I graduated with my BS almost a year ago and took the MCAT soon after graduation. My plan was to apply this year, but my score was so poor that I was unable. I have had to change my plans and put off my application. I know MCAT is the biggest part of the app that I have to work on and as much of my time as possible will have to be spent getting a decent score.
That being said, I still need some direction. I cannot spend all of my time working on the MCAT because my app is rather average at the moment and I need clinical experiences. It is very difficult in my area to shadow doctors and so far I have only shadowed one surgeon. Even with my degree and one year experience in a lab I have been unable to find a decent job. Medical scribe jobs would be perfect but are so sparse that I can't get one. I thought EMT work would be beneficial, but some of the reading I have done on here states otherwise. The EMT course is very expensive and I don't want to waste that time and money if its not necessary. Post bacc applications have been unsuccessful and there is one more I have a fairly decent shot at which doesn't open until March. However, my GPA is above a 3.0 and I have a strong upward trend(almost total straight A's) in my last year in upper level and grad level classes as well as making Dean's List. So is a post bacc necessary? SMP?
I am going to set up a career counseling session at my uni, but even then they do not specialize in assisting pre-med students. I am also going to be calling some docs today to see if I can shadow. There isn't really a pre-med program at my uni and there are no advisors that can help me.
What I need is clinical experience that involves patient contact in a hospital setting. Does anybody have any good ideas on how I can do that without spending too much money on courses/programs. Any short(less than a year) training courses?
I can pm my location details to anybody that can help me.
Thanks in advance for reading my novel to those who help.
Could not the PB app. situation be b/c you have taken most if not all of the pre-reqs? Career changer PBs will not take students that have taken often > 2 pre-med pre-reqs, much less a boatload?
So, if you are <3.5, it may help you to take an SMP, but it's risky. If you don't do well, you would be screwed. With the issue re: MCAT, who knows how well you will truly do in an SMP?
Regardless, you have to focus on doing well on on the MCAT. If that requires a prep course for you, so be it. Focusing on that and getting clinical experience and combing through all the essentials of my whole application would the priority.
You may not have as much of an advantage w/ the SMP (expensive and risky and time-consuming), if you can't get a competitive MCAT.
At any rate, you haven't really posted specifics, and I get that they are your private info, but no one can give you a decent evaluation on your circumstances if you don't share specifics--not name and addy, etc, obviously, I am talking numbers and relevant application info. Yea, there can be a tough crowd here, but you may also get very helpful insight from others.