offers ACGME-accredited residency programs in four disciplines – internal medicine, family medicine, physical medicine & rehabilitation, and the combined med-geri pathway – as well as fellowships in cardiovascular disease, gastroenterology, and geriatrics.

In fiscal year 2024-25, The Wright Center served about 38,300 unique patients across its growing network of community health centers in Lackawanna, Luzerne, Wayne, and Wyoming counties, including its mobile medical and dental unit, Driving Better Health. As a nonprofit Federally Qualified Health Center Look-Alike and safety-net provider, The Wright Center serves all patients, regardless of insurance status, ZIP code, or ability to pay. No patient is turned away due to an inability to pay. 

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