That wasn't a nice guy reply.
Step 1: Catch sarcasm
Don't get so upset, it's just a question
Ya know, if I walked up to someone in a bar and asked 'why are you such a pansy?', that would be a question too ... but I wouldn't get surprised when that guy punched me in the face.
I am pretty sure I am not the only who is doing this.
Nope, not at all ... but the other people are wise enough not to ask about it in pre-osteo.
I am trying to get into a competitive residency.
Here is where I stop caring that I'm not being nice. This is such a stupid, cliche response. 'I want a competitive residency.' Oh really?? Define competitive. Are we talking only ROADS??? No? What field?? What is your COMLEX/USMLE?? What are your pre-clinical grades like??? Good LORs from your 3rd/4th year rotations?? How did your audition rotations go???
OH wait ... you aren't even applying for a year. I know sometimes we (pre-meds) are wired to naturally seek honor, respect, the hardest, most competitive thing we can find ... but a response this vacant, stock, recycled (etc) just lets me know that you really aren't thinking about it in detail.
What if you get into an MD school and want to do derm, but you don't have a 260 step 1 and two years of research??? What if that DO school you didn't go to allowed you to do an audition rotation at a derm residency in the same state and you landed it because you impressed the PD??? The mindset that MD automatically = more competitive just has no merit, especially when you don't even know what field you're talking about, nor do you really know how competitive obtaining such residency is.
So, it would be more advantageous to obtain an MD.
See above rant. If you can rebuke any of it with facts (not repeats of things you have heard on SDN), be my guest.
I just want to practice medicine in my preferred specialty.
Good
I'm just trying increase my chances.
That's smart ... but again, know what this phrase really means before you spout it off like the other stock 'I don't care what letters are behind my name' answers.
And to be honest, I really do like the DO philiosphy more than the allopathic philosophy.
Again, I feel like your responses are cut and paste SDN catch phrases, and this, to me, feels thinly veiled and poorly researched, and this is why I'm being an ass. If you really do your research, I think you'll find that this distinct difference in philosophy is not quite as defined as you'd assume it is as a pre-med reading SDN.
But again, it comes down to increasing my chances in obtaining a highly competitive residency. If DO gave me the same advantage that an MD would, I would not hesitate to choose DO. I wasn't trying to offend anyone.
I think I've made my point about the 'highly competitive residency' phrase. There are way too many factors your aren't looking into here, and anyone who thinks I'm attacking you ... isn't thinking about them either. I still disagree with your attitude completely and I would advise you to do more research and not start threads in pre-DO where you talk about using DO as a backup to achieve something that you aren't sure about, missing information about, and contains too many variables to comprehend at this time.