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Why's that?My advice: Don't go.
The vet school is totally separate from the medical school, and they have different admissions offices.From the advice of the vets here, just bring in your checkbook.
I got a 496 MCAT and I have a 3.4 cGPA. I only applied to DO schools, besides Ross, and I would rather be a DO honestly than an MD. I got secondaries to like 15 schools, returned them all, and I have been rejected by about 6 schools so far (including PCOM after having my interview with them). I was starting to lose hope, so I applied to Ross and SGU and Ross immediately offered me an interview.Don't do it. Take a look at any of the Caribbean threads on this forum and you will see how difficult you will make your life by going to the Caribbean. I don't know what your MCAT ended up being after reading your WAMC thread, but I seriously wouldn't consider any Caribbean school if you want to be a doctor in the US. If you have to reapply after making your application better, do that rather than taking the Caribbean route.
lol poor kid. We mean "veterans," as in "veterans of SDN who know that Ross is a piece of **** and only cares about money"The vet school is totally separate from the medical school, and they have different admissions offices.
The vet school is totally separate from the medical school, and they have different admissions offices.
Yea I would definitely retake the MCAT. The fact that you got an interview says that there was something about your application that they liked.I got a 496 MCAT and I have a 3.4 cGPA. I only applied to DO schools, besides Ross, and I would rather be a DO honestly than an MD. I got secondaries to like 15 schools, returned them all, and I have been rejected by about 6 schools so far (including PCOM after having my interview with them). I was starting to lose hope, so I applied to Ross and SGU and Ross immediately offered me an interview.
I think you definitely would. Now of course my experience may be different than yours, but I have a similar gpa and I've received 2 MD II's. But I think a higher MCAT score will definitely help your situation.So even with my cGPA of 3.4, you think if I retook the MCAT I'd have a fair shot at DO schools? My undergrad university denied me a committee letter because my major is pre-vet and they don't think I really want to go to medical school because of that...when really I just realized late in the game that I wanted to be a physician, and there was no point in changing my major because it's all the same pre-req classes. I think not having that committee letter has turned some schools away from me.
I got a 496 MCAT and I have a 3.4 cGPA
I was starting to lose hope, so I applied to Ross and SGU and Ross immediately offered me an interview
So even with my cGPA of 3.4, you think if I retook the MCAT I'd have a fair shot at DO schools? My undergrad university denied me a committee letter because my major is pre-vet and they don't think I really want to go to medical school because of that...when really I just realized late in the game that I wanted to be a physician, and there was no point in changing my major because it's all the same pre-req classes. I think not having that committee letter has turned some schools away from me.
I have volunteer hours in both clinical and non-clinical settings. I did shadow a cardiologist (that's what I'm interested in). But unfortunately most of the stuff on my resume has to do with veterinary experience 🙁How are your ECs? Since you were pre Vet did you do any ECs with humans? Shadow any docs? But assuming you did you should really plan to retake the MCAT and reapply!
To be honest, if you can't improve your MCAT after a couple of tries, you ought to try PA school. It's a great gig with much less stress and crap. Good luck.
Or podiatry.
I hear podiatrists have been having trouble finding residencies and jobs the past 5-10 years though no? The attrition rate for pod schools also is horrendous and honestly isnt that much lower than alot of Carrib schools.
Not familiar with the job market...that's for OP to research.
Based off what I've seen and the attrition rate it is a route full of risks and a high chance of failure/attrition.
Dental school might be worth something looking into for the OP, although manual dexterity and ability to handle the rigorous workload they have there is also something that has to be strongly considered.
Dental DAT is easier, but not that much easier than MCAT 😵
Podiatry on the other hand may be a great career choice.
Dental DAT is easier, but not that much easier than MCAT 😵
Podiatry on the other hand may be a great career choice.
Based off what I've seen and the attrition rate it is a route full of risks and a high chance of failure/attrition.
Dental school might be worth something looking into for the OP, although manual dexterity and ability to handle the rigorous workload they have there is also something that has to be strongly considered.
Honestly, with an average mcat of a 22 we're not talking about people who are going to be excelling at dealing with medical science and honestly most of podiatry is dealing with medical school level science.
But I imagine over 90% of people who graduate from podiatry programs will find themselves in a position of employment and residency which is significantly better than Ross.
I hear podiatrists have been having trouble finding residencies and jobs the past 5-10 years though no? The attrition rate for pod schools also is horrendous and honestly isnt that much lower than alot of Carrib schools.
Well the attrition rate from what I understand at some podiatry schools can actually hover over 30%. If you want to argue podiatry school is better than Ross that's fine and I would agree but we are basically talking about 50-60% attrition vs 2o-30% attrition in a number of cases. Neither is particularly tempting.
Also if the average MCAT score for pod schools is in the 22-23 range, there are many who can handle the school work with those type of MCAT scores. Hell, honestly the vast majority of people who get into MD schools with sub 24 MCAT showings pass, graduate and go on to practice.
A 22 is low but some people simply are very poor at reading comprehension and analysis. In medicine that's a big problem. In dentistry, it's not nearly as much of an issue and that can be seen through what the DAT tests. I could easily see someone who's strengths are in excelling and not analysis and critical thinking completely bombing the MCAT and producing an acceptable type DAT score(19+)
I do agree with your general point though, the MCAT is an issue that should be addressed. And there are much better fields for those who arent great with standardized tests and who might struggle with the type of workload med school/dental school demands(such as PA perhaps).
20% is high and a gamble, but one that isn't exactly awful and is comparable to some of the lower tier DO schools. 50-60% is Russian roulette and honestly low as Ross's 6 year is under 40%.
Unfortunately, there are people in podiatry who should not be admitted there in the first place. This is why you have these massive fail outs, because they admit people with a pulse. It is not totally their fault, it is because their pool of applicants have such low stats to begin with. Unless you have a MCAT of 22+, you should not be attending pod school (don't care if their boards are actually easier than the USMLE or COMLEX, I would still say the same).
Now their residency placement rate seems to hover around 90%, which is still better than all caribbean schools. Yes, jobs are not abundant, but if you are not picky about where you live you will find one (as mentioned by those on the pod forum).
Outside of NYCOM and LUCOM(which is its own separate bag of worms) I don't know any DO school with an attrition rate at or over 10%. 2-5% seems to be around the norm no?
And good lord Ross's 6 year has dropped to under 40%? Jesus.
NYCOM seems to have reduced. LUCOM, WCU, LMU have 15-25% drop out rates. LMU is improving but when it opened its first two classes had relatively high drop out rates.
Generally most DO school drop out rates are improving as more higher quality applicants start applying as SDN has basically opened the pre md gate to osteopathic medicine.
Overall Carib is an unreasonable investment now. The merger was a death blow to the field over the next decade.
http://www.aacom.org/docs/default-source/data-and-trends/2013-com-attrition.pdf?sfvrsn=2
Here is some official data from the past decade. They calculate overall attrition kind of weird(the total attrition rates are deflated) but by and large I only see 2-3 schools with attrition rates that would hover close to 10%.
Kind of surprised to hear that about LMU. I had heard alot of good things about that programs first few graduating classes.
Keep in mind these include leave of absences(which I think are half of the attrition). So alot of these people probably come back and then end up graduating.
Why is this thread productive now? Can we get back to bashing on Carib now?
I feel really bad for carib students..like lambs to the slaughter.
I feel really bad for carib students..like lambs to the slaughter.
Old does not mean not good, young PadawanI've honestly used up all my good one liners and puns I had for them by now. Carrib threads are daily things now, getting so old.
http://www.aacom.org/docs/default-source/data-and-trends/2013-com-attrition.pdf?sfvrsn=2
Here is some official data from the past decade. They calculate overall attrition kind of weird(the total attrition rates are deflated) but by and large I only see 2-3 schools with attrition rates that would hover close to 10%.
Kind of surprised to hear that about LMU. I had heard alot of good things about that programs first few graduating classes.
Keep in mind these include leave of absences(which I think are half of the attrition). So alot of these people probably come back and then end up graduating.
School #11 sure had its problems. I suspect that it was NYCOM.
Don't they have some of the highest Gpa/MCAT stats of any DO school and have some of the most high profile matches of any DO school?
What were the problems? Also what was it with their insistence of if you fail more than 1 class you get kicked out?