SDN must not be mistaken for reality. Probably fewer than 10% of my class has ever posted here, even once. They may or may not have dropped in to read, but they haven't participated in discussions.
Those who have are not a random cross section. They will tend to share certain attributes at a higher frequency and amplitude, just by being the kinds of people who decided to be active here.
That will necessarily create a skewed impression, if they are taken to represent all med students.
As for abolishing the DO degree... I am glad that you explained your opinion better,
@jonnythan. I had misunderstood your intention and originally thought you quite hostile, even disrespectful toward DOs and their degree. I still think that it is pretty presumptuous to assert that there is no difference and that the degree has no distinctiveness at all. Just because something has been loudly and often repeated on SDN does not make it more true. That was why I took the time before to write that there are people who chose the DO route because we did want that small difference, however slight it may be. Otherwise, you might start to believe that what you hear in the echo chamber is true.
Saying DO=MD is like saying DDS=DMD, but I've never heard anyone say that DDS degrees shouldn't exist. There is history and tradition behind it, even though there is no difference whatsoever between types of dentists. DOs do at least have some particular training to set them apart. Even if you don't accept that there is anything to Osteopathic Philosophy, the additional focus on the musculoskeletal system and physical exam does make some difference between DO and MD education... and practice. Yes, all good doctors treat their whole patients, but DOs do tend to use touch more, to be more sparing with pharmaceuticals, etc... even when they don't do OMM. Not all, not all the time, but enough to constitute statistical signifigance.
I'm not saying that makes DOs better, but there is at least a wisp of difference, which I think would get lost if we just discarded the degree entirely. If you want to argue about whether that difference is enough to justify having two kinds of physicians, that might be a worthy discussion to have. I just think that it does everyone a great disservice to minimize it to the point of denying that it even exists. Especially without having investigated the matter beyond reading the prevailing opinions on SDN.
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