What year are you guys? I am starting soon- early or mid July depending on which school I go to. I am deciding between atsu kcom or TouroNY-Middletown.
If I could go back in time I'd tell myself to wait a year and go to MD school.Hey all,
I recently read a thread about going back to summer of MS1 and it inspired me to write this post. As an incoming medical student, I would like to know if there is anything you all would have done if you could go back in time? Im asking in regard to medical school and setting yourself up to match in your desired specialty. I am not sure that I will really want to pursue a very competitive specialty, but I would like to start from day 1 as if I were. Just incase down the road I decide to and I am not sidelined. Thanks so much!
I heard someone say once that the best way to get through tough military training is to go unnoticed. If you can get to the end of training without the instructors knowing your name then it means you did it right. Medical school is the same way - get in and get out without making much of a fuss and your life will be much better for it.
I'm just ranting now--but THE worst type of people in med school are the born to regurgitate ones. Its amazing to me how many there are. The system rewards uncreative, unquestioning, automatons. Luckily, those of us that don't fit all the little cliques of medical school can turn to SDN for solace.![]()
I can relate...the averages on our exams are usually 88-89 with a few 85s here and there. Class rank will be crap for me but I'm still doing well in classes. It's not effective learning while having an exam every 2 days. Its cramming and regurgitating, which some people have a much higher aptitude forSalty you can't memorize effectively?
Oh lord no! But plenty of my classmates do. Im about 10 years too old for that.
Nah brah Im doing better than most. I pray to the viking goddess Anki all hours of the day.Salty you can't memorize effectively?
I feel you entirely. The subjective human elements that are part of medicine are the worst part. At least we have OMM that is pure thoughI like math, Idk. I’m just kind of tired about learning pointless pathways and receptors and peoples names that doctors don’t even use anyways. The math is pure, it has no motives, it’s just there. Whereas Claude, benedict, and Weber just had to name strokes after themselves. I’m really getting worn out haha
When you're first exposed to the material the understanding component is definitely more important than the memorization component, but looking back at my first two years I feel like memorization is all anyone ever didI'm just ranting now--but THE worst type of people in med school are the born to regurgitate ones
When you have exams every couple days that's all you can do...in my opinion that's not the best way to test but I guess that's just my schools curriculumWhen you're first exposed to the material the understanding component is definitely more important than the memorization component, but looking back at my first two years I feel like memorization is all anyone ever did
Oh my, there are some salty inferiority complex mofos in here.
Who cares if there's a bias in certain programs/specialties? Work harder. Be better. Complaining about it isn't going to advance your career or the field anytime soon.
Attendings like students who work hard and are happy to be doing whatever they're doing. So do that!
It wasn't. It was written by a recently matched 4th year DO student who experienced plenty of bias, but tried to do my part to eliminate it by working hard. I set up all of my own rotations in a different state from my school and rotated with exclusively MD's for 3rd and 4th year.Clearly the people applying care. That doesn't mean they have an inferiority complex. FYI, inferiority complex involves a person expressing feelings of inadequacy. I don't feel inadequate. If anything I feel significantly more qualified than a large portion of MD students applying to my specialty.
Working harder doesn't eliminate the evidenced DO bias some PDs hold. There are programs who will not accept a DO regardless of board scores, or honors, or anything else. Your advice is crap and honestly sounds like it was written by school admin.
It wasn't. It was written by a recently matched 4th year DO student who experienced plenty of bias, but tried to do my part to eliminate it by working hard. I set up all of my own rotations in a different state from my school and rotated with exclusively MD's for 3rd and 4th year.
You're right. Inferiority complex wasn't the right term. Maybe being whiny is better. I've been around SDN for quite a while, and I get heated when people try to advise people away from the field because they've encountered adversity.
I will never use OMT, I'm not some flag waving AT Still fanatic, but because you've dealt with bias in the field shouldn't make you tell nervous prospective students to not pursue a career. That's ridiculous. I understand that you as an individual aren't going to eliminate anti-DO bias in medicine, but you know what will? If each DO student that rotates or completes residency in a program is a rockstar. That's how bias gets eliminated, not by whining about it online.
I wouldn't disagree with this statement at all. I would NEVER suggest DO>(US)MD.This shouldn't even be a discussion. Pursue DO if you have no other option. If a single USMD school gives you an offer, take it. Theres nothing more that really needs to be said.
DO is still far superior to anything in the Carib or overseas.
Definitely use Skethcy/Pathoma for micro and path respectively. There were a ton of micro points I got back because I remembered some small detail from those pictures. I don't use Anki because the user interface is pretty awful and I just wasn't a fan even though thats blasphemy on here. I have firecracker which I use for additional practice questions and I seem to be doign okay with it. I'm an M-1 so haven't started all that board stuff yetSo before this derails into another DO vs. MD thread....
Everyone always mentions incorporating Anki (pre-made decks like Zanki and whatever), Sketchy, etc earlier. Tips for how you guys do that? I've heard from several people, but am always curious to see how other people study and what works/doesn't work!
If you haven't noticed, Zanki has ton of cards. You should start doing these cards when you move into systems curriculum so you can complete the cards along with the relevant coursework. If you do not do this you will have to do a lot of cards in a short amount of time to mature the deck and it will be hell. Anki is work. I repeat... anki is work. BUT if you do a little each day starting early, you won't be in a world of hurt come 2nd year.So before this derails into another DO vs. MD thread....
Everyone always mentions incorporating Anki (pre-made decks like Zanki and whatever), Sketchy, etc earlier. Tips for how you guys do that? I've heard from several people, but am always curious to see how other people study and what works/doesn't work!
I feel you entirely. The subjective human elements that are part of medicine are the worst part. At least we have OMM that is pure though
So before this derails into another DO vs. MD thread....
Everyone always mentions incorporating Anki (pre-made decks like Zanki and whatever), Sketchy, etc earlier. Tips for how you guys do that? I've heard from several people, but am always curious to see how other people study and what works/doesn't work!
I watched the relevant sketches prior to each lecture for micro and pharm and my method was: Watch once at 1x speed -> review image, and then the next day re-watch those same sketches at 1.5x speed followed by another review of the image and a quick read through the corresponding section in first aid. Then either the same day or next day I'd watch our lecture with the relevant sketches in mind. Memorizing the sketches in advance made getting through lecture pretty easy and gave the sketches more context. Just before our exams I just reviewed every single image for the sketches I viewed for that block. I used this approach even if I came across the same bug/drug later on in the year but in a different organ system. I'm not a fan of flashcards nor am I good at using anki, so I did this instead of using any kind of anki deck. It was pretty painful to do all of that, but I wouldn't have approached pharm or micro any differently looking back.So before this derails into another DO vs. MD thread....
Everyone always mentions incorporating Anki (pre-made decks like Zanki and whatever), Sketchy, etc earlier. Tips for how you guys do that? I've heard from several people, but am always curious to see how other people study and what works/doesn't work!
Not sure how sketchy works yet, but is there a feature in which you can just study the image without purchasing their new books?I watched the relevant sketches prior to each lecture for micro and pharm and my method was: Watch once at 1x speed -> review image, and then the next day re-watch those same sketches at 1.5x speed followed by another review of the image and a quick read through the corresponding section in first aid. Then either the same day or next day I'd watch our lecture with the relevant sketches in mind. Memorizing the sketches in advance made getting through lecture pretty easy and gave the sketches more context. Just before our exams I just reviewed every single image for the sketches I viewed for that block. I used this approach even if I came across the same bug/drug later on in the year but in a different organ system. I'm not a fan of flashcards nor am I good at using anki, so I did this instead of using any kind of anki deck. It was pretty painful to do all of that, but I wouldn't have approached pharm or micro any differently looking back.
Yeah it shows you the image and you can hover your mouse over certain parts of the image to see what each part symbolizes. I think some people prefer to purchase one of their workbooks and take notes in that as opposed to re-watching videos though.Not sure how sketchy works yet, but is there a feature in which you can just study the image without purchasing their new books?
Awesome. Thanks. I’ve been debating if I should purchase them or not.Yeah it shows you the image and you can hover your mouse over certain parts of the image to see what each part symbolizes. I think some people prefer to purchase one of their workbooks and take notes in that as opposed to re-watching videos though.
Pure nonsense you mean. Don’t get me wrong there are definitely some interesting techniques but I ain’t feeling some of this voodoo busy work ****.
You ain’t experienced voodoo medicine until you’ve heard one of the lectures required at my school as part of our clinical curriculum. The term “medical astrology” is used unironically. I think it involves dragons or something at some point, too; I kind of zoned out. A friend of mine has the theory that they allow the guy to give this lecture, since as physicians, we’ll have to work with other practitioners who have out there beliefs. I’m just glad the dude wasn’t an anti-vaxxer (he’s a pediatrician) on top of all his other crazy ideas.
So if I could give any of you advice, do not let medicine define your life. It will not completely fulfill you. You need to have goals outside of your career. Enjoy your family, friends, and loved ones. Find your hobbies and invest time into them.
Yeah. I assume it’s meant more as don’t draw unwanted attention. Not good attention. Congrats on the solid work so far.I just wanted to counter the "keep your head down and mind your business" argument. I got invited to spend time this summer with some incredible surgeons, people who have procedures named after them, like big - big deal people. I don't have any special connections, I come from a no-name, poor family. I'm getting to do this simply because I put myself out there. Of course there's an element of "keep your head down" that rings true, like complaining to faculty all the time and stuff like that. I'm just saying go meet people, get outside your comfort zone to make good connections, that and working hard in your classes will really open doors - even as a DO.
This might be the best post I’ve ever seen on SDN.