DOnut and mddo2b are exactly what the osteopathic field needs. Antgod, do me a favor and dont apply to NYCOM. You have no clue what you're talking about. First, if you're so in love with OMM, why even apply to the MD schools you list? I have absolutely no trouble with people who believe in OMM. I believe in it too. Most of it does work very well. The chiropractic and physical therapy fields would not exist as they do today without OMM's foundations. This doesnt mean you absolutely have to use it everday as a DO physician or else you're not being a "good DO". I think Dr Dowling and the rest of the OMM faculty at NYCOM are wonderful. They are fabulous teachers and must be excellent physicians because their waiting lists for an appointment are months long. However, if I wanted to do nothing but manipulation, I'd be a chiropractor right now. Most of them only do OMM because they're damn good at it and they make boatloads of cash doing it. I wanted to become a DO because of the philosophy and the better overall training. The facts are, you do receive a better academic education at DO schools. The extra anatomy and musculoskeletal training you acquire through OMM is very helpful in all aspects of medicine, and yes, the OMM itself is useful at times too.
•••quote:••• Now what strikes me as funny is that you so called D.O. graduates think that OMM is bull**** and that its only useful only 1 percent of the time. It says alot about the current state of osteopathic medicine when 40 something percent are specializing in fields that most likely will never incorporate any OMM techniques. ••••For the love of god! Getting a DO degree is NOT a degree in OMM. I never said it was bull****, I gave a specific example where it could be used effectively, actually. Read.
•••quote:••• If you have read the literature about Dr. Andrew taylor Stills you will know that he was a family doctor. A guy who knew alot about alot of different areas pertaining to human anatomy ••••Yeah, thanks for the suggestion, but who's this Dr. Stills character? :wink: (It's Andrew Taylor STILL) He was a family doc, but I guarantee you he'd absolutely love the idea of DOs branching out into all aspects of medicine. That's actually what he spent alot of his career doing.
•••quote:••• Im sure all of you are good doctors or are going to be great doctors, but you gotta become a D.O. because you love the ideals behind it, not because its gonna allow you to become a doctor ••••Who ever said we dont like the ideals behind it?
Good luck with the MD applications, you seem like their perfect fit...