We study a two-sided matching model where one side of the market (hospitals) has combinatorial preferences over the other side (doctors). Specifically, we consider the setting where hospitals have matroid rank valuations over the doctors, and doctors have either ordinal or cardinal unit-demand valuations over the hospitals. While this setting has been extensively studied in the context of one-sided markets, it remains unexplored in the context of two-sided markets. When doctors have ordinal preferences over hospitals, we present simple sequential allocation algorithms that guarantee stability, strategyproofness for doctors, and approximate strategyproofness for hospitals. When doctors have cardinal utilities over hospitals, we present an algorithm that finds a stable allocation maximizing doctor welfare; subject to that, we show how one can maximize either the hospital utilitarian or hospital Nash welfare. Moreover, we show that it is NP-hard to compute stable allocations that approximately maximize hospital Nash welfare.
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