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deleted1146538
Hello,
Could anyone offer some advice on whether it's realistic for me to aim for MD/DO + PhD programs for this upcoming application cycle? It seems like a long shot given my scores and the competitive applicant pool. I have not reached out to anyone directly in the MD/PhD admissions community, but my current research mentors have pushed me to give it a shot. Granted, these are all PhD's, or MD's, and none of them have gone through an MD/PhD program. They also don't interact with the admissions side of things. From what I can tell, it seems like my only shot at medical school as of now are some of the newer DO programs out there.
I'm an older (31) non-traditional applicant, 1st gen, who has qualified for FAP, and hoping to be considered “disadvantaged” based on economic factors.
Scores:
Undergrad GPA: 3.0
Grad school (Biomedical Eng./Design) GPA: 3.8
Postbac GPA: 3.2*
Cumulative GPA (unweighted): ~3.2
MCAT: 501; 506
*Combination of family health, working full-time, and COVID hit me hard. My trajectory is upward, with nearly straight A's in the last 20 credits of the program.
Research Experience:
Lab Experience: Worked with 3 big labs over the past 5 years
Fields: Medical devices, wearables, fMRI, neuroscience/neurology, neurocritical care
Publications: 10 published, ~5 in the works (Mix of bigger names like Nature, Science, etc. as well smaller journals. I have 2 first author papers that I'm hoping will be published within the next 12-18 months)
Research hours: At least ~5,000
Posters: Several
Patents: 1 in progress
Awards: Some grad school awards, as well as a Nature Medicine Spinoff award
Grants: Helped write a successful R01
Other: Currently an undergraduate research supervisor and have helped a lot of undergrads get involved with published research and poster presentations.
Clinical Work Experience:
Experience: Currently an fMRI tech and clinical imaging manager at my local medical school (T20 public school) and their affiliated hospital. I've been in this role for about 18 months, which has been an awesome gig.
Clinical Hours: ~1,500
Clinical Trials: Helped develop and manage 2 small clinical trials
Clinical Volunteer Experience:
~500 hours. Some unique projects like doing x rays for free dental clinics and designing prosthetics for children for a non-profit as well as more traditional avenues like hospital volunteering, red cross, etc.
Non-Clinical Work Experience:
Spent 4 years working in medical device R&D after grad school. Worked on 2 FDA approvals, several medical devices, and was a leader within the company.
Community Volunteering:
A lot of community volunteering over the past 10 years, at least ~5,000 hours. Everything from after helping with school high school programs, coaching high school wrestling, working with veterans, habitat for humanity, etc.
Letters of Rec:
Strong letters from PI's and doctors/medical directors who were my direct supervisors and knew me on a personal level
For what it's worth, I have a strong relationship with my current neurology PI/medical director, and my dream would be to continue neuro research as a medical student here at the medical school I currently work at.
Thank you very much for your feedback!
Could anyone offer some advice on whether it's realistic for me to aim for MD/DO + PhD programs for this upcoming application cycle? It seems like a long shot given my scores and the competitive applicant pool. I have not reached out to anyone directly in the MD/PhD admissions community, but my current research mentors have pushed me to give it a shot. Granted, these are all PhD's, or MD's, and none of them have gone through an MD/PhD program. They also don't interact with the admissions side of things. From what I can tell, it seems like my only shot at medical school as of now are some of the newer DO programs out there.
I'm an older (31) non-traditional applicant, 1st gen, who has qualified for FAP, and hoping to be considered “disadvantaged” based on economic factors.
Scores:
Undergrad GPA: 3.0
Grad school (Biomedical Eng./Design) GPA: 3.8
Postbac GPA: 3.2*
Cumulative GPA (unweighted): ~3.2
MCAT: 501; 506
*Combination of family health, working full-time, and COVID hit me hard. My trajectory is upward, with nearly straight A's in the last 20 credits of the program.
Research Experience:
Lab Experience: Worked with 3 big labs over the past 5 years
Fields: Medical devices, wearables, fMRI, neuroscience/neurology, neurocritical care
Publications: 10 published, ~5 in the works (Mix of bigger names like Nature, Science, etc. as well smaller journals. I have 2 first author papers that I'm hoping will be published within the next 12-18 months)
Research hours: At least ~5,000
Posters: Several
Patents: 1 in progress
Awards: Some grad school awards, as well as a Nature Medicine Spinoff award
Grants: Helped write a successful R01
Other: Currently an undergraduate research supervisor and have helped a lot of undergrads get involved with published research and poster presentations.
Clinical Work Experience:
Experience: Currently an fMRI tech and clinical imaging manager at my local medical school (T20 public school) and their affiliated hospital. I've been in this role for about 18 months, which has been an awesome gig.
Clinical Hours: ~1,500
Clinical Trials: Helped develop and manage 2 small clinical trials
Clinical Volunteer Experience:
~500 hours. Some unique projects like doing x rays for free dental clinics and designing prosthetics for children for a non-profit as well as more traditional avenues like hospital volunteering, red cross, etc.
Non-Clinical Work Experience:
Spent 4 years working in medical device R&D after grad school. Worked on 2 FDA approvals, several medical devices, and was a leader within the company.
Community Volunteering:
A lot of community volunteering over the past 10 years, at least ~5,000 hours. Everything from after helping with school high school programs, coaching high school wrestling, working with veterans, habitat for humanity, etc.
Letters of Rec:
Strong letters from PI's and doctors/medical directors who were my direct supervisors and knew me on a personal level
For what it's worth, I have a strong relationship with my current neurology PI/medical director, and my dream would be to continue neuro research as a medical student here at the medical school I currently work at.
Thank you very much for your feedback!
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