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What is so bad about Carribean schools? And why are they always the last resort?
What is so bad about Carribean schools? And why are they always the last resort?
fireworks?
your statements are true to a degree. the reason caribbean/out of US schools are so bad is not necessarily because their programs are bad, but because they are a foreign medical school. sure, caribbeans may teach the exact same curriculum as US med schools do, but we and residency selection committees don't necessarily know that. this is why medical school graduates from india or other foreign medical schools have trouble with getting a US residency in off the bat. most of the time they have to do some sort of research or training in the states for at least a year before they can get into a residency.That being said, if you can't get into a US med school, go there and do well enough to achive suitable USMLE scores, show some clinical competence during your third-year rotations, you can certainly make it back to the US for residency and be a perfectly good physician in the end. The reality is, aside from the significantly greater exposure to research, there isn't much of a difference in the curriculum whereever you go-- med school is basically volume memorization everywhere.
This is a related question. I was just curious if anyone goes to countries besides the carribean to study medicine. Because there are certainly medical schools in Asia and other regions which I am sure would love US medical school rejects![]()
What is so bad about Carribean schools? And why are they always the last resort?
I have to say I'm pretty disappointed with the lack of firey debates.
Alright then, I'll say it.
The Caribbean is a place where people who have no business being doctors go because they can't deal with the reality that their dream is not actually going to happen.
Alright then, I'll say it.
The Caribbean is a place where people who have no business being doctors go because they can't deal with the reality that their dream is not actually going to happen.
As long as a person is a confident doctor, how does it matter where they went to f****** medical school.
My mother, when she slipped a disc at work, her orthopod went to medical school in inda and he is one of the most sought after spinal surgeons in the country. It is possible and is usually the case that medical school graduates reguardless of where they attended are competent to provide care otherwise they wouldn't have graduated.😛
india isn't the same as caribbean. barely anyone from the US would use a med school in india as a last resort. it's not the same situation. i know plenty of indian doctors who are awesome. can't say i've met any caribbean orthopods.As long as a person is a confident doctor, how does it matter where they went to f****** medical school.
My mother, when she slipped a disc at work, her orthopod went to medical school in inda and he is one of the most sought after spinal surgeons in the country. It is possible and is usually the case that medical school graduates reguardless of where they attended are competent to provide care otherwise they wouldn't have graduated.😛
You know, I'm not sure there will be fireworks. The Carribean guys are mostly pretty honest about why they chose their med school. It's the osteopaths that generally have to B.S. about how it's their desire to view the patient as a whole and the unique philosophy of D.O. school (which apparently does not carry over to the desire to do residency at a D.O. program) rather than their mid 20s MCAT and 3.3 gpa that got them to where they are. I've never heard a Carribean guy say it's the sunny beaches rather than their undergraduate record that made them pick their school.
I have noticed this as well. Why do all the DO peeps keep saying they love the DO philosophy instead of that they love the fact that they can get into a school with a 25 mcat?
I have noticed this as well. Why do all the DO peeps keep saying they love the DO philosophy instead of that they love the fact that they can get into a school with a 25 mcat?
You know, I'm not sure there will be fireworks. The Carribean guys are mostly pretty honest about why they chose their med school. It's the osteopaths that generally have to B.S. about how it's their desire to view the patient as a whole and the unique philosophy of D.O. school (which apparently does not carry over to the desire to do residency at a D.O. program) rather than their mid 20s MCAT and 3.3 gpa that got them to where they are. I've never heard a Carribean guy say it's the sunny beaches rather than their undergraduate record that made them pick their school.
Perhaps you should replace "is not actually going to happen" with "really should not be happening."
Just as a personal aside, whenever I'm looking for a physician the first thing I research is the medical school they attended. Foreign schools are an immediate alarm bell for me to keep looking.
2 Ross university students got Orthopedics surgery residency in 2005!
What wrong with you guys? It not a matter of school, go there get 90s on your USMLE and get into any residency that you like and then laugh at these people are just demonstrating gut feelings!
2 Ross university students got Orthopedics surgery residency in 2005!
What wrong with you guys? It not a matter of school, go there get 90s on your USMLE and get into any residency that you like and then laugh at these people are just demonstrating gut feelings!
Indiana or India? I can't tell? And let's just say right now that the Caribbean is no India. As has been previously addressed, Caribbean med schools were created for pre-meds who couldn't cut it (same mission as many post-bac programs). I'd say it matters, as I'd rather go to a doctor who could actually get through college level math, or didn't just party his way through school. Face it, undergrad GPA and MCAT scores have a bearing on what type of student you are, your mental capacity, and later on where you'll get into medical school.
And I think the only thing worse than a doctor who can't really cut it is a "confident" doc who can't really cut it. If one doesn't know their weaknesses, how will they improve on them?
You need to look at how many people actually started with them in their entering class, and how many years it took them to make it thru, to see if 2 ortho matches are good, or a very low percentage. And where the residencies are located is relevant too --there are competitive residencies in less desirable parts of the country.
As for USMLE, getting 90s would be pretty bad considering passing is around 182... 🙄
Then you need to learn your books and realzie that there are 2 grades, a 2 digit and a 3 digit! 90 on digit is equivalent to 240+ my friend!
Then you need to learn your books and realzie that there are 2 grades, a 2 digit and a 3 digit! 90 on digit is equivalent to 240+ my friend!
What? What rubbish. Everyone knows that once you finish med school - you don't know jack about being a physician. Real training starts during residency - so don't tell me your med school carries weight. Bottom line is that the medical profession and the admissions process attracts the kinds of people who like to keep their noises high and look down on others when in fact - someone from a carribean school can make a perfectly competent physician. From premed all the way to the CEO - attitudes never change it seems - man, these debates are the result of the same thing and reveals exactly why we all want to become doctors.
A 99 is close to a 245.... a 90 is way lower. The 2 digit scores are NOT percentiles as the USMLE did away with those awhile ago.
NO way 99 is 260+ and the highest number is 270!
Rubbish? Sounds like the words of someone with lackluster scores on their umpteenth application cycle speaking. I don't know about my "noise" but my nose is kept humbly down through this process - I'm interested in rural med, underserved med, or missions med (just look at the schools I'm applying to).
Can a Caribbean doc make a good doctor? Anecdotally, of course. But most of this talk (and the concerns of an adcom) is not in anecdotal evidence, but in trends. Let's face it: an applicant with a a higher GPA and MCAT is likely to be more capable of handling med school, will get into a better med school, will do better on Boards, get a better residency, and eventually become a more informed, better practiced, and more talented physician.
Do all Caribbean docs make horrible physicians? Of course not, but all signs would suggest that they are less likely to be leaders in the field.
While I'm not a big proponent of the carribean, I think it's a pretty big leap to go from higher college numerical stats to "more talented physician". The studies on pubmed that suggest correlation between numerical stats and performance show that the correlation is not exactly staggering or all encompassing, and you will come across an enormous number of folks who don't fit the data suggested by those studies. There will be many talented physicians who were carribean educated and many lousy ones who went to good US allo schools. The real differences are going to be opportunities.
You will learn that as good a college GPA you had and as high an MCAT as you may have had, it all really means nothing once you get to med school. You show up with a blank slate, knowing nothing, and are expected to prove yourself every step of the way -- in school, on the boards, in the wards. Nothing that happened before has much to do with how talented a physician you will be, I'm afraid -- basically everything you have done up to that point will be ancient history -- and you will see some people you didn't expect excell and some you thought were top notch flounder. Talent is not something anyone has yet figured out how to comprehensively test. It's like obscenity-- you know it when you see it.
I for one, find it somewhat depressing that there are few "rags to riches" stories, if you will, of people starting at a community college and ending up at Harvard. It's not a perfect system but that's the way it is.
Would the Army pay for the carribean med school?
Would the Army pay for the carribean med school?
What is so bad about Carribean schools? And why are they always the last resort?
Maybe because 3/4 of SDNers haven't figured out how to spell "Caribbean" properly? 😕
C-a-R-i-B-B-ean, geniuses. One R, two B's.![]()
I don't think that's a requirement....You only need to know how to spell it if you plan to go there.😎
No. They only pay for U.S. med schools. No Canada and no Puerto Rico and definitely no Caribbean.Would the Army pay for the carribean med school?
I don't think that's a requirement....
Actually at a couple of the less reputable places that seems to be the only requirement.😀