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I think it does. I feel like you have a more realistic understanding of the time constraints, commitment, and sacrifices your family members make. Unlike other pre-meds you get first hand exposure of the day to do lifestyle, especially the dynamic between family life and work. Make sure you apply to the school your relative went to. It should help.
Does being a relative of a DO have any impact on the application process? Being the son of a DO, I'm hoping that it gives some sort of an advantage. I'll be sending in my application in early August to about 6 schools.
Additionally, the school he was a true legacy at (the one his father attended), was not welcoming. Their first question was why his father had never been back there, and why he hadn't donated. I believe he was still accepted at said school, but the interview left a bad taste in his mouth. I think the bottom line is, legacy status can be both a blessing and a curse--but mostly a blessing.
Don't most secondaries ask you if you have a relative that is an alumnus? I recall several of my secondaries asking specifically that. It seems pretty important to admissions if they make an entire section for that.
It's actually asks on the primary. In the background/family history section they ask whether any relatives are physicians. When I answered yes, father DO, it then asked me to specify what school he went to. It did the same when I answered yes, cousin MD.
Oh, I know about that; I mean on the secondaries, they usually ask the additional question of relatives that are alumni from that specific school.
. I might get attacked in this thread now, the thing is he has the degree from a carribean school but never got to do his exam and residency because of us kids.My dad has a MD degree will that help. I might get attacked in this thread now, the thing is he has the degree from a carribean school but never got to do his exam and residency because of us kids.
Will I be able to use this in anyway?
A friend of mine is the son of a DO and went through the app process last cycle. As the daughter of a DO myself, he gave me the following info on this topic: most of the DO schools he interviewed at immediately took him in as "one of their own." The interviews were all incredibly warm, and he was treated like family from the moment he arrived. Some schools even made remarks about the fact that he already "knows the ropes" etc. This welcome reception did not, however, guarantee his acceptance at each of those schools. (a poor freshman year GPA outweighed his 30 MCAT and VERY STRONG upward trend, including a 3.8 science GPA). Additionally, the school he was a true legacy at (the one his father attended), was not welcoming. Their first question was why his father had never been back there, and why he hadn't donated. I believe he was still accepted at said school, but the interview left a bad taste in his mouth. I think the bottom line is, legacy status can be both a blessing and a curse--but mostly a blessing.
My dad is an MD....didn't hurt at all during the interview process, so I hope that was just sarcasm. Kind of difficult to tell through this. Heck, at 5 of my DO interviews there were MDs there.
I think 0complications was was trying to say that the circumstances surrounding the poster with a MD father were what ought not be mentioned (the fact that he never took his exam or did a residency), not the fact the he's and MD instead of a DO.