I respectfully disagree.
I do not recall castigating NYIT. What I said was, "Long Island sucks. It's expensive and boring, and you have to get on a train for an hour to get to Manhattan. I can't wait to get out of NYIT." I grew up on Long Island and have lived there all my life. I therefore find it transcendally boring, expensive, and obnoxious. However, my education (in English literature) at NYIT was of the highest quality. I loved every second of it. NYIT also afforded me opportunities I could never have found elsewhere. I had a ball and learned a lot. I graduated summa with a 3.97. I was sad to receive my B.A. That's why I'm back at NYIT as a post-bacc. I love it there.
I agree that NYCOM has better (nay, the best) clinical rotation sites. I never contended otherwise. In fact, I actually wrote, "Hospital Affiliations: undergrad, probably NYCOM. In terms of GME, PCOM--no question." However, your statement "there is no such thing as 'PCOM GME'" baffles me. Please don't put words into my mouth--especially when they don't make any--any!--sense. As I'm pretty sure everyone else on SDN understood, PCOM GME = graduate medical education programs sponsored by PCOM. (More specifically, ER, IM, FP, cards, nephrology, ophtho, ortho, urology, ENT, OB/GYN, gen surg, plastic/reconstructive surg, neurosurgery, geriatrics, derm, OMM, emergency medical services) Why, pray tell, would you assume that I was implying that only PCOM grads qualified for acceptance into said programs? I never said anything remotely similar to that! That being said, PCOM's residencies are the best in the osteopathic world in terms of number of residencies and fellowships, volume of cases, scope of pathology, quality, and location--again, major allopathic hospitals. NYCOM--which has lots of GME in super-dooper community hospitals (including some really ghastly ones, e.g. in Far Rockaway...)--has nothing that comes close except for neurosurg at LIJ and ER at the Barny (which, mind you, is no Temple or CHOP), which is better than PCOM's ER program, despite the fact that PCOM's is dually-accredited (ACGME and AOA). I'm sorry, but I'd like to hear an argument contrary to what I just said. NYCOM's rotations are great, whereas PCOM's leave much to be desired, but when you want postgrad training, it's not even the same ilk.
I also never said that you're limited to practicing in the state in which you graduated. Where did you get that from? What I wrote was, "Going to PCOM will not make it more difficult to practice in New York. And yes, PA does require the internship, but it's not particularly difficult to have ACGME programs counted as your osteopathic PGY1."
Unfortunately, NYCOM's class size isn't going to descend from its stratospherically high 320 anytime soon. It was made that size for a reason: money! NYCOM is NYIT's biggest money maker.
Please don't misquote me or twist my words around to serve your own ends. Can't you read? What's wrong with you? 🙄