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Thx 4 derailing the thread. Everyone tell PG how immature she is for derailing docbuzzards thread. Thx PG.
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but triage, why wouldn't you lose sleep over such an important topic? knowing the best DO school is as important as the discovery of the bycicle, or that new product sold in infomertials(sp) that holds the fiz in on your bottled soda. geniouslol no offense to the op, but this feels like a dumb thread. Assuming what is meant by "best" is reputation (like saying Harvard, UCSF, etc.), there is no such thing for almost every MD and DO school. Do we expect that the public or most people know that the medical program at UC-San Diego is better than University of Maryland or University of Texas-Southwestern or vice-versa?
3 in 4 people don't even go to college, so they don't know jack ****. From the 1 in 4 that go to college, most of them probably don't know how medical schools rank the same way I bet almost nobody here can rank pharmacy programs or dental programs. If someone said UCSF for those, I'd probably think they went to a good program, but do I have any knowledge whatsoever if the program at University of Michigan is better? Hell, I don't even know if they have a pharmacy or dental program.
When choosing a school, choose one that fits your needs and desires best. For me, it would be a school that's affordable and in my home state. My next concern is my ability to land a residency in my home state. I seriously wouldn't lose sleep over "should I go to NYCOM or PCOM?" in a "prestige" battle
lol no offense to the op, but this feels like a dumb thread. Assuming what is meant by "best" is reputation (like saying Harvard, UCSF, etc.), there is no such thing for almost every MD and DO school. Do we expect that the public or most people know that the medical program at UC-San Diego is better than University of Maryland or University of Texas-Southwestern or vice-versa?
3 in 4 people don't even go to college, so they don't know jack ****. From the 1 in 4 that go to college, most of them probably don't know how medical schools rank the same way I bet almost nobody here can rank pharmacy programs or dental programs. If someone said UCSF for those, I'd probably think they went to a good program, but do I have any knowledge whatsoever if the program at University of Michigan is better? Hell, I don't even know if they have a pharmacy or dental program.
When choosing a school, choose one that fits your needs and desires best. For me, it would be a school that's affordable and in my home state. My next concern is my ability to land a residency in my home state. I seriously wouldn't lose sleep over "should I go to NYCOM or PCOM?" in a "prestige" battle
^^^whatever. Verizon is the best cellphone network. Financial stats not good enough to get into verizon??

1. I don't pay for my cellphone coverage so I don't complain about my network
2. I think Sprint represents my Underdog spirit well, don't you? haha
Sprint... you rich bastards. I have some second class weak local brand as cell phone provider. The joys of being poor... not.
Anyone wanna just start the thread "Which D.O. schools throw the best parties?" because I feel like that's where this is going.
And I'd be interested in knowing.
I chose Western because I've heard from multiple sources that the class is cohesive. The recently moved to honors/pass/fail to further encourage this. I don't want to say they party a lot because it IS medical school. Yet I'm sure there is lots to do in and around LA.
Anyone wanna just start the thread "Which D.O. schools throw the best parties?" because I feel like that's where this is going.
And I'd be interested in knowing.

I'm going to nominate LECOM-B...beaches and bikinis what more do you need. Add on the fact it is PBL and classtime is ~10 hours a week that leaves so much more time to PARTAY!![]()
How do you decide where you feel comfortable or not? In other words, what are some things you look at when you're deciding whether or not you feel comfortable at the school?
@ Rollo: i just want a place that will get me a good residency, prepare me well, be professional and make sure my clinical rotations aren't horrible. those are my biggest worries. nice facilities are also a plus for me
Nice facilities shouldn't be a factor because you're not going to sit there and think about the granite marble floors and shiny new exterior of the building. Heck, you might not even go to school that much if you find out you study best on your own from home.
One factor you should consider is types of residencies offered by the school. This makes a huge difference because having home residency programs will let you get in touch with the program very early, rotate with them quite easily, and get letters of recommendations for residency app from the program. Most residency programs have a little bias towards their own students so this is something you definitely want to consider.
Attendance policy is another factor you need to consider because if you end up at a school with mandatory attendance and you discover that you learn best on your own at home, then you're in a for a long 2 years. Having an option to attend is the ideal situation.
There is a threshhold past which facilities don't matter - but it can be frustrating to have no outlets for laptops in the lecture hall, no changing room for OMM lab, limited internet connectivity, etc. The other points about residencies and attendance policies are spot on. How spread out your rotations are likely to be is a consideration as well.
No. Totally different faculty and from what I understand curriculum. I am sure its a great program....but it hasnt been in GA for 100+ years like PCOM philly. So you arent going to get that recognition simply because the school hasnt been a part of the "medical landscape" in GA for very long.
The curriculum is essentially identical... read through PCOMs PDF found on their website. Obviously, the faculty are different, but some of the faculty have transferred directly from the main campus. The recognition is going to be different. The Ga campus hasn't been around for >100 yrs like it has in Philly. Give them another 95 yrs!
If you mail me $398.50 I will send you an authentic customized diploma from the best D.O. school in the land: The South Harmon Insitute of Osteopathic, Hollistic, and Naturopathic Medicine.
Wth is up with this school? Wasn't tuition last year only $397.75, why the tuition hike? At this rate by the time some of the people on here make it through school they'll be at least $400.93 in debt and that isn't even including postage.
We're investing in a new Doctor of Wizardry program. We're enrolling our first class this fall, so if you don't get into D.O. school, we have your fall back!
I think I'll pass. If you go to a Doctor of Wizardry school sponsored by a D.O. school you have to learn levitation in addition to everything you have to learn from one sponsored by an M.D. school. I just think I'd use levitation in my quest for world domination.
Additionally I hear it is near impossible to land in one of the P.E.E specialities. Portals, Elements, or Explossions.
Aren't we happy to get our naturopathy degree to practice homeopathy?Source: http://education-portal.com/naturopathy_doctorate.html
Naturopathy Careers
Doctors who practice naturopathy treat disease and illness holistically, acknowledging the spiritual, emotional, social and environmental influences on health and wellness. Training to become a naturopathic physician requires four years of graduate school in preparation for licensure as a doctor of osteopathic medicine (D.O.)
Aren't we happy to get our naturopathy degree to practice homeopathy?
You're at a PBL program, so lecture-based programs cannot be compared. You have a 100% pass-rate on COMLEX because the LECOM administration tightly regulates who takes the COMLEX.I go to LECOM-Bradenton. We had a 100% pass rate on Step 1 COMLEX two years in a row,only have class 2 hours a day, and are located 25 min from one of the best beaches in the country.
Take what you will from that, but it was enough to get me to go there.
You're at a PBL program, so lecture-based programs cannot be compared. You have a 100% pass-rate on COMLEX because the LECOM administration tightly regulates who takes the COMLEX.
You're at a PBL program, so lecture-based programs cannot be compared. You have a 100% pass-rate on COMLEX because the LECOM administration tightly regulates who takes the COMLEX.
You're at a PBL program, so lecture-based programs cannot be compared. You have a 100% pass-rate on COMLEX because the LECOM administration tightly regulates who takes the COMLEX.
I chose Western because I've heard from multiple sources that the class is cohesive. The recently moved to honors/pass/fail to further encourage this. I don't want to say they party a lot because it IS medical school. Yet I'm sure there is lots to do in and around LA.
...You have a 100% pass-rate on COMLEX because the LECOM administration tightly regulates who takes the COMLEX.