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That's right I went there. I know that US seniors are generally preferred but what about US Imgs vs DO seniors? Who's more preferable?
That's right I went there. I know that US seniors are generally preferred but what about US Imgs vs DO seniors? Who's more preferable?
IMHO, in almost all cases, DO would be preferred.
That's right I went there. I know that US seniors are generally preferred but what about US Imgs vs DO seniors? Who's more preferable?
and this USIMG has seen different...it depends on the specialty...surgery is probably more DO skewed ...IM varies...there are programs that prefer DOs, some prefer USIMGs and still others prefer foreign IMGs....but ALL prefer applicants that dont have any red flags...fail a class, fail a step, have poor grade (or even fail) a clerkship and those will weigh heavily against you, regardless of DO or IMG status.
The opposite is actually true.
Allopathic surgery is traditionally biased against DOs.
no need to argue. obviously DO's are preferred. if there's any doubt (there shouldn't be), just take a look at the matching statistics. 75% match rate vs. 53%
ok then...so who does prefer the DO? i mean i can't imagine that the uber competitive specialties really take that many DOs or IMGs so then we would be talking about Primary Care...FM and IM seem to be similar in their preferences...some like DOs, some like IMGs, some don't take either...peds...most of the peds programs i have seen seem to have an awful lot of IMGs, but I'm also in the East so the East overall may be more biased against DOs (more because there just weren't that many DO schools until recently though pennsylvania does seem to be the exception).
My (mid-tier) IM program took plenty of DOs (2-5/y out of a class of 30-ish) but only took IMGs who were dual citizens that went to their "home" countries for med school. Over the course of the 4 or 5 years I was paying attention there was one from Japan, one from AIIMS in India, one from UC-Dublin and one from Britain (I forget which school).
With that said above...IMHO.. USIMGs, 90% of them match into FP (and they really care about language and culture cuz they are all about continuity), 9% get into IM cuz they did really well on thier Boards, and 1% will get some other nice specialty because they either had a hook up, or were extremely brilliant, and spent some time doing research and what not.
The opposite is actually true.
Allopathic surgery is traditionally biased against DOs.
ok then...so who does prefer the DO? i mean i can't imagine that the uber competitive specialties really take that many DOs or IMGs so then we would be talking about Primary Care...FM and IM seem to be similar in their preferences...some like DOs, some like IMGs, some don't take either...peds...most of the peds programs i have seen seem to have an awful lot of IMGs, but I'm also in the East so the East overall may be more biased against DOs (more because there just weren't that many DO schools until recently though pennsylvania does seem to be the exception).
Not in NYIMHO, in almost all cases, DO would be preferred.
Not in NY
I would actually disagree. I might be biased, because I am a US IMG, but there are a lot of programs that do not want DO's and only MD's (even if they are foreign) in their programs. I think really competitive programs will not take either.
I live in NYC, so I can only state what I here. Many doctors I talk to tell me to stay clear of a DO school if I want to practice in NY, because of the stigma that no one knows what a DO medical degree is. I would still tell you to choose the DO option if you are going to practice outside this state.Good Lord.
When I say, in *almost* all cases, that does allow for some exclusions. The OP was asking for a generalization, not all the exceptions to the rule.
Yes, there are a lot of FMGs in NY. There are places where an FMG would be preferred over a DO. There are also programs where a DO would be preferred over an FMG. I've already mentioned that there are programs and specialties which have a bias against DOs. I've personally had patients choose me over one of my partners, despite the fact that I trained outside the US, simply because my partner is a DO. My partner even admits that there is a bias and goes to great lengths to hide where she went to medical school for fear of losing patients because of her degree. But patients aren't PDs and residency faculty.
But let me ask you: if a friend were to ask, "should I go to a DO school or abroad?" what would you suggest? Chances are that they will be favored for residency as a DO in *almost* all cases. Exceptions are exceptions.
I live in NYC, so I can only state what I here. Many doctors I talk to tell me to stay clear of a DO school if I want to practice in NY, because of the stigma that no one knows what a DO medical degree is.
Just take a poll ask 10 people outside your hospital world what a DO is and I bet you all 10 have no idea. You sound a little bias yourselfSo you're basically saying that, because 6% of the US population (the percent that lives in NY State) doesn't know what a DO is (in and of itself a ridiculous proposition, but let's run with it), going offshore is a better plan?
I have no dog in this fight but will say that, as an AMG from NYC, I rotated with as many DO students (and residents and attendings) as I did IMGs. I think you're exhibiting a bit of sample bias in this case.
Just take a poll ask 10 people outside your hospital world what a DO is and I bet you all 10 have no idea. You sound a little bias yourself
DOs match significantly better in the allo match than imgs. They also have their own match! This is an easy decision. I graduated from umdnj which had a masters program attached to it for med school hopefuls. Ross, Sgu, auc is where those unable to get into umdnj som went. The debt levels of Caribbean students surpass those of all American grads and they are in the most precarious position match wise. Things might have been different ten years ago but the answer today is clear.
Yes but if you take just SGU and Ross match rates they are close to 80%. Which is higher then the DO rate.I agree. I'm not sure why there is much of a debate about this. Everyone has different priorities, so what is best for one person might not be best for another. However, there is no comparison to match success of IMGs to DOs. DOs have a much higher match rate in the MD residencies. When you factor in DO residencies, the differences in degrees and match rates is even more apparent. 22% of DOs withdrew from the MD match because they were obligated to when they matched in the DO match first. The 75% match rate of DOs in MD residencies doesn't account for that. Of the DOs that stayed in the match until the end, the number is much higher than 75%. The IMGS rates are still around 50%. They are even lower for non US IMGs.
The important thing to remember when comparing match successes of Caribbean and DO schools is the following fact. Including the MD and DO residencies, the match rate for DOs is in the high 90s. The US IMG match rate is barely half that.
Yes but if you take just SGU and Ross match rates they are close to 80%. Which is higher then the DO rate.
Yes but if you take just SGU and Ross match rates they are close to 80%. Which is higher then the DO rate.
80%? Where did you get that number from?
How about all the people that didn't make it let alone to clinicals but thru the first semester?
NY has a big DO population due to NYCOM graduating 250+ students every year and now Touro has been pumping out 120+ for past 3 years. So the NE is a friendly place for DOs.
First the bloomberg news just wrote an entire article and stated Ross and SGU are placing students in residency at a 75 to 80% clip, Also I am stating the DO facts that I hear from medical doctors in the field who practice privately and in Hospitals..When I was choosing between SGU and a DO school I couldn't find 1 DO doctor to shadow with.The attrition rate is quite high at many of these schools, certainly higher than at any of the osteopathic programs.
Exactly. The comment above about no one in New York having ever heard of a osteopath stymies me. Unless these people have been living under a rock there's not only Touro but a school in New Jersey, two in Pennsylvania, and another one someplace else in New England. There are plenty of osteopathic physicians working in the Northeast United States.
First the bloomberg news just wrote an entire article and stated Ross and SGU are placing students in residency at a 75 to 80% clip,
Also I am stating the DO facts that I hear from medical doctors in the field who practice privately and in Hospitals..When I was choosing between SGU and a DO school I couldn't find 1 DO doctor to shadow with.
I can only speak about SGU. The attrition rates are high because students choose to take a chance at medical school even though they aren't qualified, but most of this happens in the first semester, you can't blame the school for giving these students an opportunity. I have a friend in my class who received a 34 on his MCAT and still was denied entrance into US Medical schools. It is getting nearly impossible even with the numbers to get into a US School. He didn't want the DO route so he accepted SGU.The article states a match rate for 75-80% of students who make it to apply to the match. NOT 75-80% of students who start medical school. The attrition rate at all schools outside of the US is much higher than at US medical schools. That's an important factor to look at. 80% of students matching means nothing if less than 98% of students don't go into the match.
I understand and respect your experience but I would venture that I and gutonc, 2 attendings with experience at living and working in NE, might have had more experience in working with DOs than you have had. Consider yourself lucky because frankly, any MD who has "never heard of" a DO is clearly outdated and uninformed. Its not like osteopathic medicine is a new fangled thing (and this is coming from a non-DO).
Here's a list of NYC osteopaths (not that Yelp is a reliable resource for physicians - maybe it is - I have to run and didn't have much time).
I can only speak about SGU. The attrition rates are high because students choose to take a chance at medical school even though they aren't qualified, but most of this happens in the first semester, you can't blame the school for giving these students an opportunity. I have a friend in my class who received a 34 on his MCAT and still was denied entrance into US Medical schools. It is getting nearly impossible even with the numbers to get into a US School. He didn't want the DO route so he accepted SGU.
I think another thing that's going unmentioned here is the type of specialties offshore students are matching into. For the most part, a normal USIMG isn't going to be matching into something like ophtho, neurosurgery or urology. Yet I'd say the match numbers for DOs in those specialties aren't as impossible as those of USIMGs. And match rates for gas, EM and radiology are also higher.
I can only speak about SGU. The attrition rates are high because students choose to take a chance at medical school even though they aren't qualified, but most of this happens in the first semester, you can't blame the school for giving these students an opportunity. I have a friend in my class who received a 34 on his MCAT and still was denied entrance into US Medical schools. It is getting nearly impossible even with the numbers to get into a US School. He didn't want the DO route so he accepted SGU.
First the bloomberg news just wrote an entire article and stated Ross and SGU are placing students in residency at a 75 to 80% clip, Also I am stating the DO facts that I hear from medical doctors in the field who practice privately and in Hospitals..When I was choosing between SGU and a DO school I couldn't find 1 DO doctor to shadow with.
How do you figure. Last yr DO's matched at a 75% clip.75-80% is still REALLY low. 1/4th of the students don't match by your own admission. That is WAY lower than DO match rates, so it still reaffirms that DOs are much more likely to get a residency.
How do you figure. Last yr DO's matched at a 75% clip.
The article states a match rate for 75-80% of students who make it to apply to the match. NOT 75-80% of students who start medical school. The attrition rate at all schools outside of the US is much higher than at US medical schools. That's an important factor to look at. 80% of students matching means nothing if less than 98% of students don't go into the match.
I understand and respect your experience but I would venture that I and gutonc, 2 attendings with experience at living and working in NE, might have had more experience in working with DOs than you have had. Consider yourself lucky because frankly, any MD who has "never heard of" a DO is clearly outdated and uninformed. Its not like osteopathic medicine is a new fangled thing (and this is coming from a non-DO).
Here's a list of NYC osteopaths (not that Yelp is a reliable resource for physicians - maybe it is - I have to run and didn't have much time).
making the statement that 98% of students don't go into the match is a bit of hyperbole, don't you think?
...and i believe he was responding to someone who questioned the 75-80% match rate that was stated earlier for students at sgu, ross, and auc...it should be a given that there will be people who go offshore who don't make it through...
Well, yes it should be a given but the person to whom I was responding DIDN'T GET THAT. He was quoting (and kept quoting) an 80% match rate as if it meant that 80% of medical students at SGU and Ross finish medical school and successfully match.
do you have a source for those numbers? (your butt does not count....)