How about you?

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czanetti

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I am interested in everything, I love learning, and feel that choosing one thing to do with the rest of my life is restricting in a sense that you are settling for something. I never want that. I have always wanted to go into cancer research, so I started doing med chem. Research with my professor, the more I learned about the Phd program the more I learned I needed more. I was wondering if anyone else feels the same way that are or becoming D.O.’s it seemed to me that this profession has been able to capture the greatest concept of all that you can’t expect to explain anything with great certainty unless you take it all into factor. I am curious to what extent the DO training goes into to take the holistic approach into factor? I know it emphasizes on the musculoskeletal system because it makes up such a large percentage of our body, but what else does the profession go into, psychological aspects, cultural intervention, is it the systematic approach that it seems or am I being to righteous?
 
thanks dude for the link, sorry about that, and by the way I enjoyed every one of your entries lol very good points. I have a question for you, what helped you pick which Osteopathic med school to go to, I was thinking personally of going to TCom in texas becuase it has really cheap tuition and many programs, although they only except 10% out of state residents which is definetly not good odds for anyone, but just wondering how you went through the process of choosing. Currently I'm a junior in College at University at Buffalo, and I'm a New York state resident.

Thanks
 
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