OK, so the proposed changes would mean that every state would have to do what Michigan, Florida, Pennsylvania, and Oklahoma currently do in terms of osteo/allo internships?
No, sorry for not being clear.
I was referring to : "Also, a DO residency, does not qualify for entrance into an MD fellowship. So, if you do IM on the DO side and want to do a fellowship like cardiology on the MD side, you are out of luck. There are far fewer fellowships on the DO side, so this can suck and limit ones choices. "
As of now, to the best of my knowledge, you can still do an ACGME fellowship from an AOA residency and a AOA internship still qualifies you for entrance into an ACGME residency.
This is from the AOA website:
ACGME recently proposed two new policies that would limit future DOs from being able to train in ACGME programs. They include:
Requiring an ACGME-accredited residency program as a prerequisite for clinical education for entry into an ACGME-accredited residency program or a Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada (RSPSC)-accredited residency program located in Canada. (This would limit a DO who completed an AOA-accredited internship from proceeding to an ACGME program unless they repeated their internship year in an ACGME-accredited residency program.)
Requiring an ACGME-accredited residency program or RCPSC-accredited residency program in Canada as a prerequisite for clinical education for entry into an ACGME-accredited fellowship program.
The last update says: "Dec. 21, 2011 – AOA Executive Director John B. Crosby, JD, spoke with Thomas Nasca, MD, ACGME CEO, and came to an agreement to hold a meeting of the AOA-AACOM-ACGME leaderships to discuss the proposed policies. The leadership meeting is scheduled for the fourth week in January."