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Super helpful thanks!!!!
Are there any DOs (medical student or even practicing physician) out there on SDN that had the opportunity to go to an MD school but chose DO over said program???
If so, would you mind sharing some of the reasons for that decision? Thank you so so much.
I can tell you that I've had a number of my students turn down MD accepts for my school. For most it was that we offered something the other schools couldn't.
Location also helps.
Being on this side of the Mississippi River, we get a fair share of students from CA. They want to stay loser to home than, say, Rush, Wake or Drexel.
Wait wait wait.... hold on a second. You're telling me that there are people out there that make independent decisions that are based on their own needs and desires and not on what an internet forum thinks? I don't believe you @Goro . I simply just don't believe you.
I can tell you that I've had a number of my students turn down MD accepts for my school. For most it was that we offered something the other schools couldn't.
Location also helps.
Being on this side of the Mississippi River, we get a fair share of students from CA. They want to stay loser to home than, say, Rush, Wake or Drexel.
I always wonder where the phrase "beating a dead horse" came from. Am I to presume that there was a time where it would be entirely unproductive to beat a dead horse rather than the traditional practice of beating live horses?You asked for it.
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I always wonder where the phrase "beating a dead horse" came from. Am I to presume that there was a time where it would be entirely unproductive to beat a dead horse rather than the traditional practice of beating live horses?
Well I hope you tell those students they're idiots.
They're quite happy, thank you. Not everyone wants to be an "ologist."
Dont do it. I say this as somebody who might go to a DO school. No matter what specialty you end up wanting you will have more options for residencies in terms of location and desirability of the program as a US MD.
Unless you want OMT as part of your clinical practice. Then I would say that DO is a better route.
True, that is the one situation where it may make sense. Even then I believe MDs can take OMM classes after they graduate, right?
Precisely.
DOs are able to be specialists but become PCPs more often then their MD counterparts, not that there's anything wrong with that to quote Seinfeld.
At the end of the day, if you think you would regret not being a physician more than not being an "ologist," take the DO acceptance. If you're only interested in specialties and would regret being a DO more than you'd regret not being a doctor at all, hold out for MD.
If you want OMT to be apart of your clinical practice...you are going to want to do more than a weekend workshop. The training in DO schools is infinitely superior.
Larry David makes fun of osteopaths in curb too.Speaking of Seinfeld, I was watching an old episode the other day and Kramer gives a shout out, "because I don't like my wallet. My osteopath says it's bad for my spine. It throws my hips off kilter."
I always knew there was a reason I liked Kramer