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| Osteopathic DO student topics. For current medical students. Co-hosted with The Council of Osteopathic Student Government Presidents. | RSS: |
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#1 |
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Junior Member
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Thanks for all the help! |
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#2 |
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Senior Member
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DO, because you have the option to go to a DO residency for competitive specialties. A lot of "competitive" specialties match DO's fairly frequently as well
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#3 |
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Newbie
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DO, anytime you get a chance to stay in the US you do it. No matter what specialty you want to go into.
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#4 |
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DMU c/o 2016
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KCUMB 100,000 times before SGU. If you want a non primary care residency you have the DO ones. If you go SGU you will likely have major problems obtaining even a primary care residency.
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It's gonna be the future soon. I won't always be this way. When the things that make me weak and strange get engineered away. |
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#5 |
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matador
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truth!
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#6 |
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Senior Member
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KCUMB
/endthread |
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#7 |
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Senior Member
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It's not even close. KCUMB
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#8 |
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M4
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I'm going to go with SGU. Who wouldn't want an MD after their name!?
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#9 |
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Family Medicine
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#10 |
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OMS-1
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Is this a real question?
KCUMB, no question...
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Be kinder than necessary, everyone you meet is fighting some kind of battle... Be silent. Keep your forked tongue behind your teeth. I did not pass through fire and death to bandy crooked words with a witless worm. --Gandalf We must all face the choice between what is right and what is easy. --Dumbledore Class of 2016 |
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#11 |
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Junior Member
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#12 |
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C/O 2013
Join Date: Jul 2011
Posts: 719
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Go to the one that has a lower attrition rate.
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#13 |
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Senior Member
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Don't be an idiot, go to KCUMB.
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ROCKY VISTA COLLEGE OF OSTEOPATHIC MEDICINE, C/O 2014 !!!!!!!!!!!! ![]() ![]() ![]() OMS III: OB/GYN [X] Psych [X] Family [X] Family [X] Surg [X ] Surg [X ] IM [X ] IM [ ] Psych elective [] Peds [ ] EM (hopefully) [ ]
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#14 |
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Senior Member
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#15 |
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Old Member
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This has to be trolling. No way someone got into DO school being this clueless having never done any research on the subject and that asks DO's for their opinion on Caribbean vs DO.
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#16 | |
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Senior Member
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Quote:
http://forums.studentdoctor.net/show...3#post12185733 He's just clueless, apparently. Or just discovered SGU. |
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#17 |
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Junior Member
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Originally Posted by ensuii
I'm going to go with SGU. Who wouldn't want an MD after their name!? There are a lot of factors that ought to go into your choice beside just the desire to have "MD" placed after your name. Too many in here unfairly look down on DO schools. As has been posted before, once you study at a Caribbean med school, and yes...SGU is among the best of them...you acquire a whole new set of challenges in both residency and practice in the US. Your transition would be far more seamless, if you attend a DO school instead. KCUMB had a leadership problem a few years ago, but that has been resolved and students there do very well. It's a solid school. What is really important is that you weigh all the factors very carefully, and consider what your career will be like down the road before making such a big decision. Last edited by Aquaman55; 03-06-2012 at 06:16 AM. Reason: - |
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#18 | |
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1K Member
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Quote:
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#19 |
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M4
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#20 |
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Senior Member
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Kcumb!!!!!
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#21 |
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matador
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If you could only pick one thing to wake up to sitting on your desk right next to your head, what would you pick?
KCUMB: ![]() or SGU:
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#22 | |
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Senior Member
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Quote:
) will offer you an open run at getting into pretty much any field of medicine...it will all depend on how well you do. This is a luxury carib students don't have. And I'm a US MD student if that matters. |
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#23 |
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Senior Member
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If you need to ask then please go to SGU, I don't want to end up being in your lab group.
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#24 |
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2K Member
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I don't know if this is 100% accurate. The stipulation would be that if the student has the intellect/hard work to survive in an offshore medical school and do well on the boards, then acquiring an IM residency should not be as difficult as some make it to be (I know several individuals who have acheived just that from offshore med schools). That being said, there is absolutely no reason to pursue medical education at an offshore medical school when you have secured a position in a school in the US.
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#25 |
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Senior Member
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Eh.. i've read a lot of posts on valuemd and amazingly enough, there are individuals over there who have picked the carib over DO. Honestly I think they should uninstall their brain at that point.
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#26 |
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Chillin, Maxin, Relaxin
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Yep. I've met folks who went carib and wouldn't even consider applying DO. Nothing like making an already long and tough journey that much harder..and more expensive. This is a no-brainer for everyone who is informed on the subject (and has their head screwed on correctly)..consider yourself informed now OP
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On a path to certain destruction... |
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#27 |
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Member
Join Date: Oct 2011
Posts: 43
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Worse yet, some of them believe that if they fail out of SGU (or any med school for that matter), a DO school would be willing to take them.
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#28 |
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KCUMB 2012
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LMAO to the original poster..... Have you seen 2011's match list for KCUMB ?
you sir, are very misguided.
__________________
"I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord, plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future. (Jeremiah 29:11)” Breathe In, Breathe Out. Move On.
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#29 |
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Senior Member
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Yea I agree.. kcumb's 11' match list was impressive.. 16 em residencies and bunches of anesthesia. that general surgery looked good as well (am interested in)
They're delusional. |
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#30 |
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Junior Member
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i get that, my point was looking into competitive residencies and later on with fellowships like GI, allergy/immunology, Cardio ... it seems that the MD route (even if it is going to SGU) is better than the DO route (something like KCUMB)
https://apps.sgu.edu/ERD/2011/ResidP...=PGY1&Count=-1 vs . http://www.kcumb.edu/acad3/PDF/2011M...yStateSite.pdf No doubt that the kcumb list is pretty impressive and it is a great school, but when compared to SGU's list with places like hopkins on there, that makes me question the obvious choice of KCUMB>SGU. http://www.nrmp.org/data/resultsanddatasms2012.pdf for most fellowships it seems that FMGs such as SGU grads have same match rate, if not a higher match rate. |
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#31 |
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Atypical agent
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Well, if you think you are better off that way, do it. Likewise, if being a DO is just not something you can tolerate, do it. I think if you are going IMG, you probably will do the best from SGU.
A lot of people make a big deal about competitive specialties and DO vs. caribbean, but frankly there are people in both that aren't going to get into competitive residencies due to less than stellar performace. I say go with what you feel best about. Its your decision and your time/money/life. |
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#32 |
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C/O 2013
Join Date: Jul 2011
Posts: 719
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If you want an MD from SGU, go to SGU. Case closed.
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#33 | |
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matador
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Quote:
Flaw 2 is that you're citing SGU's tracking of people into fellowships. Fellowships are (mostly) due to your residency performance and connections, and not your med school anything. Because of this DO schools really dont follow them at all. That SGU does is nice, but largely irrelevant and not done by many other schools out there. Definitely not the norm. Big huge flaw #3 is that you're comparing US-IMGs (10% of the resident population) to DOs (5% of the the resident population). So lets take the exact number you cited. 37 foreign grads became Gastroenterologists. 21 DOs did (just in ACGME fields). So without counting any AOA GI fellowships, and there are some, DOs did better than US forgiegn grads, since they are literally half the population they'd be 42 spots if the population sizes were equal. If you go down the list of fellowships DOs will either be matching at a higher rate, or straight out HAVE MORE PEOPLE, in every fellowship but oncology. Oncology is the biggest international graduate field in medicine. |
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#34 | |
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Senior Member
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Quote:
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#35 | |
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Senior Member
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Quote:
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#36 | |
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matador
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Quote:
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#37 | |
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Senior Member
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Quote:
(2) Since when is Hopkins anything more impressive than allo plastic surgery, which is on KCUMB's list? And you want to say that Hopkins is also more impressive than Mayo? The year before last, a DO student from AZCOM matched Mayo derm. When was the last time an SGU student matched Mayo derm? (3) School has nothing to do with fellowship. Fellowship is about residency performance and connections. (4) Number 3 is why pre-meds shouldn't enter into these kinds of debates. Last edited by Mass Effect; 03-16-2012 at 05:17 PM. |
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#38 | |
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matador
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Quote:
![]() (I cant believe im referencing this) |
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#39 |
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Senior Member
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#40 |
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Junior Member
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https://apps.sgu.edu/ERD/2011/ResidP...pkins&count=-1
SGU grads at hopkins for PGY-5 ... thats what i meant. School definitely does matter especially if its the difference between MD and DO...some fellowship program directors still do have that bias. |
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#41 | |
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matador
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Quote:
Nuclear medicine is more or less unmarketable since all modern radiology residencies teach PET and SPECT readings, its been years since NM was a fellowship worth taking, thus why they switched it to a residency lately. ABNM stants for american board of no marketability. So if the example you really rely on is a guy who was *dropped* from his program into a weaker program... you have no legs to stand on. |
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#42 | |
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Senior Member
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lol... I had to. |
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#43 |
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matador
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#44 | |
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Senior Member
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Quote:
PLEASE go to SGU because you obviously feel that md is worth much more than actually being employed. Your not gonna be happy being "just" a DO
__________________
LECOM-Bradenton c/o 2015 |
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#45 |
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Member
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Kcumb
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#46 |
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Senior Member
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KCUMB for sure
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Diplomate, American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology |
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#47 |
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Member
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:/
Last edited by Chiroptile; 03-24-2012 at 10:06 AM. Reason: Poster remorse |
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#48 |
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Senior Member
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I highly recommend against caribbean for non-primary care specialties. My reasoning, the match rates are clearly stacked against you. People go to the caribbean for various reasons. Some go because they did not get into a difficult to get into canadian school, but had very high academic credentials. Others had a great application with a stellar undergraduate gpa, but had something that did not set well with admissions, and they maybe inpatiantely decided to go to the caribbean. Most caribbean students had around a 3.0 or slightly lower gpa with aorund a 30 or maybe a bit below MCAT. If this sounds like the student you are, you can bet that most likely you would be a candidate for IM or family practice at best. Does caribbean and family practice nessesarily equate to no money to pay of student lone debt? No. Look up marijuana doctors, if you believe in this, one doctor on CNBC claimed he made 1M in a cash practice in the first year in colorado. Dr. Patel of california is another example. I would say if you are the sort of person that likes less stress, going osteopathic will equate to this given the goal of a specialty other than family practice, like surgery, anesthesiology, or neurology. Being a US doctor will help you out end of story. If you have a lot of connections, you could be OK with caribbean. E.G. I have seen a guy in Ohio whos father is a surgen become a plastic surgeon going to AUC, and another guy whos dad is a doctor in New York get a residency at Columbia. Use your best judgement.
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#49 | |
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Senior Member
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But seriously, I think those numbers are a bit high. |
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#50 |
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Account on Hold
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that cannot be right... if most people had a 30 or a little lower mcat you would expect the average mcat of admissions to be higher. the average carib student has a 3.0 gpa (some highter... but also some lower) and an mcat in the high teens low 20s. AUC reports 7s for average on each section and st george reports 21 total on a quick google search..... if 21 is the average you have to suspect that a few 16s snuck in there
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) will offer you an open run at getting into pretty much any field of medicine...it will all depend on how well you do. This is a luxury carib students don't have.






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