It's great that you guys specifically identify as osteopathic physicians and seem to have a sense of pride about that. I mean that sincerely. But I would bet that the vast majority of DOs (like >95%, and especially most recent grads) couldn't care less about the letters after their name, and went to DO school because they wanted to practice medicine in the US and didn't get into a USMD school.
In my opinion, this merger is the first (well not even first probably, lets say next) step in the destruction and phasing out of the DO degree in the US. While not exactly the same, the story of the LL.B. and JD is a good parallel. At some point accrediting and licensing bodies will realize that there's basically no difference between DO and MD physicians nowadays, everything will come under the same bodies, and DO schools will start conferring the MD degree. At this point, previous DO grads will have the option to update their degree to a MD, which the vast majority will. Some won't so you will still see DO after names occasionally, just like you still occasionally see LL.B.
This will likely happen in full when the old guard of DOs eventually retire/die/etc, and what is left is a group of physicans who the vast majority don't feel any particular connection to osteopathic medicine. They just view themselves as physicians, not specifically osteopathic physicians.
That's my guess anyway.
What your saying makes sense, and the way admissions are going It may be true, but the most important aspect of this is the time frame. We may see paradigm shifts while we are practicing as DOs or MDs, but I highly doubt the DO degree will disappear for a very long time.
While there are many on this forum that would jump at the chance for an MD, just as many, if not more of us are indifferent of medical degree type or very supportive of the DO degree. Take my home region of Appalachia and the southeast, there is almost a 1:1 ratio of DO:MD schools, and most MD programs are very "Osteopathic" in the sense that they are very rural medicine and MUS oriented (my university's MD program is very rural medicine oriented). Here we all have a common goal, and as a result here is very little if any DO bias.
What is This common goal? Rural medicine. Largely rural communities have been left hung out to dry by the medical community. As a result many areas (especially in the south) have physician shortages. 9 times out of 10 you will rarely find a MD student willing to practice in a small town/rural area. Hell, we have doctors joining Doctors without borders when we have physician shortages in our own country. DOs however are created for these areas. Look at schools like WVSOM, CUSOM, KYCOM, or any of the VCOMs. All strongly emphasize rural medicine with their students.
So maybe in the future we will see the DO degree die and the 100% MD takeover, but for now America needs DOs. Until MD schools can realize there is an issue with a patient having to drive 3 hours round trip to a hospital/office and fix it, the DO degree needs to stay. I don't care who does it, but this needs to be fixed before we blindly start destroying the degrees that are focused on furthering rural medicine. If it comes to it, I would 100% forego a clinical career after my medical education to advocate for this whether it is in the AOA or AMA.
Truth be told, the way I see it, the DO degree only still exists because MDs continually drop the ball in rural/underserved areas. They are the physicians medicine needs right now, they are just not the ones it wants. Remember DOs were created by AT Still as a reactionary movement against MD practices. I believe they still exist for that exact purpose, albeit now it is a reaction against the MD aversion towards rural medicine. Someone has to do it, and if MDs won't, DOs will.
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