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Are DOs as competitive as MDs for military residencies, or do DOs face the same uphill fight for competitive residencies (ortho etc.) that they would face applying for an allopathic residency?
Are DOs as competitive as MDs for military residencies, or do DOs face the same uphill fight for competitive residencies (ortho etc.) that they would face applying for an allopathic residency?
Just don't go to lecom they are child molesters.
Just don't go to lecom they are child molesters.
Listen just because one student did that doesn't make the rest of us bad apples. I mean the rest of us are just into that whole bondage thing, I mean what do you think we do in OMM class?Just don't go to lecom they are child molesters.
Just don't go to lecom they are child molesters.
Are DOs as competitive as MDs for military residencies, or do DOs face the same uphill fight for competitive residencies (ortho etc.) that they would face applying for an allopathic residency?
DO's are at a disadvantage. They in GENERAL have much more difficulty with test taking and as such have issues with board passage they have lower MCATs and their schools are in GENERAL not affiliated with major institutions of learning and thus farm their medical students out to anyone who will train them, with the associated loss of quality control. They also seem to come in far less prepared to function as a physician than those graduates from MD schools. There is a lot of consternation among residency program directors about the military's reliance on DO's and the very clear decline in the caliber of HPSP accesions.
This is going to sound mean, but I think it is funny that LECOM (whatever the hell that stands for) is opening a 3rd campus. Let's face it, if you "medical school" is in a strip mall, don't be surprised if some of us are skeptical. What's next - Univesity of Pheonix offering medical degrees online?
Its frank, blunt, painful but the truth.
This is true, if you're assuming that an individual's performance on a couple of days of standardized testing really distinguishes much.If the residencies really want to distinguish the good students from the bad, regardless of their degree, all they really have to do is look at their USMLE/COMLEX scores. It's not rocket science.
I don't have the time right now, but if you want to do a search, you'll see a fair bit of news about this. The USMLE folks have been considering making the Step I/II pass/fail within the next few years. There were links posted to this information from USMLE and the like around SDN before. It shouldn't be too hard to find if you're interested. One of the deans actually mentioned that the class below mine may be the last one to take a non-pass/fail Step I.Also, as far as decreasing the weight on USMLE,
No. Uber-competitive specialties are still USMLE-obsessed (RadOnc, Derm, Rads, etc.), but some of the rest seem less interested in Step 1 than you might think. Surgery sure seems to be one of the hold-outs, but that doesn't impact me.you're either talking about FP, or you're fooling yourself.
This is true, if you're assuming that an individual's performance on a couple of days of standardized testing really distinguishes much.
Sometimes I think folks in medicine really drink deep from the standardized testing Kool-aid. Probably comes from being weaned at a young age on doing well on the Pre-SAT, then the SAT, then the MCAT, then the USMLE, etc. etc. etc.
Happily, the value of scores like the USMLE is just going down. Lots of residencies are looking at USMLE scores more as a "can they read well?" and then give LORs and rotation evals much bigger weight.
No interest in the MD vs. DO thing. Too often DO's feel obligated to defend their choice regardless of whether they had other options or not and MD students feel the need to flaunt superiority at the risk of their degree being somehow unvalued. It's tired (not Tired).
Seriously, if you take a bunch of kids with 25-30 MCAT scores, and GPAs under 3.7, is anyone really shocked a few years years later when these same people have lower inservice training scores and somewhat less ability to function on the wards? Garbage in, garbage out.
Is DO's being dismissive of IMG/FMG's really all that different from MD's being dismissive of DO's?BTW, we should all be very thankful for DO schools. MD schools stopped making it a priority to train 1/2 the number of needed doctors a long time ago. So every slot in residency that DO's get now would be going to a FMG otherwise.
Is DO's being dismissive of IMG/FMG's really all that different from MD's being dismissive of DO's?
Do folks need to feel superior to the next guy to be confident in themselves? It smacks of rich kid elitism or the kids who got picked on in the playground.
Happily, the value of scores like the USMLE is just going down. Lots of residencies are looking at USMLE scores more as a "can they read well?" and then give LORs and rotation evals much bigger weight.
Oh, I don't know. I've worked with a few doctors born and trained in India who are much better and more qualified physicians than some of our lower end domestics.And for record, anyone who thinks that we should be turning US students away from med school while hiring half our doctors from third world countries is insane.
Nah. If I had to vote, I'd keep the USMLE and I'd keep it numeric instead of pass/fail. The advantage of the USMLE is that you have an opportunity to see how one students tests versus how another student tests. You can't rely on grades because schools vary so much from one to the other.I have no reason to doubt that this trend is true. But you seem to agree with this strategy
Would you also say that in general the quality of the average state medical school graduate is not as good as the quality of the top 20 med school graduate, based on student selection? Just curious how far that extends.I didn't say they produce poor physicians. But I'm hardly the first person to notice that, in general, the quality of the average DO-graduate is not as good as the average MD-graduate. And it's nothing to do with the curriculum or the degree, it's student selection, plain and simple.
Happily, the value of scores like the USMLE is just going down. Lots of residencies are looking at USMLE scores more as a "can they read well?" and then give LORs and rotation evals much bigger weight.(not Tired).
DO's are at a disadvantage. They in GENERAL have much more difficulty with test taking and as such have issues with board passage they have lower MCATs and their schools are in GENERAL not affiliated with major institutions of learning and thus farm their medical students out to anyone who will train them, with the associated loss of quality control. They also seem to come in far less prepared to function as a physician than those graduates from MD schools. There is a lot of consternation among residency program directors about the military's reliance on DO's and the very clear decline in the caliber of HPSP accesions.
This is going to sound mean, but I think it is funny that LECOM (whatever the hell that stands for) is opening a 3rd campus. Let's face it, if you "medical school" is in a strip mall, don't be surprised if some of us are skeptical. What's next - Univesity of Pheonix offering medical degrees online?
Its frank, blunt, painful but the truth.
I've never understood why folks insist on making this about the DO degree or the curriculum. It's really nothing to do with the education they're offering, and everything to do with the students they select.
Seriously, if you take a bunch of kids with 25-30 MCAT scores, and GPAs under 3.7, is anyone really shocked a few years years later when these same people have lower inservice training scores and somewhat less ability to function on the wards? Garbage in, garbage out.
If the residencies really want to distinguish the good students from the bad, regardless of their degree, all they really have to do is look at their USMLE/COMLEX scores. It's not rocket science.
Emergency Medicine, west coast. I've heard from more than one residency director that USMLE's are just not that big a deal for them. They mentioned that they didn't find a correlation between Step I's and how folks did in the residency program when they arrived.You are fooling yourself! No idea what residencies you are looking at but this is completely not true.
Huh. I'm curious how programs do that, as schools are making massive movements to Pass/Fail systems. I know of lots that have made that switch and none that have gone from P/F to GPA. I think you're over-valuing grades. Also, lots of P/F schools do not do class standing, either.The biggest criteria to get an interview is boards followed by class standing/GPA. LORs and Personal statements are usually looked at way down the line often just prior to your interview, so that the interviewer knows who you are.
Oh, I don't know. I've worked with a few doctors born and trained in India who are much better and more qualified physicians than some of our lower end domestics.
And how does St. Georges and Ross grads fit into the equation? They're training in developing nations. And some of their grads get better residencies than the bottom of the class US allopaths. Is that "insane"?
I'm just curious if your objection is to where folks have trained or where folks were born.
No, actually I never denied it. I agree 100% that in general high GPA and MCAT scores correlates with ability and talent as a physician.
What I said is that Osteopathic schools do not produce poor physicians.
Not true. One thing I haven't found is correlation between intelligence and social skills. The socially inept medical students are just as likely to be the right side of the curve as the left. The stereotype of someone who performs well on standardized tests as being social misfits is inaccurate. There are plenty of shy and inarticulate med students, but it has no relationship to how smart they are.(which lets be honest, the nerds with the high scores are "in general" social rejects, and have trouble dealing with people. ie.. surgeons lol)
The fact that allopathic schools haven't grown in number like osteopathic schools has nothing to do with patients stating preference for osteopaths. It has to do with uncontrolled growth. The fact that LECOM has multiple campuses and UCLA has one doesn't make LECOM a better school or osteopaths more popular.and in many "patients" minds, that makes DOs excellent doctors which explains the explosion of popularity of the Osteopathic profession in the last 2 decades.
The fact that allopathic schools haven't grown in number like osteopathic schools has nothing to do with patients stating preference for osteopaths. It has to do with uncontrolled growth.
Not true. One thing I haven't found is correlation between intelligence and social skills. The socially inept medical students are just as likely to be the right side of the curve as the left. The stereotype of someone who performs well on standardized tests as being social misfits is inaccurate. There are plenty of shy and inarticulate med students, but it has no relationship to how smart they are.quote]
Actually Im gonna still disagree with you. If you dont believe that the best of the Type A gunners out there who, "in general", have the higher scores are less liked by their peers and patients, then you havent been paying attention throughout your life because MANY people have noticed this phenomenon which is why it has become a "Stereotype" in the first place. No one is saying all smart people have inadequate social skills because of course its not true in the least bit because I feel Im a good scorer with social skills for example, and there are tons like me, but as a general rule, if you got into medical school and you werent really that smart, then you probably made up for it in other ways by having strong social skills, etc, compared to the guy with no social skills that had to be brilliant to get in. The fact of the matter is Im mostly talking about the extremes of the profession which do however influence scores, where on the one hand you have the brilliant ******* vs the lovable ******* but unfortunately in the realm of scores the lovable ******* looks poorly but it doesnt necesarily mean their isnt a place for them in medicine, just like the brilliant ******* probably shouldnt be a pediatrician, the ******* probably shouldnt do Cardiology. Most of us MD and DO alike fall somewhere in the middle and my point was that there is more to being a good physician than just scores and grades which the other poster was alluding to and that the DO schools tend to emphasize this more than MD schools.
As for your other point about Osteopathic growth and Mc Donalds hamburgers, you missed the point. I said "popularity" which is far different than "growth", and I never said DOs were more popular than MDs by any stretch, I just said the publics perception of us is increasing in popularity. Growth will naturally happen because of supply and demand of physicians which is why we farm foreigners like crazy who can barely communicate with patients and staff and why we are starting satelite mall schools(which actually I disagree with mainly from a professional prestige perspective) and making Nurse doctors which sucks. Popularity though is the "growth" in satisfaction and stature which our profession has been incurring steadily due to our slightly different approach to medicine which appeals to certain people in the ever changing medical environment. Its not better or worse, its just different from what your used to and I get insulted by some because I have a somewhat different subset of skills than you do and I dont think thats very fair. Its kinda like saying KungFu is better than Tai Chi (which it is 😉 j/k), when in reality its sort of hard to compare the 2 because their intentions although similar, are not exactly the same.
Anyway, these MD vs DO things annoy me so Im done.. What it really boils down to is if your PATIENT thinks you did a good job, and you got them better in the safest most effective way possible, plain and simple. If you do that, all will fall into place no matter who you are.
My gripe with all the new DO schools being built is that they've abandoned that quaint old allopathic tradition of having an associated large, tertiary care teaching hospital.
Kinda like the Caribbean for-profit med schools, actually.
The bottleneck for the pipeline that produces board-certified physicians in this country is residency slots. Seems to me that if they were really interested in producing physicians, they'd put a little more effort into training them after they finish medical school, instead of throwing them to the wolves of the allopathic match.
My brother's a DO student. He'll be as capable a physician as any MD. But his school didn't do him or his classmates any favors by failing to create any new residency slots out there, either by establishing or expanding a teaching hospital.
My gripe with all the new DO schools being built is that they've abandoned that quaint old allopathic tradition of having an associated large, tertiary care teaching hospital.
Kinda like the Caribbean for-profit med schools, actually.
The bottleneck for the pipeline that produces board-certified physicians in this country is residency slots. Seems to me that if they were really interested in producing physicians, they'd put a little more effort into training them after they finish medical school, instead of throwing them to the wolves of the allopathic match.
My brother's a DO student. He'll be as capable a physician as any MD. But his school didn't do him or his classmates any favors by failing to create any new residency slots out there, either by establishing or expanding a teaching hospital.
How does this fit into your equation?
Wow. There's a certain irony in someone trying to fight against the stereotype of DO's being inferior to MD's then turning around and saying there has to be a lot of truth in stereotypes by definitions.If you dont believe that the best of the Type A gunners out there who, "in general", have the higher scores are less liked by their peers and patients, then you havent been paying attention throughout your life because MANY people have noticed this phenomenon which is why it has become a "Stereotype" in the first place.
I was disputing the notion that USMLE=great doc in the first place, so I agree with you on that one. As for the DO schools emphasizing whole applicant more than MD schools? I don't know. I never attended an osteopathic school so I can't say.Most of us MD and DO alike fall somewhere in the middle and my point was that there is more to being a good physician than just scores and grades which the other poster was alluding to and that the DO schools tend to emphasize this more than MD schools.
What does that mean? Apologies, but I don't understand how that is different from popularity? Are you talking about awareness of the DO degree? I can maybe buy that.I never said DOs were more popular than MDs by any stretch, I just said the publics perception of us is increasing in popularity.
Yeah, again, this message goes back to the image issue. It's hard to push for the big differences between MDs and DOs when so many of your colleagues also push for how MD and DO is completely the same.Popularity though is the "growth" in satisfaction and stature which our profession has been incurring steadily due to our slightly different approach to medicine which appeals to certain people in the ever changing medical environment. Its not better or worse, its just different from what your used to and I get insulted by some because I have a somewhat different subset of skills than you do and I dont think thats very fair. Its kinda like saying KungFu is better than Tai Chi (which it is 😉 j/k), when in reality its sort of hard to compare the 2 because their intentions although similar, are not exactly the same.
I couldn't agree with you more there. You treat a patient right and the last thing they care about is where you went to medical school. That's true if you went to Harvard MD vs. Pi$$water Falls Backstate MD vs. Pikesvill DO vs. Upstairs Hollywood Florida Osteopathic Medical College.What it really boils down to is if your PATIENT thinks you did a good job, and you got them better in the safest most effective way possible, plain and simple. If you do that, all will fall into place no matter who you are.
It doesn't fit into my equation, my reading-comprehension-impaired friend, because I was specifically talking about
- newly founded/expanded schools that DON'T have "close associations" with major teaching hospitals
- my brother's school in particular, which DOESN'T have a "close association" with a major teaching hospital
- an overall lack of osteopathic RESIDENCY slots, which is altogether different than the "where DO students go for MS3 & MS4 clinical rotations" issue
Nowhere did I bash or insult DOs, so stop being so defensive.
DO schools produce, on the whole, graduates who are every bit as capable as those from MD schools. A huge number of DOs end up in the allopathic match because there aren't enough osteopathic residency slots out there. The fact that the recently opened DO schools aren't doing anything to rectify this problem ought to concern you.
.I was disputing the notion that USMLE=great doc in the first place, so I agree with you on that one. As for the DO schools emphasizing whole applicant more than MD schools? I don't know. I never attended an osteopathic school so I can't say.
One thing I will say is this: one of the reasons that some allopaths have a tough time figuring out what to make of osteopathic medicine is because often the message coming from osteopaths is a little contradictory.
"The MD and DO training are completely comparable. DO training is identical to MD with the addition of some OMM." You hear this a lot from folks. It seems perfectly logical. I buy it. But you also hear lots of DO's saying "DO training focuses more on the whole patient than MD training. DO training emphasizes the patient more than the illness, compared to MD training." You hear that a lot, too. But the second is in opposition to the first. The training is either identical or different. We hear both.
Another set of contradictions is "Osteopathic schools and allopathic schools have comparable applicants. Why, look at the MCAT/GPA average at (insert DO school) and look at the averages at (insert MD school). We have comparable applicants." Those numbers don't mean a whole lot to me regardless, but that's cool. But you also hear a lot of "Osteopathic schools have lower scores because we look for the 'whole applicant'". Again, this contradicts the first statement. Osteopathic schools are either comparable in testing ability of allopathic schools or they're not. And the idea that allopathic schools don't look for the whole applicant can leave folks feeling a little insulted as well. And, frankly, untrue. Personally, my stats were below the norm for my medical school; they just liked my story.
I support osteopathic medicine because I've worked with and been treated by too many good osteopaths to view them as inferior in any way.
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One thing I will say is this: one of the reasons that some allopaths have a tough time figuring out what to make of osteopathic medicine is because often the message coming from osteopaths is a little contradictory.