Recently, I have had a few interviews and to help me make a better decision on where to go I would like some insight on how rotations are structured. I would welcome any insight on the matter, but I specifically have these questions:
~Is there are difference between MD and DO rotations?
Short answer... yes and no. Depends on what you mean by "difference" with lots of opinions here. And honestly I don't think one is inherently better or worse than the other, rather you could have a different experience.
Most DO schools do not have there own hospitals as compared to MD schools... Does this imply DO students move around for rotations (ie. Different hospitals..different states?)?
It certainly can mean that. At least here a good number of students leave the Tampa/St Pete/Sarasota area to do rotations back home or in a certain region. I chose to stay as I'm from the general area and had no problems scheduling all mine here. I would think that at most places you could probably do most of your core/required rotations near where the school is, but you most likely be at multiple smaller hospitals/clinics as opposed to a single large academic medical center with lots of residents.
-OR- Is it also common for MD to move around or do they do all there rotations in one hospital?
I wouldn't say it's common. Though that is the case at one of the state MD schools here (FSU) where they have a handful of regional campuses throughout Florida and for 3rd/4th years you basically pick a regional campus you want to go to. There is a decent size hospital in Tallahassee but it currently only has a FP residency program and only a few students stay in town there for years 3 & 4.
How are rotations assigned? Do you have to apply for them like residencies?
I'm sure this will vary among schools. Here we are split up into ~13 or so groups, each with ~10 students which determines the order of your rotations. And within these groups we sat down and decided who wanted to go where for our core rotation sites. Some of the sites can only take certain number of students so if everyone in a particular group wanted to stay in a certain area then that would be worked out in your group. I never ran into that problem. And then it's really just a matter of submitting your choices into the school's online portal system. Same for electives/selectives, you basically find a place that has an open spot for the timeframe you want and submit that online and the school sends the required paperwork to the site.
My 2 cents...... all that said, I think some of the responsibility is on you to shape the clinical years as you see fit. I can only speak to LECOM here, and while we don't have a single large mega academic center, we do have a LOT of flexibility in where we do rotations and if someone wanted to spend most of their time in a certain area at specific hospitals then it may be possible provided they put in a little extra legwork.
And I don't think you can generalize by saying large academic center = good and community hospital = bad. I've done my rotations at a mixture of places, and both have their advantages and disadvantages. I've been at a large academic center and experienced the pathology and access to numerous residents and fellows that a place like that affords. I've also been at community training programs where you may not be fighting a fellow and several residents for procedures, and with private docs where I've scrubbed in as first assist for each surgery.
Point is, I think it's important to have experience in all sorts of settings. You certainly don't want to go through these years only at private clinics or small hospitals where you may not work with residents and have structured didactics. And on the flip side, most of my experience in procedures and face-to-face time with attendings has been at these smaller venues.