Click.
Very interesting. Good enough for me.
It may not be something that is obviously illegal to the applicant, especially they are being encouraged by whatever group of physicians they are with. That is why it is often brought up in these threads. Anyone who has volunteered in the US knows how restrictive the rules regarding patient contact are. The same rules should apply to trips abroad; however, they often do not.
Once again, no one has said one word about some illegal activity. What you are doing is assuming you know all of the events and preaching fire and brimstone. I don't believe that anyone would argue whether or not it is smart to put illegal activities on an application so your argument is quite superflous.
It's not wrong because there are those in need back home, per se, though -- as medical schools exist to train physicians to serve in the US -- adcoms do want to see domestic volunteer experience. It is wrong because the way these trips are often structured leave the country no better off (and, sometimes, worse off) and frequently allow people to step outside their scope of practice.
You are assuming that this applicant does not have any domestic volunteer experience. What if he had 300 hours of domestic volunteer experience and he decided to go to another country to provide water and a listening ear to those in need. Maybe your right, Mother Theresa should have never ventured outside of her country and we should rescind her Nobel peace prize.
First, all philosophical advice is inherently subjective as there is no way to objectively prove if something is moral or not (ie, it is not a science).
You just proved my point, not negated it. Thank you.
That said, how much more aggressively would you like them to monitor it? It's a public forum. The fact that they verify faculty members is above and beyond what most message boards do.
Touche, good point.
What would happen would depend on a lot of other factors.
LizzyM, however, often seems to implying in her posts about this that she is not the only one who feels this way; UMich and AAMC have also spoken out in concern. Do you really want to take the risk?
Once again, this is with the assumption that this individual wants to write about illegal activities.... So.... irrelevant unless OP decides to include that.
Also, nobody has said that, if you write about going on a mission trip you will get rejected. Members have simply stated that it won't be particularly impressive (thus, if OP has another topic he is passionate about, that might be better) and that it could hurt you if not done correctly.
Once again, nobody has said to "flat out don't do it".
You can't say nothing but negative things and then justify it by saying "well, I'm not telling you not to do it". This is just a game of semantics and you and I both know that you have put such a negative connotation that any reader siding with you would never write about their beautiful mission trip experience.
And that is fine that you think that. Ultimately, OP will have to decide for himself what to write about. We have just made him aware of the potential downfalls he may encounter if he chooses to do so.
Agree.
Yes, I do. Most of them are short, two to three weeks trips abroad that, if not done correctly (ie, training local doctors, involving local government, etc would all be "correctly"), can harm the country they occur in. If one was involved in an extended mission trip with an organization that is well-known and respected (Doctors Without Borders), then it would be viewed very differently.