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I agree that after board and residency DOs and MD are pretty much the same. However, up until that point, DO schools statistically have lower stats, and there really is no way of getting around it or sugarcoating it. Lets forget MCAT for a moment, the USMLE 1 pass rates for DOs is significantly lower than MDs, 96% for MDs, 87% for DOs. Yes, 87% is still very high, but the difference is quite noticeable. Also considering the fact that 83% of international med students pass the USMLE 1, the 87% US DO pass rate is especially disappointing as not all IMs are US born.
think there is any hope of converting back to all MD? most DO's end up in MD residencies anyways...
i do like the concept beyond the DO. i just wish there was a way to truly make them 100%... meaning get rid of the stereotypes, perhaps take the same licensing exams, and have equal shots at all residencies.
ahh, my stats are messed up, its actually lower than 87%.
MD pass rate: 95% first timer
DO pass rate: 77% first timer
IM: 71% first timer
You are right though, but comparing USMLE with COMLEX pass rates is not great either because they are different tests. As for why DOs take USMLE, I'm assuming to match into MD res, which should mean that they have quite a bit, although not critical, incentive for passing the exam. I believe COMLEX step1 is something in the 90's% pass rate as well. However, due to the lack of MDs taking COMLEX, that comparison cannot be made. The two tests that both DO and MD candidates take are MCAT and the USMLE (lesser extent for DOs), and the stats speak for themselves.
Why would you want to convert your degree after your education? You went through four years of hell to be able to place those two letters after your name. I'd be protective of them, not trying to discredit them by admitting they are inferior; because that's basically what trying to convert them is implying.
think there is any hope of converting back to all MD? most DO's end up in MD residencies anyways...
i do like the concept beyond the DO. i just wish there was a way to truly make them 100%... meaning get rid of the stereotypes, perhaps take the same licensing exams, and have equal shots at all residencies.
I'd like to propose an interesting mechanism for why DOs have a lower passing rate on the USMLE than MD seniors. It will be a bit assumptive and maybe even insulting to some at a point.
OK, why would a DO take the USMLE? To get into a US allopathic residency. Let's say you are a DO student in the top 10% of your class, great grades, extracurriculars, etc. This is impressive, but let's say you want to get into dermatology or neurosurgery, two competitive fields. What are your chances of getting into allopathic residencies for either of these specialties as a DO? Not great, regardless of grades, etc. Now, DOs are allowed to apply to osteopathic residencies in dermatology and neurosurgery, which MDs can not apply to.
So, now imagine you are this top student. What is more realistic with your status as a DO and your stats from school: landing a DO dermatology gig or an allopathic one? Obviously, the former. So why waste your time taking the USMLE? Focus 110% on the COMLEX, kill it, and you probably have a good chance of matching somewhere.
Now, how does this affect the system on the macroscopic level (ha... too much biology and chemistry studying today)? For the most part, it seems students with excellent stats (top of the class, killer test scores) tend to gravitate towards more competitive specialties, which are all available as osteopathic residencies save for Rad Onc or Plastics. So I would propose that all these uber-students at DO schools would realize it is not realistic they will match at allopathic residencies for Derm, Ophtho, Neurosurg, etc., so it is really a waste of their time to take the USMLE. So now you have the best and the brightest (as far as we can measure brightness) removed from the pool of USMLE takers.
This leaves the slightly above average, average, and below average DO students to take the USMLE. Some will do great on the USMLE, some will barely pass. Since this pool of students can be considered less academically proficient than their DO counterparts who opted out of the USMLE to only take the COMLEX, we can imagine the pass rates would be dragged down. Couple this with the fact that some of these students will just take the USMLE for the hell of it, not getting stressed out about it. They know if they do OK on the COMLEX, they can match at an osteopathic residency.
This makes some offensive assumptions about the test-taking skills of those who weren't top students in med school, but I'm assuming there is some sort of correlation between performance in medical school and licensing exams. It may not be a causal one, but some sort of connection.
Personally, this is how I would look at it. If I went to a DO school and was gunning for derm, I'd go balls out studying for the COMLEX and not care about the USMLE. An allopathic derm residency would be so hard to get, why bother wasting my resources trying to obtain it?
thats a good theory, although why would below average DOs apply to MD res? and I wonder just what exactly motivates DOs in general to apply for MD residencies, other than exclusive ones.
If I would want to match into general surgery, why would I not apply to both to increase my chances? Granted: I need to know that I have an excellent shot and that if granted my DO residency before MD residency, which usually happens, I will have to take the DO residency. Its all about odds, I feel. Same reason I'm applying to both types of schools and same reasons I'll apply to both residencies, more than likely, but I'll make that decision in 5 years from now.thats a good theory, although why would below average DOs apply to MD res? and I wonder just what exactly motivates DOs in general to apply for MD residencies, other than exclusive ones.
Are there not less DO graduates needing residencies? Isn't it proportional to the amount of graduates? I'm asking because I don't know.No need to lie to the kids. It is more difficult to specialize as a DO because there are fewer Osteopathic specialty residencies than there are in the MD world. And DOs applying to allopathic residencies still suffer from bias, in that the assumption is that they are subpar compared to the average MD grad.
Stats aren't everything in medical school, but it's worth considering if you're interested in a surgical subspecialty. Most people aren't going to end up like JPH coming out of an osteopathic medical school.
Are there not less DO graduates needing residencies? Isn't it proportional to the amount of graduates? I'm asking because I don't know.

Maybe I can write like VR but I sure as hell can't do it. It answers my question. I was basically asking if there was a 1:1 ratio of spots (obviously maybe not for what you want.)As far as I know, there are not enough osteopathic residencies as their are graduates. So if everything were simply 1-to-1 here, DOs would be fighting for the "leftover," allopathic residencies. This isn't what really happens of course, but I don't think it is proportional. Maybe this doesn't address what you asked... I'm confused by your VR-like wording.![]()
When DO's split off from MD's, MD medicine was mostly quackery. So was DO medicine, but it wasn't any worse than MD medicine. Just different. The Flexner report put MD medicine back on track, and DO's quickly followed suit.
Yes, there were a lot of quacks around in all disciplines, but to say that all the MD were just as quacky as Still is not accurate. This was a time of major medical advances. Lister had developed sterile surgical techniques, medical science was just beginning. But Still actually was a quack, and the DOs did not throw off that yolk until after he was gone. While the medical sciences were busy advancing, Still was shaking babies and fighting against those advancements. You cannot fight quackery with more quackery. The DO schools will teach you a VERY revisionist history of Still and the origins of the practice, chiefly because the truth is a bit embarrassing. When Still died, he insisted that the DOs never cross over to MD type medicine. That's what they did though. In reality, they need to take the next step and MERGE. There is no reason to maintain two regulating bodies over physicians that do the exact same thing. It only hurts the DOs, and the nation could use the increase in med schools. Some did merge in California, much to the chagrin of the DOs at the time. But since today, they practice exactly the same medicine, there is no reason to maintain the DO name. They CLAIM to practice a type of medicine that is somehow more "holistic" and say they "look at the whole body, not just the disease", but this is a bunch of rhetorical nonsense and serves mainly as an advertising slogan in an attempt to attract the "alternative medicine" crowd. They take a few token classes to try to justify the claim, but there is nothing that makes a DO inherently any more "holistic" than an MD.
Both classes of physicians practice holistic medicine, which I'm positive you'd agree with me on. However, at the interview, I plan on stressing my interest in OMM. That way I don't have to BS and will be telling the truth.If you are in a DO interview, you must nod you head and say Still was a visionary and I really want to practice holistic medicine and all that stuff. I have too big of a mouth. I'd probably slip up and leak out something they don't want to hear. TRUTH TO POWER!
Both classes of physicians practice holistic medicine, which I'm positive you'd agree with me on. However, at the interview, I plan on stressing my interest in OMM. That way I don't have to BS and will be telling the truth.
I agree. Perhaps "Holistic" wasn't the best term to use. Your scenario above is a perfect example of how the bridge between the two bridges has diminished.I would say the word "holistic" is almost meaningless in the context of modern medicine. Neither practice approaches patients in a meaningfully different way. The incentives to practice preventative medicine are the same for each branch in the practical world. If two patients are treated for the same problem at an ER, one by a DO and one by an MD, there is nothing that either would do differently than the other that would reflect a different training. Every physician is searching for the best (evidence-based) treatment modalities for the problems they face.
There are DO institutions that rival MD institutions. As far as the credentials above, you can find a spotting of applicants on MDapps that have applied both DO and MD with excellent stats. This goes to show, that excellent students will apply to DO schools. And I'm sure there are even more students then just the sampling size on MDapps.when will people stop lying to themselves? DO's are MD rejects. plain and simple, end of story.
if not, they why arent there more DOs? why dont people apply to DO only instead of MD? (when they have a 36MCAT and 3.8gpa?)
DO's are the subpar MDs
There are DO institutions that rival MD institutions. As far as the credentials above, you can find a spotting of applicants on MDapps that have applied both DO and MD with excellent stats. This goes to show, that excellent students will apply to DO schools. And I'm sure there are even more students then just the sampling size on MDapps.
I'm on the borderline but depending on what each school produces for me, I'll fall over to that side fast.
As far as the credentials above, you can find a spotting of applicants on MDapps that have applied both DO and MD with excellent stats. This goes to show, that excellent students will apply to DO schools. And I'm sure there are even more students then just the sampling size on MDapps.
Please show me someone with a 3.8/35 applying to DO schools because they just love the philosophy so much.
While the other poster was not politically correct, he/she is correct. DO schools are commonly used as a backup or an alternative route to becoming a doctor by students without the credentials to get into allopathic schools. This doesn't mean DO's are subpar or inferior doctors. But, given the choice, practically all students would choose a MD school over a DO school. The ones applying to both are the ones that are on the borderline.
thats cause if they dont get into an MD school, they'll go to DO.
if they get both, they'll go with MD. DO = back up... for rejection.
stop lying to urselves guys. open ur eyes and see with me
Read my mind, haha. Not that everyone on pre-allo fits that description, of course.Given my experience on both boards I'm beginning to think less A-holes apply D.O.
Maybe that would be a reason to apply D.O. also...
They don't "pander" to mediocrity of stats, they simply place more importance on the journey the applicant has gone through before application. More importance elsewhere = less importance on numerical stats = many applicants being accepted with lower stats than the MD average = DO average stats below MD average stats.DO schools do seem to pander toward mediocrity in terms of stats.
above poster makes me sick.thats cause if they dont get into an MD school, they'll go to DO.
if they get both, they'll go with MD. DO = back up... for rejection.
stop lying to urselves guys. open ur eyes and see with me
mdapps should not be used to back anyone up...anyone can post whatever they want on there.
I there a msar for DO schools? i haven't heard of one🙄
lets stop sugar coating things. The majority of DO schools have lower admission stats. If anyone got into a MD school and DO school, everyone knows that they would pick the MD school. Stop deluding yourself. Now if they only got into a DO school, then thats great too. I am not bashing DO's, in the end when you actually work, this issue wont come up. But trying to equalize pretty much all MD schools with DO schools is sugar coating sub-par applicants...
yea lower end MD schools and higher up DO schools may have closer admission stats.
and why is that DO poeple use MD apps....are these poeple illiterate? it says MD apps. Someone should come up with a DO apps, otherwise they shouldn't be allowed to publish their app process for DO schools on MD apps (sarcasm). But there are anal pre meds so my flame shield is on.
I'm not so sure...
Example: I apply to a DO school and an MD school, accepted to both. Let's say I have a 3.9/34, and I get a full-ride scholarship to the DO school and nothing from the MD school, which costs $33,000 per year. I think I might choose the DO school, and am sure others would as well.
If my trend of GPA continues for this and next semester I see myself having a decent chance at a majority of the Philadelphia schools (sans Penn and dependent on the MCAT). That being said, if I was looking at choosing between PCOM, Temple, or Drexel, I would seriously be leaning towards PCOM. It gets me just outside the city, has outstanding faculty, is well known, and rotates with many hospitals in the area. Additionally, my aspirations won't be limited at PCOM granted I don't get on the derm/plastics/blahblah kick (but a lot of that is on self success). That's just an example, because I doubt I'll have 3 acceptances, but one can wish and dream.If anyone got into a MD school and DO school, everyone knows that they would pick the MD school.
thats good for you, i hope you researched your residency limitations quite extensively. Also, graduating from a top DO doesnt mean anything....
Wont matter if you board scores suck. Now perhaps you want to do family practice, or something that isnt as competitive and perhaps whats why you went DO, i can only assume since you were very specific to your reasons.
still where is the msar of DO schools? Where is the mdapps for DO schools?
There are two things wrong with this statement:
1) I haven't seen too many people with 3.9/34's applying to DO's. You?
2) Another poster is of the opinion that DO schools don't look at your numbers as much and therefore emphasize intangibles. I don't agree but under that logic, no DO school is going to give you a full ride just because you have numbers above their averages.