Oh, shut up!
Lots and lots of cultural factors. 😎🙄
I am well aware that these types of threads pop up periodically and the same conclusion is often reached, but I really don't wanna take take 2 sets of boards or use OMM (my family doc had no need for it). There are a lot of other things also, but I'd rather not discuss them to length in this thread. I just feel certain people will not be able to handle it and subsequently proceed to give me vitriol.
....you wonder why? Everything you have said on this thread makes you sound as though somehow a DO is an incompetent healthcare practitioner who is unable to take care of his/her patients. And your attitude/tone makes it sounds as though being a DO is somehow something that is beneath you.
As IveGotTwins pointed out, there are multiple DOs in his/her residency program. They all say OMM is stupid and did not go to a DO school by choice (the DOs I work with say the same. None of them manipulate in the ER because they don't want to give someone a vertebral artery dissection). They all would have
preferred to go to MD programs.
For a variety of reasons MD wasn't an option for them. That being said, they are all awesome people and most of them
completely competent and some are better than people who went to MD schools.
I've interviewed at 2 DO schools and 1 MD, been accepted to 1 DO. For me, MD will likely not be an
option due to my less than stellar verbal score. I did well in undergrad, graduated summa cum laude, aced all my classes, had a 3.83 GPA, 3.91 sGPA, but because of my performance on one section of one exam (verbal), I was rejected from the majority of the MD schools I applied to. Is that one section going to be indicative of the kind of physician I am going to be? I HIGHLY doubt it. As a matter of fact, it will likely have no indication as to the kind of physician I am going to be.
What I am saying is, you never know what your situation might be. Worry about performing to the best of your ability in undergrad and on the MCAT and let the chips fall where they may. I thought I would do really well on the MCAT, and I did on the sciences, but because I did poorly on verbal and could not make up for it (english is my second language), I was forced to apply broadly and to both MD and DO schools.
I do not think that being a DO is in any way inferior to being and MD. Will it be more difficult to land certain residencies as a DO, certainly. But, the quality of education that I will receive as a US medical student will be the same. Getting into medical school is already hard enough as it is and is quickly getting more and more competitive. The majority of people who get into medical school, MD or DO, deserve to be there and are smart, hardworking, intelligent people. So please, don't caught up in the DO vs MD pissing contests that goes on daily on SDN.