- Joined
- Jun 23, 2007
- Messages
- 1,431
- Reaction score
- 1
- Points
- 4,571
- Pre-Medical

1. At DO school, you learn about the healing powers of herbs and roots, combined with chanting and yoga.
2. It is harder to get into an MD school because God hates you.
3. DO school is harder because you are stoned all the time.
4. From DO school, you can take electricity and magnetism courses at any number of online programs.
I think juice just came out of my nose...To save you some grief, this is a very controversial topic, that most people that are wanting to go to DO school have to fight tooth and nail with the pre-allo people with all the time. For some reason the preallo students think that the DO degree is more like a witch doctor mojo jojo degree than an MD degree. Its not. DO students actually take the exact same classes as an MD student, plus some extras in OMM which are osteopathic medical manipulation (right??).Pakbabydoll said:Whats the difference between M.D and D.O schools?
Why is it harder to get in to M.D school then DO schools?
Which one is more challenging and why?
Can you go in EM if you go to a DO school?
1. At DO school, you learn about the healing powers of herbs and roots, combined with chanting and yoga.
2. It is harder to get into an MD school because God hates you.
3. DO school is harder because you are stoned all the time.
4. From DO school, you can take electricity and magnetism courses at any number of online programs.
pffffttt!!!!!I think juice just came out of my nose...
To save you some grief, this is a very controversial topic, that most people that are wanting to go to DO school have to fight tooth and nail with the pre-allo people with all the time. For some reason the preallo students think that the DO degree is more like a witch doctor mojo jojo degree than an MD degree. Its not. DO students actually take the exact same classes as an MD student, plus some extras in OMM which are osteopathic medical manipulation (right??).
So to answer the questions:
1. They are practically the same. Classes are the same. In DO school you are taught the principles of Andrew Taylor Still, the founder of osteopathic medicine. You can resort to some google-fu if you want any more info, or just visit AACOM the Association of American Colleges of Osteopathic Medicine website for more information.
2. Its just as hard to get into DO school as MD school. I think the average MCAT and GPA are a few tenths of a point lower for DO school because they don't weight these criteria as heavily as MD schools do. They look more at the person and their personality versus just book smarts, and are more forgiving of "issues" you might have had in undergraduate studies. But again, they are just as competitive to get into as MD schools.
3. More challenging... Im gonna say tie again. Med school is not easy. DO students can go and be residents in MD programs or DO specialty programs so I guess its as challenging as you make it. Just because you are an MD does not automatically make you a good physician. Just as being a DO does not automatically make you a quack Dr. Ask JPH, who posts on here, I'm sure he is full of opinions on whether or not DO school is challenging.
4. As I said above, DOs can apply to both MD and DO residencies, so they are not confined to family practice or working out in the boonies in an urgent care clinic. You will probably have a better chance of scoring the MD residencies as a DO by taking the USMLEs vs. the COMLEX exams for DO students simply because the COMLEX is relatively new (past 20-30 years I think...) so the MD residencies are still trying to convert scores between the two tests.
I think I answered your questions, and if you have more ask. Maybe put a disclaimer when you ask them that you are not trolling, because it has happened all too often, and its not a good outcome. Feel free to pm me if you do have any more questions, or just ask here, I or someone will help you out, I'm sure.
Those more in the know, please correct me if I am wrong, or if more is needed.
This is one of the best responses to a post I have seen on this sight. Finally a mature, thought out response.
Perhaps if you had been on this site for more than 10 posts you would understand why people like me answer the way we do to posts like this. There is no response needed, either the person is a troll or they should be doing their own research into this area if they want to apply to medical school. Most people that want to be doctors actually look into the profession they hope to be a part of...
On top of that you could find out the answers to these questions in five minutes or less if you really wanted to know.
There is no response needed, either the person is a troll or they should be doing their own research into this area if they want to apply to medical school.
I think I answered your questions, and if you have more ask. Maybe put a disclaimer when you ask them that you are not trolling, because it has happened all too often, and its not a good outcome. Feel free to pm me if you do have any more questions, or just ask here, I or someone will help you out, I'm sure.
I did do my research except the Princeton review said that there is no "REAL" difference between them, they are more alike then different. It also said that main difference is that DO schools spend a little more time on a persons whole health. I guess like D.O schools try to graduate well rounded physicians before going in to specialties rather then going in to a specialty from the beginning. Am I making any sense?
Sorry if I sounded rude when I asked this question but I wanted to know what students like you guys thought. Its my first year in college so I am not used to all this.
Thank you so much and yes you answered my questions very well.
One more question though does going to a CC for first two years hurt your chances of getting in to a DO school?
I am going to take
Biology 1&2
Chem 1&2
Math till Calculus
English 1,2,& 3
and all of my general education requirements at a CC.
I am going to save
Physics
O-Chem
Biochemistry for a university .
I am planing on being a microbiology major with a minor in chemistry.
One more question though does going to a CC for first two years hurt your chances of getting in to a DO school?
I am going to take
Biology 1&2
Chem 1&2
Math till Calculus
English 1,2,& 3
and all of my general education requirements at a CC.
I am going to save
Physics
O-Chem
Biochemistry for a university .
I am planing on being a microbiology major with a minor in chemistry.
..One more question though does going to a CC for first two years hurt your chances of getting in to a DO school? ...
...I am planing on being a microbiology major with a minor in chemistry.



That might help you once you're in med school, but it could hurt you on the MCAT. Statistically speaking, Biology majors are the next-to-worst scorers on the MCAT.
What do you suggest I do? I know a Kaplan tutor personally and he agreed to give me lessons at my house (for free 😉 ) ones I start studying for it.



No, not at all. I know lot's of people who have done that. Just do well in your classes. That's what counts most.
That might help you once you're in med school, but it could hurt you on the MCAT. Statistically speaking, Biology majors are the next-to-worst scorers on the MCAT. The only major worse than that is Health Sciences. IMO it's because Biology majors spend so much time memorizing pathways and stupid other things that they don't get too many opportunities to think about things. At least it was that way in my experience.
However, I really do believe that it helped me a lot in med school to be a Bio major (and chem minor) because I had a lot of exposure to the material already. Med school classes really aren't that tough, there's just a whole heck of a lot of material to learn at one time. Knowing some of the basic stuff ahead of time certainly made it easier.
![]()
That statement is a little off. It is correct, but the truth is that 70% of the people that take the MCAT are biology/biological science majors so they do hold the majority of the scores. The highest scores to go the engineers, but they make up a much smaller majority ... the rest (I assume) are spread randomly. So it kinda hard to call the majority 'the lower end' instead of considering it the norm, and others as extremes, or exceptions. Just my dos pesos.
Not quite. These are the facts for the 2006 MCAT:
55% of test takers (21,603 of 39,108) were Biology Majors, with an average MCAT of 27.2; Humanities= 28.7; Math & Stats= 28.6; Phys SCi= 29.2; Social Sci= 27.3; Health Sci= 24.7.
54% of matriculants (9439 of 17378) were Biology majors, with an average MCAT of 30.1; Humanities= 31.0; Math & Stats= 31.5; Phys SCi= 31.6; Social Sci= 30.2; Health Sci= 28.7.
43.7% of those Biology majors who took the MCAT (9439 of 21,603) matriculated into med school; Humanities= 53%; Math & Stats= 48%; Physical Sciences= 50%; Social Sciences= 45%; Health Sciences= 35%.
So... just over half of the MCAT takers were Biology majors. 43.7% of them matrticulated into med school (the 2nd lowest average of any major) and the matriculants averaged a 30.1 (also the 2nd lowest of any major). I might mention that average for ALL matriculants was a 30.4, so Biology majors fell below that as well.
I'm not trying to say anything other than the facts. I was a Biology major. I like Biology majors-- but maybe it's just not the best thing to major in anymore. That's all I'm saying.
http://www.aamc.org/data/facts/2006/mcatgpabymaj1.htm
From the statistics it looks like my major in English was a good thing!
45% vs 43.7% vs 35% .... sounds like more of a break down on a personal level opposed to how your major preps you for the mcat/how it determines if you will matrticulate.... One prepared themself, one did not. It's not going to be a break down by major, and the only reason it seems that way is because 55% of people who take the test major in Biology.
2. Its just as hard to get into DO school as MD school. I think the average MCAT and GPA are a few tenths of a point lower for DO school because they don't weight these criteria as heavily as MD schools do. They look more at the person and their personality versus just book smarts, and are more forgiving of "issues" you might have had in undergraduate studies. But again, they are just as competitive to get into as MD schools.
I dont want to sound rude but honestly a good source of information comes from FAQ at the top of the threads page, www.aacom.org and just a regular google search.
IF,and only if, it broke down that way in only one year then your argument might hold water. BUT... I've run the numbers for quite a few years now and it is the same EVERY year. This is not just because some people study and prepare differently. The same majors fair the same way EVERY year. If you want me to do the math and come up with a correlation, I will-- but you'll have to wait until after my PBL test on Friday 😀.