i really don't want to get into bashing any of the schools. but...don't put Western in with the othern schools. It is the first year and lots of kinks surely will need to be worked out. I would be cautious spending a few hundred thousand on tuition/living at a school with no track record. Get beyond the socal location and think big picture/long term.
I would. No, they haven't started yet but Western is one of the best D.O. schools in the country. Their residency match is extremely strong year after year, they have great clinicals and strong affiliations with some of Los Angeles' best hospitals for clinical training, and their board schools are through the roof (#1 in the nation last year).
This DOES have bearing on their DPM school, which, while albeit new, will offer the same basic science curriculum side by side with DO students there. They have 3 years to set up clinicals, and their on-campus clinic will have been in operation for about a year by then (We will all take a long time with each patient since we don't know anything, anyways. The comments lobbed at smaller schools' clinics, I think, are mostly irrelevant). They have already forged great relationships for DPM clinicals (UCLA Olive-View, Long Beach Memorial, Arrowhead Regional (huge teaching institution) and Pomona Valley, among others) and I personally know many strong and well-established area-DPMs who have been contacted to serve as clinical faculty. They're excited to be a part of the school and some will be traveling rather long distances just to help out one day a week.
Western is far from a sure bet, and there is an inherent risk in choosing to attend a "first year" school, but Western's DPM program is not "brand new" in the normal sense of the words.
Will there be growing pains? Absolutely. But their didactic education will be phenomenal, just as it is for their D.O. students. When Western's D.O. students round with Keck, UCLA, UCI, and Loma Linda medical students and more than hold their own, that tells one something. Lastly, Western's recent first year classes have had access to a purportedly very student-friendly administration who seeks feedback constantly. Western, while understanding the issues that first-year (and any new-ish) classes will face, will do as much as possible to address any issues as they come up.
Will Western be perfect? No. Will it quickly have the ability to compete with established pod schools in regards to didactic education, clinical rotation diversity, strong board scores, and strong residency match? Probably. I think people will be pleasantly surprised.
(It's also nice that their lectures are recorded and streamed on the internet directly afterwards. Plenty of D.O. students live far away and only come in for labs and required courses)