First, take a breath. You have a great application. Receive my feedback with this in mind because it's impressive. Stop worrying about things that you cannot control. Trust the process.
Non-clinical volunteering:
- 200 tutoring, 200 for a summer camp for kids affected by a parent's cancer
Tutoring is something that practically every prehealth student does and does not count towards "service orientation."
I like that you have service orientation experience as a summer camp counselor. Where I would want you to improve is to have something more consistent rather than a summer opportunity. Do you have any service orientation non-clinical community service (food distribution, shelter work, job placement services, transportation services, housing rehabilitation) where you are in community with people in distress?
You say you have interest in women's health, so maybe you have done work with women's shelters.
You say you have interest in primary care, so maybe you can break down the shadowing and clinical experience to highlight this?
What are your leadership experiences?
Understand the process is a marathon. Medical education is a marathon. It's not logical and relies a lot on human subjectivity. There are no guarantees, and I know it causes anxiety for everyone. You're going to have imposter syndrome for the next 10 years as you try to rise up the medical workforce pecking order/hierarchy. It is hard for everyone, but you'll have issues similar to other Asians in general American society who are rising professionals (see professional workshops by the Society for Asian Scientists and Engineers). But you can do it anyway. Find APAMSA chapter officers at the schools on your list and talk to them before and during your application process (and certainly once you matriculate).