Last edited:
Though this activity won't count as the type of "clinical experience" that medical school adcomms want you to acquire, it certainly counts as a significant and interesting experience (that I'd enjoy reading about). Include it on your application and feel free to explain that your role was within the scope of practice for your position.Before deciding to pursue medical school, I did some time exploring the pre-veterinary route. While working as a veterinary assistant, I had the opportunity to scrub in and assist with a number of surgeries (managing instruments, holding organs in place during procedures, etc.).
In my state, this is explicitly noted to be within the scope of practice. With that being said, do you think it is appropriate to include in my personal statement/work and activities? Given that adcoms probably don't know the regulations surrounding scope of practice in veterinary medicine, I'm not sure how it would be received.
Though this activity won't count as the type of "clinical experience" that medical school adcomms want you to acquire, it certainly counts as a significant and interesting experience (that I'd enjoy reading about). Include it on your application and feel free to explain that your role was within the scope of practice for your position.
Don't make your med school application too packed with animal-based experiences though. You need lots of the human-interactive variety to make it clear your focus has shifted and been adequately tested.
@Doctor-S for comments.
Before deciding to pursue medical school, I did some time exploring the pre-veterinary route. While working as a veterinary assistant, I had the opportunity to scrub in and assist with a number of surgeries (managing instruments, holding organs in place during procedures, etc.).
In my state, this is explicitly noted to be within the scope of practice. With that being said, do you think it is appropriate to include in my personal statement/work and activities? Given that adcoms probably don't know the regulations surrounding scope of practice in veterinary medicine, I'm not sure how it would be received.
Agree with @Catalystik.Though this activity won't count as the type of "clinical experience" that medical school adcomms want you to acquire, it certainly counts as a significant and interesting experience (that I'd enjoy reading about). Include it on your application and feel free to explain that your role was within the scope of practice for your position.
Don't make your med school application too packed with animal-based experiences though. You need lots of the human-interactive variety to make it clear your focus has shifted and been adequately tested.
@Doctor-S for comments.