Hey, I'm a DO student.
Also, why is the stigma of DO on SDN always DO should be used as a backup?
Mostly residency options -- particularly for competitive specialties.
-DO residencies are more likely to be lower quality
-All the name-brands are MD
-Program directors may be unfamiliar with evaluating DO's for admission and be hesitant to accept one. There may also be flat-out bias against DOs.
-Some specialties don't have osteopathic residencies (the main one I can think of is Pathology). If you want a specialty like this, you're forced to match into an MD residency
-In general, it's recommended you take at least Step 1 of both board exams as a DO. I may personally be taking all 3 Steps of both exams, for a total of 8 exams (Step 2 has two parts), thousands of dollars, and probably 100+ exam hours.
Plus, all the annoyance that comes with people confusing your degree for that of an optometrist's or your practice for that of a homeopath's.
Also, the merger of the AOA and the ACGME good or bad for DOs?
Hard to say. Here are some possible effects:
-More credibility, higher standards, and better quality for osteopathic residencies
-Greater entrance of DO grads into MD residencies, giving way to less bias and more familiarity (possibly alleviating some of the problems in the list above)
-More competition and less opportunity for osteopathic grads in residency
-Less osteopathic residencies available as some may close down when subject to MD residency regulations
-Greater clouding of the osteopathic identity (e.g. do MD grads get taught OMM at osteopathic residencies?)
Maybe another DO student can comment more on this.