law2, really? (as in DO's opposing merge) wow, that's interesting... i'd just assumed (i know, bad! slap!) that they'd support it on the basis of leveling the playing field for sort of a free-trade agreement in medicine. i'll have to suss this out. sorry for the assumption; i just keep running into so much elitism from the MD camp that i tend to cynically apply it everywhere, even though it's CLEARLY not everyone, and that's a terrible stereotype to make!
re the OP... i don't know for sure so this is 100% anecdotal, but i think you folks might be right about the difficulties of going overseas with a DO degree. in australia "osteopath" means something entirely different from "medical doctor". like, ENTIRELY different. more like a specialist physiotherapist or something. an MD, however, is also a weird degree overseas. basically anywhere but the US it refers to a PhD-doctoral level training in medicine rather than a clinical practice degree. the MD equivalent is MBBS, at least in oz. so if you were to apply for overseas residencies with an MD, you'd have to stipulate that your degree was an MBBS-level degree, unless you had achieved the even higher Doctor of Medicine degree. the point is that while you'd spend a lot of time explaining that yes, a DO is a practicing medical degree, you'd also spend a lot of time assuring them that your MD is also a valid degree.
lotsa alphabet soup if you ask me... hence why i think doing away with the alphabets and allowing competition between schools rather than between degrees would be a good thing. call that soviet all you want, and call me a bonehead all you want, but i don't see how that destroys free-market enterprise of ideas. actually i don't think that could at all unless you were standardising at the school level... which oddly enough is kind of what the bushies did 3.5 years ago with all primary and secondary education! wow, so are THEY commies as well? get a grip.