Or at least close by an urban area? So far I know of PCOM, COMP, MUCOM, DMU...any others to add to the list?
Or at least close by an urban area? So far I know of PCOM, COMP, MUCOM, DMU...any others to add to the list?
Define "at least close by."
RVUCOM is in Parker, CO, which is in the greater Denver area, but a pretty big commute to downtown itself.
LECOM-SH is about an hour from Pittsburgh, but Greensburg is definitely not urban.
Western is in Pomona, CA which I would consider rural, but it's not exactly LA.
I could continue, but you could google.
Seriously.I kind of surprised by how many people on here who think having a population of 100-200k is rural. That's more like a small city...
Or at least close by an urban area? So far I know of PCOM, COMP, MUCOM, DMU...any others to add to the list?
I kind of surprised by how many people on here who think having a population of 100-200k is rural. That's more like a small city...
Whoops, typo. Meant I would consider Pomona urban!
Or at least close by an urban area? So far I know of PCOM, COMP, MUCOM, DMU...any others to add to the list?
My apologies.
No worries, my bad!
And you are right-- it's interesting where people draw the line between urban, suburban and rural. I'm sure there's some sort of official demographics cut-off, but I don't know what it is.
How about a DO school actually in a major city? You have PCOM, KcU, msucom, is that it?
Touro nyHow about a DO school actually in a major city? You have PCOM, KcU, msucom, is that it?
Touro ny
Most DO schools are in suburbs of major cities, that is just how most of them are built, its not like allopathic schools which tend to be built within downtown areas. Given how most major US cities are like when it comes to crime, cost of living, and cleanliness, its actually better being in a suburb than in downtown Chicago, Detroit, Los Angeles, etc.
KCU is actually downtown like Touro-NY. Ours is actually a campus though and not a renovated building.
Now the specific area that KCU is located in is a pretty rough neighborhood. We have armed (off duty police officers) security that patrol the campus 24/7.
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I'd probably go for something less ...urban
Johns Hopkins is probably one of the best MD schools in the country, probably number one, I just visited the campus in June, and man the area around it is GHETTO. The school itself it top notch though. Baltimore though is like something out of Thunderdome.
The upside of Touro NY is that NY improves a lot once you start going south towards midtown NY, but I doubt most students could even afford to live in midtown NYC.
Kansas City has a rough reputation, so I am not surprised you got armed security.
TCOM is urban? Hardly, downtown doesn't always mean "urban" IMHO.
On SDN, the term urban is equated as "ghetto" . And downtown IMHO, does NOT mean the same as "urban/ghetto".
So no, I do NOT think downtown Ft. Worth is "ghetto/urban", it's just downtown.
Clearly one's "background" dictates ones definitions.
On SDN, the term urban is equated as "ghetto" . And downtown IMHO, does NOT mean the same as "urban/ghetto".
So no, I do NOT think downtown Ft. Worth is "ghetto/urban", it's just downtown.
Clearly one's "background" dictates ones definitions.
Yeah I've heard JHU is in one insane neighborhood. I've also heard that about Yale too which I never would have though.
Touro-CA and WesternU also seem to be in some shady areas that IMO are not in an urban setting by my definition of urban.
I'm surprised so many people don't include Fort Worth as urban. Just because TCOM may be in a nicer part of town doesn't exclude it. Yes the first two years are on campus, but clinical years are definitely spent in an urban medical center. Most of my hospital and clinical experiences were patients that were either not insured or on government programs. When you are the only medical school in a city of nearly 800,000 people and you have rotations set up at the county hospital and work with multiple residencies at multiple sites, you definitely get an urban population. Fort Worth is HUGE, it just feels like a smaller town, especially compared to Dallas just down the road.
We forgot that, but AZCOM is also "urban" too, its about 40 minutes away from Phoenix.
We forgot that, but AZCOM is also "urban" too, its about 40 minutes away from Phoenix. Most DO schools are located in suburbs of major cities, only a few are in the boondocks.
On SDN, the term urban is equated as "ghetto" . And downtown IMHO, does NOT mean the same as "urban/ghetto".
So no, I do NOT think downtown Ft. Worth is "ghetto/urban", it's just downtown.
Clearly one's "background" dictates ones definitions.
Seriously.
I met some kid at an interview who said he didn't know if he could adjust to the rural area. Mind you, this school was in a city with a 750K pop and a multi-million metro area....
I kind of surprised by how many people on here who think having a population of 100-200k is rural. That's more like a small city...