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The 2026-2027 DO School Specific Threads are now available in the School Specific Discussions forum. The 2025-2026 discussions are now available in the prior year discussions forum.
I've heard Mayo Clinic is pretty degree-milliest. They have a campus in Minnesota and regional campuses in Arizona and Florida.
Lol, I have heard some schools being compared to McDonalds, but I feel like you have to be doing at least a decent job if you are opening multiple campuses.
From what I have heard from students and doctors, LECOM is a literal doctor factory
The interview process isn't even personal
Branch campuses you barely interact with your professors
From what I have heard from students and doctors, LECOM is a literal doctor factory
The interview process isn't even personal
Branch campuses you barely interact with your professors
Current OMS2 at Seton Hill campus. Interview process was somewhat impersonal but once a student you get a lot of time with faculty. PBL curriculum gets you 2 hours of face time 3 days a week in small groups with a faculty facilitator. Also, H&P and OPP courses twice a week get you significant time with faculty to learn hands on portion of curriculum.
Lots of LECOM haters on SDN but I have been pleased with my education thus far.
I've heard Mayo Clinic is pretty degree-milliest. They have a campus in Minnesota and regional campuses in Arizona and Florida.
Lol, I have heard some schools being compared to McDonalds, but I feel like you have to be doing at least a decent job if you are opening multiple campuses.
Not sure if this is a troll post, but here goes. OP, I don't think that >2 campuses necessarily equals "degree mill." In these post-Flexner report times (granted there's a whole pandora's box that I won't go into with that), I don't think it would be safe to call any medical school a degree mill. I have been told that LCME and COCA have high standards, and failure to meet those standards can have serious repercussions. For example, a school can hand out degrees like candy, but if its attrition rates are sky-high or students aren't passing the boards, that school isn't going to last long.
A similar, but better metric for choosing a medical school would be to look at the ratio of resources to students. Are students struggling to get clinical rotations that they want/need? Is the quality of these rotations consistent or highly variable? What does the match rate (not necessarily the placement rate) look like? Do students seem happy and like they're well-supported?
According to Wikipedia, a degree mill is "a company or organization that claims to be a higher education institution but provides illegitimate academic degrees and diplomas for a fee." Accredited US medical schools with branch campuses are not degree mills; the degrees they award are legitimate and legally enable graduates to enter residency training and practice medicine.
With that being said, I do believe that some medical schools (especially of the osteopathic variety) are run by profiteers who value expansion over quality of education.