I never fully get why people ask these sorts of questions. You don't have any idea how the program directors (or, more likely, application screeners) will view the differential between your step I score and your clinical grades, and neither do any of the people on this board. You asked for programs in certain geographical regions that might rank you but, again, no one here will know the answer. And if we claimed to, if we said, "Don't apply to Northwestern because they only rank people with really stellar grades," would you believe us?
Somewhere out there on the interwebs, there's a list of programs by city or region or state or whatever. Figure out where you want to go and apply to every program in those regions. Invariably, in so doing, you'll encompass some programs at the top, middle, and lower tiers, thereby guaranteeing some "safety schools," as it were. Relative to what you've already paid and what your future earnings are likely to be, it costs next to nothing to apply to large numbers of programs.
Beyond that, do what others have said: improve your performance. What is it that's standing between you and high-pass or honors? Your attitude? Work ethic? Medical knowledge? Surely it's something. Trying to elevate your application to meet the expectations of whichever programs you hope to match into is surely more honorable than hunting for that one program that is willing to lower its standards to accept someone who bombs OSCEs and shelfs (someone who can crank out a 250 on Step I should be able to turn it on for these other exams).