You just contradicted yourself.
How is this by far the most important?! As mercapto pointed out, MD/PhDs have little difficulty matching. MSTPs are the top-40 medical schools to begin with. Who's splitting hairs between a top-5 school and a top-20 school? MAYBE there's some small effect on residency, but of course your performance in medical school matters way more, and then once you're done residency nobody will ever care where you went for medical school. Did they care where you went to high school when you applied for medical school? It's the same kind of deal.
IMO reputation of the school should be ignored as long as that school is MSTP. It's been certified to be a quality MD/PhD program at that point. If you're looking beyond MSTPs then you might want to think a little bit about the program for other reasons, but reputation? Who cares?! You think grant reviewers are going to somehow factor in the name of the school you trained at for medical school/grad school someday? Research-oriented fellowships probably don't even care about this at all. You're MD/PhD, come on over.
I disagree with this one too. You pretty much have no idea what the "quality" of the medical school is or if you will like their cirriculum. Is a medical school "quality" if their local hospital is failing and uses medical students for a lot of labor as soon as they start, hence you become more clinically proficient? Cause if this is the case there are several and they don't meet your #1 criteron. Or is a school more "quality" if the med students are at the biggest name hospitals not really doing anything because they have a huge layer of fellows/residents/rotating med students buffering their hands on experience.
If you're a pre-med, you haven't been to med school yet. I was sucked in by touchy feely small-group/PBL crap and grew to realize how annoying it was being required to be at class every day, sometimes multiple times a day (most small groups/PBL at most med schools are this way). I quickly realized the best way to learn was to skip lecture, grab the lecture notes, and read on my own. The social science oriented material and lectures were almost, with few exceptions, completely useless. The worst ones were so poorly attended they became mandatory. Yet this is the sort of thing med schools sell themselves on. The core body of knowledge you need to know is pretty much standardized across med schools. Third year and Fourth Year is roughly the same anywhere.
There's a few caveats:
Anywhere that still requires a rural med rotation out of MD/PhDs is kind of nuts IMO.
I'm biased towards programs that have less basic science cirriculum so you can get into clinics BEFORE the PhD. If I had my way I'd do all of third year before the PhD, but you can't do this usually because they're too afraid you'll run off without the PhD when you get screwed/goings get tough in grad school.
I strongly disagree with this. The idea that you will spend all of your time studying or in lab is ridiculous unless you are one of those types that feels the need to do that all the itme. But this all depends on your personality. For me, I like to do a lot of things that are location specific. I will also be factoring in location heavily for residency. I like to ski, so I like to be near mountains. I also like city environments because I'm a foodie and enjoy exotic foods regularly. I guess you can find microbrews anywhere?
Agreed there. You get to meet the bubbliest first years when you interview typically. Oh joy!
Sort of agree. Taking PhD classes during med school is helpful. It's especially helpful when both sides are flexible enough or designed well enough that you have many PhD class choices that don't conflict with the MD schedule.
For me most important was (and I would still expouse these with the caveats above and below):
1) Location
2) Strength of research in my area -- For me this ended up not being important. For various reasons I couldn't work in the half dozen or so labs here I'd identified before I interviewed. I should have known when I didn't get hardly any of the people I asked to interview with and the one guy I did was kind of anti-MD/PhD, but I was naive then.
3) Time to graduation/extra requirements that hold students up. Turns out this is misleading too. I joined the program thinking the average was 7.5, but the average since I've been here has been 8 years.
Fully prepared to duck the tomato for this post
😀