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So the thought on SDN seems to be that DO's have a harder time matching into competitive specialties such as ROADS.
I was thinking about it though, there are about 5 times as many MD schools as DO's. 141:29.
Assuming that each school has the same class size, (I know it doesn't, I just don't know the data off-hand) and all those MD's from the Caribbean, you have about 17% of graduates each year being DO's.
Now we all know that a majority of DO's enter medical school with similar or lower stats, but considering less than 20% of the graduates are DO's, if DO's are able to make it to about 10% in terms of matching in competitive residencies, I think speaks volumes in terms of how being an MD/DO doesn't really make a difference anymore. Factoring in how the top10 MD schools attract and get most of the smartest and brightest pre-meds, it makes a lot of sense why DO's make up a smaller percentage in competitive residencies.
I am fully aware that some people will still be prejudice against different letters following someone's name.
Of course if something about this assumption is wrong, please point it out. I am still learning and am nowhere as knowledgeable as a med student, resident, or attending might be.
I was thinking about it though, there are about 5 times as many MD schools as DO's. 141:29.
Assuming that each school has the same class size, (I know it doesn't, I just don't know the data off-hand) and all those MD's from the Caribbean, you have about 17% of graduates each year being DO's.
Now we all know that a majority of DO's enter medical school with similar or lower stats, but considering less than 20% of the graduates are DO's, if DO's are able to make it to about 10% in terms of matching in competitive residencies, I think speaks volumes in terms of how being an MD/DO doesn't really make a difference anymore. Factoring in how the top10 MD schools attract and get most of the smartest and brightest pre-meds, it makes a lot of sense why DO's make up a smaller percentage in competitive residencies.
I am fully aware that some people will still be prejudice against different letters following someone's name.
Of course if something about this assumption is wrong, please point it out. I am still learning and am nowhere as knowledgeable as a med student, resident, or attending might be.
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