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They're not, a lot of schools have said that they will likely be doing virtual interviews this year. In the end it will come down to the individual school, but many have seen the benefits to the students and gotten positive feedback from virtual interviews, and many have also invested in 2-year contracts in their virtual interview software and need to justify the purchase.I know the adcom you're referring to. If s/he has said virtual interviews are all but guaranteed at almost all schools, then why are so many med schools still silent?
Its a different scenario than having students in-person as students, once they arrive, are not traveling. The school can control how often they get tested. The school can isolate them. And the benefits to the student are pretty obvious. None of those are true for people flying across the country, and then home, just to talk to someone in basically the same way they could through a webcam. Yes there is some loss, I certainly think I would do better in-person rather than virtual, but it is spread evenly across all applicants. Plus students can save literal thousands of dollars (flights from the West Coast to the East Coast are expensive, and many Californians are not getting interviews at California schools) and the headache of travel. From listening to podcasts and talking with schools at the Virtual Fair, it seems that many are likely doing virtual interviews this year and seriously considering doing virtual interviews in perpetuity. They'll all offer some sort of second look where, once you get in, you can look at the campus and meet the students etc. I think that would be the ideal system.