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@IsWhat :I wouldn't even call it generalizations because none of the things you said were even true...
They are probably waiting to come off a wait list at an allo institution.
Id imagine there is probably (not always) a very big difference in personality and social skills between a person with a 3.7/36 and a 3.4/27 entering into medschool and later becoming a doctor. Two completely different populations.I hate to perpetuate this thread....but I can't help it with comments like this. You can't just tell part of the story and play if off as just showing an "example" but saying "oh it does come down to the individual". Is the MD fresh out of residency? Is he just younger in general? Perhaps that's why he seems less experienced and knowledgeable. Does this mean the DO is "a better, more caring doctor?" Absolutely not. If they're the same age with same amount of practice years then it's unfortunate you feel that way and maybe the MD really isn't as great but I have run across many many an allopathically trained MD that are just as awesome with patient care where all their patients absolutely adore them. This is not a rarity. And on the flip side I've run across DO physicians that are terrible doctors, mistakes left and right. Am I therefore going to generalize this to all DO's? Of course not.
Plain and simple: What kind of doctor you'll be is be largely based already on what kind of person you are. For every example someone has of one particular incidence, someone else will have an example to counter it. So let's stop with these ridiculous posts of how "My DO cares so much more about me as a person." Good for you. I'm glad you have a great physician taking care of you. That's all it should be about. Being a great physician, no matter DO or MD.
#endrant
What about those of us with a 3.4/36? Am I a half-breed? Or a full mud-blood since I'm at a DO school? 😛Id imagine there is probably (not always) a very big difference in personality and social skills between a person with a 3.7/36 and a 3.4/27 entering into medschool and later becoming a doctor. Two completely different populations.
if you are being playful...lol 😉What about those of us with a 3.4/36? Am I a half-breed? Or a full mud-blood since I'm at a DO school? 😛
This thread is so awful.
I agreed until the bolded part. lets also work to not misconstrue or reword statements in ones favor.Listen guys, this thread should not have been started by the OP. They claimed that even after a search he /she couldn't find what they were looking for, which is a little hard to believe as there are literally so many of these around asking the same question.
However, too little too late. It has been started. People have their own opinion on the matter, and that's fine, we're all entitled to them, but that is not what we should be spouting. Facts are facts. Numbers don't lie. Give people the facts and let them choose for themselves which road they want to follow.
Whether MD or DO one day we'll all be colleagues so let's not be so petty and say ridiculous unfounded things like "if you have a 36 you must be more socially awkward that the person who got a 28". I hope whatever poor pre-med souls read this thread have the ability to hone in on the valuable information that does exist and ignore the rest of the garbage.
I agreed until the bolded part. lets also work to not misconstrue or reword statements in ones favor.
Original statement: Id imagine there is probably (not always) a very big difference in personality and social skills between a person with a 3.7/36 and a 3.4/27 entering into medschool and later becoming a doctor. Two completely different populations.
It doesn't automatically place you in a different social group. However, due to the high grades they are more likely to devot a lot of time into academics and have less outside interests. Again its not always but more of a correlation. I had a med school ask about outside interests as that was clearly something they saw. Its just an observation. Lots of people have high grades and have a relatively balanced life. There is a significant minority that don't have this.You wanna tell me what I "misconstrued"? I wasn't aware that a test score and GPA automatically places you in different social and personality groups. You really need to just.
I agreed until the bolded part. lets also work to not misconstrue or reword statements in ones favor.
Original statement: Id imagine there is probably (not always) a very big difference in personality and social skills between a person with a 3.7/36 and a 3.4/27 entering into medschool and later becoming a doctor. Two completely different populations.
See, no. Not necessarily.
Biases continue because people choose to keep on perpetuating them.
Whatever, mostly people will follow the crowd and then believe and perpetuate something. When more people stop following the crowd, and when perhaps there is some sound research, maybe the bias will die off. \
There won't be any significant research on it, however, b/c both schools of medical education would see that as counterproductive to their overriding goals.
This is exactly what weaker students want to believe - that academic and social intelligence are mutually exclusive and that it is a zero sum game. Nothing could be further from the truth. Many, many students at top tier institutions are both intelligent and great people.
^this.It doesn't automatically place you in a different social group. However, due to the high grades they are more likely to devot a lot of time into academics and have less outside interests. Again its not always but more of a correlation. I had a med school ask about outside interests as that was clearly something they saw. Its just an observation. Lots of people have high grades and have a relatively balanced life. There is a significant minority that don't have this.
To draw a parrelel its kind of like your pre med friends versus friends that have " easier" schedules. Some people don't like hanging around pre med people because of the obssevive personality their schedules creates. I have personally seen this less on the osteopathic side of things. I have also seen DOs are typically less prestige obsessed.
Either way it's my observation and you are free to disagree. However in my life experiences this is something I have encountered
I agreed until the bolded part. lets also work to not misconstrue or reword statements in ones favor.
Original statement: Id imagine there is probably (not always) a very big difference in personality and social skills between a person with a 3.7/36 and a 3.4/27 entering into medschool and later becoming a doctor. Two completely different populations.
*1990 Lexus
2015 Toyota
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^this.
... I'd argue the truly holistic aspect of the DO degree is the admission process, not how an osteopathic physician approaches the practice of medicine.
This is the most accurate description of the holistic nature of osteopathic schools ever typed on SDN.
So true. Really smart people are often gifted in multiple areas including social intelligence.If you honestly believe that people with higher grades tend to have fewer outside interests, it just tells me that you have had very little exposure to large numbers of smart people. The people who have to study to the point of excluding all other activities are few and far between. When I got to college, I was in awe of the people who were talented artists, rock stars on the sports fields, strong advocates for various causes, and still made astronomic grades. When I got to med school, I was even more in awe because those well-rounded academic superstars made up an even higher proportion of the people I interacted with daily. As someone said above, it's nowhere close to a zero sum game.
So true. Really smart people are often gifted in multiple areas including social intelligence.
I will readily admit that I used to think like some posters in this thread. I was top of my high school class and thought I was the ****. Then I got to college and found myself struggling. At first I looked at the kids who were excelling with disdain. I thought they were nerds with no lives, I thought they HAD to be super awkward with no friends because they always kept their nose in a book. Nope! It turns out some were more efficient/better at studying, and some didn't have to study as hard because they were just plain smarter than me. There were people who were really nice, had lots of friends, had cool hobbies, and did better than me in class despite all that! That really stung me to my 17 year old core.
So true. Really smart people are often gifted in multiple areas including social intelligence.
I will readily admit that I used to think like some posters in this thread. I was top of my high school class and thought I was the ****. Then I got to college and found myself struggling. At first I looked at the kids who were excelling with disdain. I thought they were nerds with no lives, I thought they HAD to be super awkward with no friends because they always kept their nose in a book. Nope! It turns out some were more efficient/better at studying, and some didn't have to study as hard because they were just plain smarter than me. There were people who were really nice, had lots of friends, had cool hobbies, and did better than me in class despite all that! That really stung me to my 17 year old core.
Gandy, no one really believe that. In fact I believe there have been studies on students that were bright, high performers, who were also scored high on EQ and socialization. Whatever. IQ and EQ can be related due to certain standing organic individual issues; however, IQ and EQ are not mutually exclusive, period.
To Tired,
I really think I do get your point. And it ha also seemed like a common, yet unspoken understanding that if a person wanted to pursue a highly competitive specialty, the advantage goes to MD. Is it necessarily fair or right? Well those are other questions. I don't believe so anymore than I believe if you graduate summa cum laude, you will have sucky social skills. Come on. LOL
To be honest, let's just be real. Surgery is a tough, tough road, regardless. Yes, probability wise, advantage will be given to the MD candidate especially as far as surgery is concerned. As I said. Doesn't mean it is right. I get that you are directing people that know they want a certain path and in order to help them have an advantage, and from my experience overall, well then yes, allopathic will give you better odds. This however, as I have shared, doesn't mean it is always so. And yes, I'd say that it took the DO CT surgeons I know of more work and effort and time to get the respect they deserve. Still doesn't mean that it's the best way to move forward; b/c I differ with you that strong clinical exposure is greatly important. You have a lot of people that are on the higher ends statistically speaking. They are surely capable; however, b/c they didn't get enough exposure, and ultimately thrust against that bear during residency, well, their heart and soul was just not totally there. Buyer's remorse is a much harder thing to live with in this field I believe...for many reasons.
I think I'm misunderstanding you somewhere. I think we (and everyone else) agree that it isn't necessarily fair that MD gets a "leg up" over DO for competitive surgical subspecialties. However, from my (possibly incorrect) understanding, you are saying that to advise someone to pursue an MD when attempting to enter one of these fields is the incorrect choice. You then base this upon the fact that MDs have less clinical exposure than DOs, saying that MDs therefore lack the heart and soul that is apparently unique to DOs and thus will not survive these brutal residencies. Am I understanding you correctly?
What I really don't understand is why 1) you think that DOs necessarily have more clinical exposure than MDs, 2) why DOs necessarily have more "heart and soul" than MDs, and 3) why you think advising someone to take an unnecessarily more difficult route to achieve the same goal is a defensible position.
Please help me understand your reasoning.
No actually I am not. I am totally For preparing people for how the world is. If you had read you would have gotten that. Plus, I wasn't done editing yet. 🙂
I'm not a totally black and white thinker. I give you the reality that Neurosurg is going to be a huge ball buster for even your top-playing allopath grad. I have worked also with these guys/girls--mostly guys in big university medical centers. But the neurosurg deal is kind of unfair b/c that's just a hugely competitive, ball-busting path for anyone--and yea--it's path is also paved with A LOT of research, which makes this a disadvantage to many DO's in general.
So, I am not against your preparing people for the realities at all. I praise you for it.
It's just that there are other factors that go into the process, and it seems silly to forsake these other factors and "X-factors."
And the end of the day, few of the "best of the best" will get into ANY neurosurg program. But this is not necessarily true of Gen Surg, etc.
Also, I am truly sorry if I offended you in any way. As I said, I'm not a black/white thinker, b/c in general, life just doesn't work that way many times.
I like the equations balanced. 🙂
None of these things are offensive or controversial. Just advocating for keeping options open.
Isn't it ridiculous that we even have to have this discussion? MD or DO...either one is a physician that is competent enough to treat you. And if they're not competent enough, it certainly has nothing to do with which set of letters are following their name.
If you think there's a serious distinction between the competence of the two, it sounds like you need to get over your ego
You're defending your degree, and that's great. I have a long history on this board, and no one can accuse me of being anti-DO. More often than not I find myself defending the degree from some strange misconceptions, primarily by allo med students.
That being said, I'm a realist, and I believe is maximizing options at all times. All I'm saying is that it is easier to tag a competitive specialty with an MD. That's it. Not saying it's impossible with a DO, or that no one has ever done it, it just makes that mountain steeper. For a select few specialties, it makes it a whole lot steeper.
My class was filled with MS1 students who were going to do primary care. Of those, a double-digit number bailed out for the ROAD specialties once they saw what primary care entailed and paid. A handful of others hit the IM fellowships as fast as possible following residency. Not to say primary care sucks; I did a variation of it for nearly four years, and it has rewarding moments. But people can (and frequently do) change their specialty choice with increasing exposure. I was totally sure I was going to be a General Surgeon. Then I met them. They sucked.
So I'm not going to argue this point anymore after this. I will just reiterate that if you have the choice, I recommend taking MD rather than DO.
Similarly, if you have the choice: take a DO school over a Caribbean school, take an Ivy over a State school, take a research-oriented school or residency over a non-research oriented school or residency, take a university residency program over a community program, take orthopaedics over everything else.
None of these things are offensive or controversial. Just advocating for keeping options open.
I mean, I see some of the points they make. Much of it is no different than the point of getting an IVY league education to help propel your career forward.
Who knew that many in 2015 still see DO graduate as DOG--as in underdog.
You say you see the point, but your next sentence says you don't. If we define underdog as disadvantaged in certain situations, then yes. DO grads absolutely are underdogs. It doesn't mean they are inferior, or doomed to be bad physicians, or anything like that. You seem to feel that anyone acknowledging these disadvantages is implying that, and we aren't. We're just stating a fact of life from our experience. You don't have to like it or think it's fair (and I can see how an aspiring DO applicant would not), but that doesn't make it untrue.
Best of luck to you!
Just for my knowledge, what is your level of education?Seriously, I think some are just taking stuff way too serious. I said I see some of it. But there is a whole other side that can be taken to extremes.
It will be what it will be for whomever. So, DO schools should only exist to produce primary care physicians? Hmmm, maybe NP, PA, and DO should merge into one kind of educational program. 🙄
Branding has it's pluses and minuses. The most important issue here overall is how the person "brands" themselves by how they function and present.
Everyone is not going to go to Harvard for med school, and not everyone is going to go to an allopathic med school to become a physician.
The difficulties of moving into various specialties have been delineated. This has been well noted. And to be fair, the difficulties for certain specialties are more challenging in general, regardless of your school "brand." Might this a added challenge for DO grads? Perhaps. Heck, for some specialties I will go ahead and say Probably, b/c many have made some reasonable points. So what? So long as the path one makes is put down with integrity and hard work, let people end up where they end up.
I'm confused as to whether this is actually about fair advising of DOs or potential DO students as they consider moving toward certain specialties, or is it about pointing out some sense of inferiority w/ one that pursues DO path over MD? I want to believe it's simply about the former, but the angst with which some have participated here makes me question the latter. Yea. I'm allowed to question this, so long as I say I absolutely can't say for sure.
Personally, I see this as something to chillax about. An intelligent person is going to do the research and weigh most of the cogent factors in terms of what may or may not work for them with their possible future goals. Most people that apply to either MD or DO schools are reasonably intelligent in my experience.
If midlevels are doing OK in specialties, I think it's not unreasonable to assume DOs could do well in them also. Yes, I get that those are different levels/kinds of practice. Point is, everyone thought NPs would take over primary care. But you know what? A great number of them are schooling and practicing outside of primary care.
So, I'm not really big on extremist thinking here. But I think that Tired's last reply should be given fair consideration; b/c how can it be a bad thing to keep one's option's open? So kudos to Tired for presenting points in such a constructive and fair way.
So what? So long as the path one makes is put down with integrity and hard work, let people end up where they end up.
Nobody will disagree with you on this- as much as you seem to think we are. But you can't say "so what" about things like that on a forum that exists to give pre-meds advice. Because it is an important consideration. That's all I'm saying. I've said it enough different ways, so I'll stop with this.
And since I've figured out from context clues that you plan on applying, a word of sincere advice. PLEASE tighten up your writing for your personal statement. Using a hundred extra words and a dozen platitudes is only hurting your efforts to get your points across.
Good luck!!
Just for my knowledge, what is your level of education?
I was wondering the same thing about you, but didn't ask.
The main reason I was wondering is that you're apparently extremely passionate about this issue, but at the same time you seem a little inexperienced with various issues surrounding medicine in general and being a pre-med specifically. I'm probably not the only person wondering if you're in high school or very early college, and just recently started thinking seriously about medicine. Which is totally fine, don't get me wrong, but was just curious.