• The 2026-2027 DO School Specific Threads are now available in the School Specific Discussions forum. The 2025-2026 discussions are now available in the prior year discussions forum.
  • Bring your 2026 application questions to our open office hours with Emil Chuck, PhD, Director of Advising Services for HPSA, and get them answered live. Personal statements, secondaries, interview prep, school list strategy. Sunday, May 17 at 9 p.m. Eastern.

Shadowing from MD vs DO

This forum made possible through the generous support of SDN members, donors, and sponsors. Thank you.

Certified Corsair

Full Member
5+ Year Member
Advertisement - Members don't see this ad
Hi all,

Saw a thread that got me thinking. When trying to get into DO school, most say "highly recommended" to shadow a DO. When living at school I was able to for a very brief time, but that is not the case anymore. I currently have/continue to get shadowing hours with an OB/GYN MD and a cardio-thoracic MD willing to write me letters. Despite those two, would I still be at a disadvantage in admissions without a DO specific letter? How important do they weigh that aspect?

Thanks!
 
A DO letter is pretty important. It shows you want to join the profession enough that you sought out an opportunity to learn more about it. I would get one.

Exactly. More DO shadowing hours and a DO letter indicate that the Osteopathic route isn't a "backup" for you. Will it make or break your application? Most likely not, but it would really help.


Sent from my iPhone using SDN mobile
 
Advertisement - Members don't see this ad
Hi all,

Saw a thread that got me thinking. When trying to get into DO school, most say "highly recommended" to shadow a DO. When living at school I was able to for a very brief time, but that is not the case anymore. I currently have/continue to get shadowing hours with an OB/GYN MD and a cardio-thoracic MD willing to write me letters. Despite those two, would I still be at a disadvantage in admissions without a DO specific letter? How important do they weigh that aspect?

Thanks!
I agree that a DO letter and lots of DO shadowing is a good thing to have, but it is not absolutely important. About 15-20% of my shadowing hours were with a DO, yet my physician letter was done by an MD. Even without the DO letter I still got 4 DO acceptances
 
I agree that a DO letter and lots of DO shadowing is a good thing to have, but it is not absolutely important. About 15-20% of my shadowing hours were with a DO, yet my physician letter was done by an MD. Even without the DO letter I still got 4 DO acceptances

I was like Dr. Pilot in most of my hours were MD and my letter was from an MD. When I applied, I only had MD hours and had 4 II out of 9 secondaries submitted. I did eventually find a DO to shadow however it was several months into the cycle. If it is at all possible, find a DO to shadow. I wouldn't say it is make or break however, it does make you a more competitive candidate and is in your best interest since you are interested in osteopathic medicine.
 
I was like Dr. Pilot in most of my hours were MD and my letter was from an MD. When I applied, I only had MD hours and had 4 II out of 9 secondaries submitted. I did eventually find a DO to shadow however it was several months into the cycle. If it is at all possible, find a DO to shadow. I wouldn't say it is make or break however, it does make you a more competitive candidate and is in your best interest since you are interested in osteopathic medicine.

Thanks guys! I have some MDs but ever since I moved home its been like where's waldo finding a DO around here but I will find one nonetheless
 
Sorry to hijack your thread, but I have a similar question. I had a hard time finding a DO to shadow (not many in my state and many places don't allow it) but I finally got someone to shadow for just a day. They pretty much implied that they don't take many pre-meds for shadowing so it would be difficult to shadow again. And since a DO letter is highly recommended or required for some schools, should I still ask for a letter even though I know it won't be as strong?
 
Sorry to hijack your thread, but I have a similar question. I had a hard time finding a DO to shadow (not many in my state and many places don't allow it) but I finally got someone to shadow for just a day. They pretty much implied that they don't take many pre-meds for shadowing so it would be difficult to shadow again. And since a DO letter is highly recommended or required for some schools, should I still ask for a letter even though I know it won't be as strong?

An average/generic letter is better than no letter!


Sent from my iPad using SDN mobile