On March 21, 2025, 112 physicians matched into residency programs through Washington University School of Medicine, with a 95 percent match rate against a national rate of 93.5 percent. Twenty-four of those physicians matched at Barnes-Jewish Hospital, where they would begin training as part of Washington University Medical Center’s academic complex. Most spent that day on housing searches, relocation logistics, and calls home, not on the disability insurance enrollment window that opened 102 days later when training began on July 1. That window closes permanently on the last day of residency, and a resident who develops a qualifying medical condition during training exits with a health record that will follow every disability insurance application they file from that point forward.
WashU Medicine’s 2025 match cohort covered a broad range of clinical disciplines. Internal medicine led with 23 matches, including seven in physician-scientist training tracks and four in primary care tracks. General surgery and pediatrics each placed 10 physicians. Ophthalmology and psychiatry placed eight each, dermatology placed seven, and orthopedic surgery placed seven. Urology, neurological surgery, plastic surgery, and otolaryngology represented additional placements across the cohort. The class will train at 51 hospitals across 24 states, with 25 residents remaining in St. Louis at Barnes-Jewish Hospital or St. Louis Children’s Hospital. Each physician who arrived at orientation on July 1 crossed the same GSI eligibility threshold on the same day.
What the WashU GSI Enrollment Window Provides and What It Does Not Carry Forward
Washington University School of Medicine residency programs participate in a hospital-sponsored program that allows eligible residents to obtain individual non-cancellable disability insurance without medical underwriting. WashU Graduate Medical Education disability insurance eligibility is tied to active training status. The window opens on the first day of training and closes when training ends. There is no grace period for physicians who complete their program and intend to enroll afterward, and eligibility does not transfer automatically to a fellowship unless that fellowship program independently participates in a GSI arrangement.
The policy issued through this program is individually owned. It does not expire when a resident completes training at Barnes-Jewish Hospital or Washington University. It follows the physician into fellowship, into an attending role, and into any subsequent practice setting. The benefit amount chosen on a PGY-1 stipend of $69,842 serves as the foundation on which later increases are built. The riders attached at enrollment, including the permanent 10 to 15 percent premium discount available to residents during training, are fixed at the start of training and are not recoverable after program completion.
The Future Increase Option rider is the mechanism that extends the GSI enrollment decision beyond the training years. FIO allows the policyholder to increase monthly benefits at specified future intervals without submitting to new medical underwriting. A WashU resident who attaches the FIO rider during training holds the right to increase coverage to reflect the income shift from a PGY-1 training stipend to an attending salary without reopening the question of medical insurability. A resident who does not attach FIO during training, or who develops a qualifying condition and has not yet attached it, loses that option permanently. The 10 to 15 percent resident discount does not carry forward to benefit increases purchased after training ends.
WashU Graduate Medical Education disability insurance eligibility is tied to active training status. The Future Increase Option rider and the permanent resident discount available at enrollment close with the program. Neither reopens.
The broader category of hospital-sponsored disability coverage for residents and fellows operates identically across programs nationally: eligibility is tied to active enrollment in a participating training program, and the window is defined by the length of the program.
For a detailed breakdown of how the WashU GME stipend by training year and St. Louis housing costs determine what a disability benefit must replace during training, see [how St. Louis cost of living affects disability benefit sizing for WashU residents]([Article 1 URL: to be inserted]).
Why Application Order Is the Risk Most WashU Residents Do Not Anticipate
A WashU resident who applies for individual disability coverage through standard underwriting channels before completing the GSI enrollment forms is not protected by the GSI process. Standard fully underwritten applications require medical disclosure. A resident who submits such an application and receives a rating, an exclusion, or a decline creates a documented underwriting record, one that exists whether or not a policy was ultimately issued. Future applications, including applications filed years later, ask whether the applicant has previously been rated, excluded, or declined for disability insurance. Answering those questions honestly, after an adverse underwriting outcome, changes what coverage remains available and on what terms.
The GSI enrollment process does not require medical disclosure because it is designed to bypass standard underwriting entirely. That protection applies only to residents who arrive at enrollment without an adverse underwriting record already in place. A WashU resident who completes GSI enrollment first and then seeks additional individual coverage through standard channels places the sequence correctly: they enter the standard underwriting market with a non-cancellable policy already in force, and an adverse outcome in that market does not affect the GSI coverage they already hold. Completing standard underwriting before GSI enrollment cannot be corrected after the fact.
The consequence of that reversed sequence is not hypothetical. “It’s heartbreaking. You’re talking about someone who went online, didn’t know the rules, and accidentally applied with another carrier. Now they’ve precluded themselves from ever being able to get a guaranteed standard issue offer, their one and only chance to ever buy disability insurance,” said Steven Crawford, president of Financial Balance Group and a specialist in Guaranteed Standard Issue disability insurance programs, on the Income Protection Journal Podcast. Crawford has built nearly 200 Guardian GSI hospital programs across the country. The scenario he describes is documented, and it is permanent.
After more than three decades advising medical residents at this decision point, one pattern holds: the residents who arrive at program completion with the fewest insurance options are not those who chose a benefit amount that was slightly too low. They are the residents who delayed engaging the GSI enrollment window and arrived at it with a health event or an adverse underwriting record already behind them. The enrollment forms ask no medical questions because the program is built on the assumption that the resident has not yet applied elsewhere. That assumption protects the residents who act in the correct order.
March 21, 2025 is when the clock started for WashU Medicine’s 2025 match cohort. The enrollment window closes on the last day of training, and the conditions that determine whether it closes with the FIO rider attached and the underwriting record intact are set by decisions made between those two dates.
For WashU residents who want to understand the specific provisions already written into their GSI disability policy before training ends, including the provision that waives the 90-day elimination period when disability results from an intentional assault, see [occupational risk and disability insurance provisions for WashU housestaff]([Article 3 URL: to be inserted]).