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I recently had an interview with an RN and while it went well, I was a bit surprised because I had never heard of anyone interviewing with a nurse... has anyone else had this experience?
I recently had an interview with an RN and while it went well, I was a bit surprised because I had never heard of anyone interviewing with a nurse... has anyone else had this experience?
While this is shocking, I think it's a great idea (not solely but in addition to an interview with a doctor). Seeing as how we'll be working alongside nurses for years to come, I think it's a good idea to see how experienced nurses perceive medical school applicants as well.
Maybe patients should start interviewing us??!? Give me a break--we're going to medical school to become doctors. Applicants should be afforded the dignity of interviewing with future equals.
Maybe patients should start interviewing us??!? Give me a break--we're going to medical school to become doctors. Applicants should be afforded the dignity of interviewing with future equals.
I had an interview with a JD. Seriously. He couldn't answer any of my questions.
I recently had an interview with an RN and while it went well, I was a bit surprised because I had never heard of anyone interviewing with a nurse... has anyone else had this experience?
Nurses aren't equals? Please.
No, they're not.
Physicians are decision-makers, diagnosticians, and perform procedures. Nursing is ancillary support with a limited scope of practice. We are not equals in a professional capacity.
This is not a rude statement, and our RNs should never be subject to abuse or disrespect at the hands of physicians. But stating that RNs are professionally equal to physicians is ridiculous.

Wow Tired, I never realized you were married.![]()
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Exactly. There are nurses out there with PhDs and even if the one interviewing you didn't have one I'm sure she was selected for that role because she does know much about med.school and everything associated with admissions process. Reminds me of an ER episode couple years ago when Kovac was having a conflict with one nurse and was trying to be formal and called her Ms.X and then she goes: if you really want to be formal it's Dr.XAn RN whose primary activity was practicing as a nurse, or an academic whose background happened to be in nursing? I know RN/PhDs who do full-time research, for example, and being interviewed by someone like that would be no different from interviewing with another researcher (non-MD or MD) at an academic medical center.
Maybe that's not the case with this particular interview, but at least another angle on why one might want to question an automatic association between "RN" and "inferior/subordinate"
I hand one interview that had a nurse on the panel, and many interviews that had PhD's on them. The point of the interview is to determine what kind of person you are, your motivations for going into health care, how you handle stress, conflict etc. There's no reason a non-MD can't gauge those qualities. Faculty members know the school and the student body, they should be able to judge whether you belong there or not.
The last time I was interviewed by a nurse, it went something like, "Do you like that you little ----? Do you want more? What's my name? What's my name?"
Yeah now that I think about it, I think that she was just wearing a costume. I did enjoy the thermometer placement FWIW. 😀
How I delight in your posts, CM. Always a bit of levity when and where it's needed.Are you aware of any RN's on a medical school faculty? As far as my own school, I've been there for 4 years and never met one.
If the situation is, as you presume, an RN/PhD doing research and on the faculty, then maybe it is appropriate. Maybe.
But I really think you're over-generalizing the purpose of the med school interview. The purpose is to determine what kind of person you are, how you handle stress, and how you will fit in in medical school. Nurses, even faculty nurses, have only a passing understanding of the medical education process, and have never experienced the rigors of medical school.
When you consider how much of medical education occurs outside the classroom (clinicals, endless studying, independent research, etc), even a nurse who is faculty will only know what he has heard, since he has never and will never experience it. It is really no different than having a research assistant, department secretary, or hospital tech conduct the interviews.
one of my interviews last year was with an RN/PhD, and I don't think she was any less qualified to interview me as the M.D.s; in fact, i thought she was one of the nicer interviewers, interested in getting to know me as a person. But then again, I didn't get in, so I guess it all works out. Hell, if 2nd year med students can interview me, I don't see why a nurse couldn't.
I agree that a nurse is not your academic equal. I don't buy into that new age medical philosophy where we're all equal team members because it amounts to saying that my 4 years of medical school and who knows how many years of residency are worthless.
However, I do think a nurse has a VERY good idea as to what makes a good doctor. They interact with doctors every day and can definitely recognize the good and bad qualities. And to all those of you who claim you "won't get information about the school this way", stop kidding yourselves. The interview isn't really designed for you to get to know the school. It's simply another evaluation. Ask your questions on the tour.
My wife was hit by a car as a child. I assume that a lingering head injury was the only reason she said, "I do". 😀
😛Maybe patients should start interviewing us??!? Give me a break--we're going to medical school to become doctors. Applicants should be afforded the dignity of interviewing with future equals.
Maybe patients should start interviewing us??!? Give me a break--we're going to medical school to become doctors. Applicants should be afforded the dignity of interviewing with future equals.
However, I do think a nurse has a VERY good idea as to what makes a good doctor. They interact with doctors every day and can definitely recognize the good and bad qualities.
And once again, everyone misses the point of the medical school interview.
It's not a job interview. Whether or not you have the qualities that make a good physician is simply not the point. They need to know if you have the qualities that make a good medical student, a topic completely out of the realm of nursing. Don't kid yourselves into thinking that they are the same thing. If that were true, all the SDN posters who complain that they have low scores but great "social skills" would have multiple acceptances.
The plaintive wails here about everyone being on the same team and everyone being equal are very PC. But we'll see what song y'all sing in a few years.
And once again, everyone misses the point of the medical school interview.
It's not a job interview. Whether or not you have the qualities that make a good physician is simply not the point. They need to know if you have the qualities that make a good medical student, a topic completely out of the realm of nursing. Don't kid yourselves into thinking that they are the same thing. If that were true, all the SDN posters who complain that they have low scores but great "social skills" would have multiple acceptances.
The plaintive wails here about everyone being on the same team and everyone being equal are very PC. But we'll see what song y'all sing in a few years.
And once again, everyone misses the point of the medical school interview.
It's not a job interview. Whether or not you have the qualities that make a good physician is simply not the point. They need to know if you have the qualities that make a good medical student, a topic completely out of the realm of nursing. Don't kid yourselves into thinking that they are the same thing. If that were true, all the SDN posters who complain that they have low scores but great "social skills" would have multiple acceptances.
The plaintive wails here about everyone being on the same team and everyone being equal are very PC. But we'll see what song y'all sing in a few years.
Come ON . . . don't buy into the BS schools feed you. You don't go get dressed up and rehearse questions just so you can go "learn about a school". Plus, i would think med schools would be concerned about making good DOCTORS, not good students. Those with great social skills and horrible scores don't make it to the interview, PLUS, a good interview will never negate a lack of demonstrated intelligence. Interviews are more to weed out the a-holes and antisocial types than to help those with good personalities. A nurse is NOT your medical equal (I don't buy into that PC BS either), but he/she definitely at least knows what makes a good doctor, and can pick out an a-hole probably better than most.
My only interview at WashU was with their directory of diversity and minority recruitment (and I'm white). She had an MBA, and was probably the best interview I had all season.
Hey, thanks for clearing that up for us. I'm glad you know more about med school interviews than the medical schools do. Most people who get interviews would probably make good med students. That's not the point. It's really up to the invdividual school how they wish to evaluate you. If they want to do it by having you interview with a RN, that's really up to them. But hey, if you're ever in that situation, just walk out and tell them you don't deal with lowly nurses. I'm sure they'll just accept you for being able to lay down the law and for letting them know how medicine works.
No, they're not.
Physicians are decision-makers, diagnosticians, and perform procedures. Nursing is ancillary support with a limited scope of practice. We are not equals in a professional capacity.
This is not a rude statement, and our RNs should never be subject to abuse or disrespect at the hands of physicians. But stating that RNs are professionally equal to physicians is ridiculous.
Maybe patients should start interviewing us??!? Give me a break--we're going to medical school to become doctors. Applicants should be afforded the dignity of interviewing with future equals.
My wife was hit by a car as a child. I assume that a lingering head injury was the only reason she said, "I do". 😀
I'm with this dude. I think RN's are great at determining who good doctors will be. Only because I grew up with my dad being chief of anesthesia at a UC and he was on the admissions board and he said watching students go through, especially the last two clinical years, nurses were right on target.
Personally, I respect nurses on par with doctors, if only because i was surrounded by them as a kid. In my interviews, at least half of the directors/assoc.deans of admissions were not MDs, and more and more are not being MDs, because MDs are not necessarily the best at choosing MDs.
I've had interviews with MPAs, MBAs, MDs, and PhDs... too bad I didn't get a nurse...
Gotta weigh in against RN interviews to med school. I have the utmost respect for nurses but people who have stated that they are subordinate are correct.
That's where the ridiculousness of the this thread comes in. As an applicant on an interview day, most probably they don't even have a bachelor's degree yet, let alone an M.D., so I don't think an applicant is ever in the business of looking down on people as suboordinates during interview day.But an RN who is a member of the medical school faculty is not subordinate to a medial school applicant.
(I am not an RN.)
My interviews with PhDs always seemed more difficult. I think there was that "Why don't you do what I did?" question that seemed to linger sub-vocally. The MD interviews you could relate your desire of helping people using science and the doctor-patient interaction with. Conveying this relationship that you've seen during volunteering is not as easy with someone that doesn't practice medicine. While some PhDs do have patient contact, the ones I interviewed with were strictly bench researchers. It was a fine line to walk when PhD interviewers asked why not full time research and I had to state that science is only half the picture, and patient interaction was the other (this picture varies from person to person. Different strokes for different folks). I agree that if you interview for regular MD you should interview with at least 1 MD/DO. Not that the other faculty are subordinate to an MD/DO, but only an MD/DO is in the unique position of practicing medicine in which you aspire to (they can directly relate to your motives like no one else).