Glad to hear the disaster-in-the-making is on its way to being averted.
As for me, well, I never even applied to US schools. I have a good friend who got into our local state MD school on his first try, and I had an equivalent GPA, higher MCAT, and 7 years of medical experience (he had none), so I have little doubt I could have gotten in as well. However, my situation was pretty unique... you see, I married a girl from the Caribbean and had lived for a time in St. Vincent & the Grenadines. I had no misconceptions about what Caribbean life was like (as so many people do) and knew I could handle it. Also, we were both wanting to go to med school. Her stats were not as good as mine (although I have little doubt she also could have gotten in). We had just missed the deadline for applications for the 2003 start dates and didn't want to wait around a year in the hopes that we might both be able to start at the same time. Add in the fact then that we might get accepted to different schools. Also not a good idea (we did the long-distance thing, mandated by the INS *****s, as a punishment for NOT choosing to do things the illegal way, as so many do). God also had alot to do with our decision, and we felt like He most definately was telling us what to do. Glad we listened, things have turned out quite allright thus far. 😉 We also wanted to come to Ireland or the UK for clinicals, which was part of why we chose AUC over some of the other schools.
As a result, we've gotten to spend 3 years living outside the US, an experience many of our Stateside US med school colleagues have expressed some jealousy over, and made some amazing friends in the process. We have discussed it many times, and although things would have been easier for us as US grads, we feel that the IMG 'stigma' isn't something that's going to hamper our long-term goals in the least. US DO schools also weren't an option, as one of our goals is medical missions work part-time, and eventually we would like to practice in St. Vincent, where the DO degree isn't recognized yet. We had been around the block in medicine enough to realize that being an IMG doesn't matter much in the longrun, but being a good, caring physician does.