Hi
Hello! I'm looking for some advice. I applied to 25 schools (18 MD/PhD, 3 MD, 4 DO) in summer 2021 for fall 2022 matriculation. I have 3.91 overall GPA, graduated summa cum laude, and 514 MCAT. I was a physics major, published a first author paper in a physics journal, and started an astronomy club. I also have about 70 clinical volunteer hours (hospice volunteer and ER volunteer), and 100 nonclinical (non-profit data-entry volunteer and tutoring--both for low SES underserved communities). I currently work as a clinical research assistant and I'm working on a clinical first-author paper.....I have about 40 physician shadowing hours and will have 70 total... I have gotten denied from half of my schools so far. I knew my MCAT was low and that I am non-trad because of the heavy physics background but what else can I do to improve my chances? I have just started volunteering to earn more clinical volunteer hours... What else do schools want-- what more should I do?
Hi! I'm in a similar boat as you. I applied to about 13 MSTP, 6 MD, summer 2021 for Fall 2022 matriculation. I have the same GPA and same MCAT. My background is also in Non-Trad research. I can relate to how discouraging it can feel to not understand what else you could do. I'm not sure why I'm replying to OP, other than to say that I resonate with your post, and it was validating to know that I'm not alone.
I don't know if it might help... but one difference between our backgrounds is that I've worked full time as a research assistant since 2019. Last year I was told that the "what more" I could do was "more" research. At the time it made me feel a little better because it was something I could
do instead of something I did wrong, or I in someway wasn't enough. I had an advisor at my institution say that their MD/PhD applicants had "five-first author publications" which is absolutely absurd. There are faculty research members I personally know who don't have five-first author publications. I guess it's just a testament to how competitive these applications can get. When I have interviewed in the past there have been so many incredible and impressive people. Not just as applicants, but also as human beings. Individuals who I would love to learn with. It's really amazing.
One of my mentors has served on admission boards (for a completely unrelated discipline) and keeps emphasizing how much admissions are sometimes dependent on totally arbitrary things - such as your application was reviewed before the reviewer had lunch instead of after. I don't know if that holds true for MD/PhD, but it's worth sharing.
All that to say: I relate with your experience, and I look forward to you finding the right program for yourself and for your goals. For me, applications are a crushing process. I look forward to the day when I can look back on applications the way I now look back at taking the MCAT and think, "thank goodness that's over."
EDIT: For what it is worth, I thought my MCAT might be too low for MSTP, but an advisor from the Duke MST Program congratulated me on a great score, and said that it would be a plus for the MD but have less bearing on the MD/PhD application since they care more about research. 🤷♀
This is one of my first posts on SDN, so I apologize if I didn't use correct lingo.