- Joined
- May 6, 2006
- Messages
- 269
- Reaction score
- 1
yeah man it up, men
They just don't get it. My mom doesn't get it either. I am 30, and I don't need her approval anymore for anything, but it would be nice. Mostly, I am embarassed that she doesn't know what she's talking about.
I am about as white as they come, except that I used to be a really good dunker, and I had a 33" vertical leap in my prime. So is she. I think its more of an age thing. Your parents and mine just don't understand what a DO does. Hell, I didn't until less than 2 years ago. They'll figure it out once you're actually practicing medicine.
Nah, its more like , i want to be a DO, just pissed off at parents who don't understand, and I am trying to vent in an anonymous forum, hoping to send the message that one should be a DO or an MD because he chooses to be one.
I am not here lamenting my future DO degree. Its ok, my sympathy gauge is low too bro. lets end it here.
yeah man it up, men
I am glad that at least YOU want the DO degree. It's you who has to do the work, so you should reap the benefits as well.
Ya man, you better man it up , bro, yes dude. chill. 😱
Agree one hundred percent, it is all about being the best doctor you can be. and has nothing do with being a DO or an MD
hey desi, I am only kidddinnngg
who put this together? huh?
....It would be insulting if my mother chooses to not take me as her PCP because I am a DO.....
ive gotten into MD and DO schools, and at this point i think id rather go DO simply because its less cutthroat and more laid back.
hmmmm
i like these debates and since its 3:30 am and i can't sleep i will join in on this one...
in the real world...some patients know the difference but most don't...the doctors i work with just have Dr. on their name badge... and the degree letters are alot smaller...but this a smaller city in upstate NY...when i worked in nyc some ppl did say i don't want a DO i want a real doctor...but for the most part if you are smart, smiling, and articulate patients will like you...
nurses know the difference and some comment on it and others don't really care... we have great doctors who are DOs and not so good ones who are MDs, just be competent and they won't care either....however...when i told the doctors i work with that i was applying... they all looked around and said... don't become a DO apply MD...even the ones whose colleagues are DOs...they said i will have an easier time with residencies and you don't want to questioned by others your whole life....every single MD said this... because i had my DO acceptances before the MD ones
my bf is a podiatrist...and he is confident ...brilliant... and chief resident and he gets alittle upset by the stigma of podiatrists... he always get...wow you are smart for a podiatrist... and he says he thinks being a DO you get the same response...
its silly to think that DOs are alooked upon the same as MDs....just like its silly to think that FMGs are looked upon the same as amercian grads...but do they all make a good living and have patients that adore them? SURE
so if i didn't get into an MD school i would have gladly gone to UNECOM and looved it! because as my nurse manager said you should be happy that u were accepted to any school in the US ;-)...but i want to be an oncologist so it really doesn't matter for me...but my best friend who wants to be a neurosurgeon would have had a harder time... so look at your specialty and look at your motivation...and follow your heart
but MD does not equal DO... just like harvard does not equal upstate or gw (one of these will probably be my school and i am soooooo happy!!)
there is nothing wrong with ppl saying i only want to be a MD
by the way...I have interviewed at many MD and DO schools... all of my schools were laidback...not cut throat...no sabotaging...shared notes...friendly...supportive... so that isn't a fair stereotype of allopathaic schools anymore...
good luck to everyone applying...
mel;-)
nurses know the difference and some comment on it and others don't really care... we have great doctors who are DOs and not so good ones who are MDs, just be competent and they won't care either....however...when i told the doctors i work with that i was applying... they all looked around and said... don't become a DO apply MD...even the ones whose colleagues are DOs...they said i will have an easier time with residencies and you don't want to questioned by others your whole life....every single MD said this... because i had my DO acceptances before the MD ones
Do you know just how silly this phrase sounds?my bf is a podiatrist...and he is confident ...brilliant... and chief resident and he gets alittle upset by the stigma of podiatrists... he always get...wow you are smart for a podiatrist... and he says he thinks being a DO you get the same response...
I think this is the paragraph that is most insulting. DO practice rights ===== MD. No ifs ands or buts (excluding the 5 infamous states that I foresee changing soon). Their curriculums differ by OMM, that's all. I have long been comparing my top 2 choices, one a DO, the other an MD school, and the basic courses are the same with exception to OMM. Clinical rotations must meet a minimum criteria by accreditation and licensing laws, so they are the same too.its silly to think that DOs are alooked upon the same as MDs....just like its silly to think that FMGs are looked upon the same as amercian grads...but do they all make a good living and have patients that adore them? SURE
There are not any oncology DO programs I'm aware of, but a few neurosurgery DO programs that MDs can't match into. So technically, DOs have a better shot at NS than allos do. You are showing that you have a lot of opinion about DOs but not much based on fact.so if i didn't get into an MD school i would have gladly gone to UNECOM and looved it! because as my nurse manager said you should be happy that u were accepted to any school in the US ;-)...but i want to be an oncologist so it really doesn't matter for me...but my best friend who wants to be a neurosurgeon would have had a harder time... so look at your specialty and look at your motivation...and follow your heart
yes it does. And it's you who will have to get used to it. Did you know that Harvard offers an OMM training course now?but MD does not equal DO... just like harvard does not equal upstate or gw (one of these will probably be my school and i am soooooo happy!!)
no, there's not. However, there is something wrong with people being all gung-ho for osteopathic medical school, UNTIL they are accepted to an allo school, and then start talking out of both sides of their mouth.there is nothing wrong with ppl saying i only want to be a MD
You saw a glimpse into student life. You won't know until you get there.by the way...I have interviewed at many MD and DO schools... all of my schools were laidback...not cut throat...no sabotaging...shared notes...friendly...supportive... so that isn't a fair stereotype of allopathaic schools anymore...
well then if that is where you heart is then i think its a great idea...
i do think if you would have gotten into an MD school last year you would have gone there and loooved it too... i don't think you would have been saying...oh man i wish i was in a DO school...i am not bashing DO because i really really loooved UNECOM and WVSOM...i think UNECOM more just because i wasn't so keen on living in rural WV....
I don't think they're "trying really hard" at all. A good doctor will have a lot of patients. The philosophy is pushed so much in school so that you will remember when you're practicing. A DO may not do a lot of OMM, but it will help with a gentle touch or not being afraid to touch the patient. You fail to realize that one of the BIGGEST deterrents to people choosing DO over MD is the COST of medical school. I'm in at CCOM, and the tuition is 38,500 a year (roughly). If I get in at SIU, the tuition drops to 22,000 (roughly for what I need). Unfortunately, debt is a high-ranking decision-maker too. It's not "just" the MD/DO issue at stake.i always wonder about that...if ppl had a choice would they choose DO over MD...but if more ppl say yes then that is great for osteopathic medicine... i think i had this convo in my unecom interview... i think if this is really true then the profession will in fact start to grow... and ppl will embrace the techniques and philosophy more... it seems like now... pre-meds and academic DOs are the only ones who push the philosophy....practicing DOs just try soo hard to blend in and be accepted by MDs....
yeah, you should take that vice-versa and really examine it. From what I've seen on the pre-osteo vs. pre-allo boards, the pre-osteo folks have got it together. There's way less gunner-ism, neuroticism about the most minute details (although it's there), and snarky responses. If you post about DO school in pre-allo, they laugh at you. If you post about MD schools in pre-osteo, it's no big thing, just another medical school.like i said... ppl should follow their heart...and its not cool to bash the majority because you are the minority...meaning... DO premeds shouldn't bash ppl who want to be MDs....and u shouldn't insult allopathic schools...and vice versa...
again, you don't know what you're talking about. Here, go to this website and you can see the osteo neurosurg residencies yourself. Looks like there are 11 different NS residencies for DOs ONLY. Nice try on the DO bashing, but you need to do your homework.your MD neurosurgeon looks at his colleagues as equals because they ARE all brain surgeons...but i bet he had an 'easier' time getting there than his DO counterparts...i put it in quotes because becoming a neurosurgeon is not easy by any means....
Here is why I think people get confused...
People who aren't doctors look at things like match lists (meaningless) to judge the quality of a school. They look for things like derm and neurosurgery, and assume that everybody wants to go into those fields. If a school doesn't have a lot of people matching into stuff like that, they assume that nobody from that school can get good residency placement.
Then they look at DO match lists and see tons of primary care matches. They assume that all 80 people from DO school X wanted to match derm, but ended up in primary care because that was all they could get.
But here's the deal... DO schools are traditionally primary care factories. So what kind of students do you think they attract?
That's right! People who want to go into primary care. So of course they're going to match a lot of primary care. On top of that, DO schools have a lot more older non-trads. These are people who might not want to spend a long time doing residency and fellowship training after school. Again, more primary care.
But if you want to do something else, the option is clearly there. You have to pretty much do the same thing as you'd do at an allopathic school. In some cases, it may be a little harder, but this is becoming less and less frequent.
This is what I gather from talking with many DO's and MD's about this exact subject. Just go to school at the place you like the best. Except for very few instances, you will be evaluated on your own merits.
I think this is the paragraph that is most insulting. DO practice rights ===== MD. No ifs ands or buts (excluding the 5 infamous states that I foresee changing soon). Their curriculums differ by OMM, that's all. I have long been comparing my top 2 choices, one a DO, the other an MD school, and the basic courses are the same with exception to OMM. Clinical rotations must meet a minimum criteria by accreditation and licensing laws, so they are the same too.
hmmmm
i like these debates and since its 3:30 am and i can't sleep i will join in on this one...
in the real world...some patients know the difference but most don't...the doctors i work with just have Dr. on their name badge... and the degree letters are alot smaller...but this a smaller city in upstate NY...when i worked in nyc some ppl did say i don't want a DO i want a real doctor...but for the most part if you are smart, smiling, and articulate patients will like you...
nurses know the difference and some comment on it and others don't really care... we have great doctors who are DOs and not so good ones who are MDs, just be competent and they won't care either....however...when i told the doctors i work with that i was applying... they all looked around and said... don't become a DO apply MD...even the ones whose colleagues are DOs...they said i will have an easier time with residencies and you don't want to questioned by others your whole life....every single MD said this... because i had my DO acceptances before the MD ones
my bf is a podiatrist...and he is confident ...brilliant... and chief resident and he gets alittle upset by the stigma of podiatrists... he always get...wow you are smart for a podiatrist... and he says he thinks being a DO you get the same response...
its silly to think that DOs are alooked upon the same as MDs....just like its silly to think that FMGs are looked upon the same as amercian grads...but do they all make a good living and have patients that adore them? SURE
so if i didn't get into an MD school i would have gladly gone to UNECOM and looved it! because as my nurse manager said you should be happy that u were accepted to any school in the US ;-)...but i want to be an oncologist so it really doesn't matter for me...but my best friend who wants to be a neurosurgeon would have had a harder time... so look at your specialty and look at your motivation...and follow your heart
but MD does not equal DO... just like harvard does not equal upstate or gw (one of these will probably be my school and i am soooooo happy!!)
there is nothing wrong with ppl saying i only want to be a MD
by the way...I have interviewed at many MD and DO schools... all of my schools were laidback...not cut throat...no sabotaging...shared notes...friendly...supportive... so that isn't a fair stereotype of allopathaic schools anymore...
good luck to everyone applying...
mel;-)
The internist I shadowed (MD) told me that out of te group that he works with (5 MDs and 2 DOs) that one of the DOs is the most brilliant and best doctor in the practice.
So basically you just seem stuck up to me with those comments. By the way how is the world did you get into Harvard or GW with those stats? ..... o yea
Ok...now to her defense, lets not start that. She has clinical experience and her stats are not bad. Lets leave the claws in people I am sure she worked hard and deserves what she earned. We are not going to turn this into an anti URM thread I hope.
Not sure what you meant with the "....excluding the 5 infamous states that I foresee changing soon." That has to do with internships/residency options, and not practice rights.
I am not going to turn this thread into anti URM- but I do think that people should'nt open their mouth about how DO is inferior to MD to pre-DO students which most of them have better stats then them in the first place.
Give me a break.
I read this thread and I gotta agree with sexyman. If it wasn't for the URM status dancinRN would probably have been lucky to get into a good DO school. While I realize this may be a loaded comment, I do not think people should be so opinionated about the significance of DO vs. MD when they stand on a platform of borderline stats, despite clinical experience or an MD acceptance.
This message goes out to all my fellow Indian Pre-Meds who have parents that dont understand why being a D.O. is equivalent to M.D.
All you have to do is ask them this question: If doctors from India who have MBBS degrees can come to America, do their residency and then practice with physicians who got their M.D. degrees studying in America and be treated as equivalent, then why cant a person go to an osteopathic medical college in America and be treated as equivalent to an M.D.
I think to be considered a minority group you have to be around the 10% range. Emphasis on I think.
look how quick you judged me for being black and having lower MCAT scores and GPAs than you...MD's know that DOs have lower MCAT scores and GPA than most of them...
Mel🙂
dancinRN, I have no idea why you think I was calling you names. I did not mention URM at all. I stuck to the issues at hand. And I still think you have some bias toward DOs. Not because you decided to choose MD, but because you then come here and "tell us like it is" while trying to boost the DO profession. Again, that's talking out of both sides of your mouth and really unpleasant.
Words like archaic and inflammatory were used to describe your line of thinking, of which you parrot back from your MD buddies.
DOs *don't* want to be the same as MDs. If that were the case, it would have been done long ago. They just strive for the same practice rights (achieved now) and respect (we know how that's going) as MDs. Your cronies at work don't have respect for DOs at all. Despite what they say, it's getting infinitely LESS hard to match in a particular specialty as a DO, which is the crux of your argument, right? Remember your neurosurgeon and rads onc examples?
I can tell by the rest of the responses here that you think you are "doing us a favor" and "telling us how it is". You can go ahead and stop. Most of us applied to both DO and MD programs - we know how some MDs feel about DOs. And believe it or not, some of us have also had successful careers in health care, and work with both DOs and MDs.
You might be trying to be helpful, but you're condescending in your posts.
hahahahhahahahaha I guess sending a PM in order to not argue with you in public wasm't effective... i wasn't being condescending....its the internet... you read it that way🙂
I believe I know plenty of DO's with >27 MCAT and a >3.1 Science GPA.
Again, I do notice that you said MOST and not ALL, but your statement is hypocritical nevertheless. No one is judging you for your race. It is merely a fact that URM status increases your chances of acceptance with lower stats. You were the one to point out you are African American. If you say you do not comprehend why people are getting angry for your stated "facts" about the DO degree, why would you reiterate with defensive comments about your URM status?
With that said, I do wish you luck in pursuing your MD and I hope the way you meet the challenges you face in medical school and beyond reflect your true ability to handle the academic and professional load of a physician.
Folks, please don't feed the trolling behavior. Just let it die.
That's awesome!!!
Yep...Check this out.
http://www.kirbydermatology.com/about.htm
http://www.drwillkirby.com/about/index.php
I think someone on here has his picture as his avatar...cough<jaggerplate>
![]()
It's ok, DancinRN is too good for us now that she got into her all mighty MD school 🙂 Now she can whisper to the md's when there are no do's aroundFolks, please don't feed the trolling behavior. Just let it die.
The most surprising revelation on this thread... totally did not picture you being 30 texas. Don't get me wrong, I love your sarcastic posts, but I pictured you being 22-24ish... being 30 probably makes you even cooler.I am 30, and I don't need her approval anymore for anything
I brought up that I was African Amercian because I was tired of being referred to as a URM...