This is absolutely not true. See
@gonnif's
post from last November:
"Previously there was a Multiple Acceptance Report (in February) that showed every school that accepted you only to every other school that accepted you. This was used primarily for schools to plan number of acceptances and/or depth of wait list. This was followed by National Acceptance Report (in April) which allowed every school to see where every applicant had been accepted. This was a top down approach that AMCAS collected the info and sent it out to all the schools. Neither of these reports will be issued this year."
These Multiple Acceptance Reports are not being sent anymore, so schools are completely blinded to where else you hold offers. Instead they have been receiving some aggregate data through the CYMS tool on AMCAS. Here is what
@Fencer had to say about how it's been working for him so far:
"It was disappointed with the tool. There is aggregate data for how many of our accepted applicants have other acceptances, but I don't know if they are MD or MD/PhD, and I don't know who or what schools. We know that >80% of our accepted applicants have multiple acceptances (but that includes MD). Furthermore, they partition the data into in-state and out-of-state. If you have less than 5 accepted applicants for one of these categories, you are not able to know how many applicants selected Plan-to-Enroll to our program, other school, or no decision. In my case, I can see the out-of-state category but not in-state... We also are able to see that our 2/3 of the alternate pool have received an acceptance, but I don't know where. We will know if people have still more than 3 acceptances after April 15, but not who is holding more. One of my applicants had more than 6 acceptances as of now. After April 30, we know who is holding what. My bet is that we are going to delay admissions to waitlisted applicants until April 15 - May 15. As people reduce to 3 acceptances (right now 1/4 of my applicants hold more than 3 acceptances), some movement will occur."