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Clearly I didn't care enough to google.
I was delegating the task to you.
Poutine is delicious without the cheese.
Clearly I didn't care enough to google.
I was delegating the task to you.
What is poutine? Sounds like a solvent to me.
is it weird that my subconscious always reads your screenname as "HalfLing" like in LOTR so I just assume your avatar is a hobbit? I feel like that might be weird.....
is it weird that my subconscious always reads your screenname as "HalfLing" like in LOTR so I just assume your avatar is a hobbit? I feel like that might be weird.....
haha...how dare you.
If you haven't watched BBC's Sherlock (my Avatar is Sherlock, and its on Netflix) then we can no longer be frenemies.
As you wish...Love the thread derailment here. Please...continue.
Which is better DO or Caribbean?
Consensus in the pre-osteo forum will obviously be DO. Those who make the cut at SGU do decently though.
So carib is better?
SGU for someone with a high MCAT and low GPA who can change their study habits? Maybe.
None of the others though.
I was playing devil's advocate at first, but please explain as to why you think this.
Because my state appears to be far more friendly to SGU grads than DO grads.
Because my state appears to be far more friendly to SGU grads than DO grads.
SGU for someone with a high MCAT and low GPA who can change their study habits? Maybe.
None of the others though.
What's a high enough MCAT in your opinion?
I might get scared now every time I see half's post lol.
What state you in?? Just curious.
I'm guessing he's in NY, but he does not make a good point even if it's the case.
Remember Johnny is in rads too which is going to also be very DO unfriendly (acgme wise). I think in his part of medicine (specialty and location) he is probably right. Obviously this isnt the case everywhere though.
So SGU grads will have a better shot at an acgme rad than a DO student? I doubt it. My guess is that both FMGs and DOs will not match.
Even if it were the case, how is a high MCAT any correlation to the ACGME Match?
So SGU grads will have a better shot at an acgme rad than a DO student? I doubt it. My guess is that both FMGs and DOs will not match.
Even if it were the case, how is a high MCAT any correlation to the ACGME Match?
I still don't see why a DO would be worse off than a SGU grad. I have no bias, and I'm interested in Osteopathic Medicine's future. I think DO students need to address that certain specialties are going to be a far reach relatively soon. Sure, as a pre-med/applicant/first-second year one can say that they're certain of what speciality they want to match, but what if rotations disappoint? Or what they want something else. Sure, it can still happen..but the avenue in doing so might be a tougher one.
good luck trying to find a DO that goes into plastic surgery though
Actually, this is what is known as a "bias"
Understand that being biased isn't necessarily equivalent to being wrong 👍
there is an established correlation between MCAT and Step scores and there is an obvious relationship between step score and residency. The propagated error ends up getting silly, but correlated correlations still correlate 😉
I still don't see why a DO would be worse off than a SGU grad. I have no bias, and I'm interested in Osteopathic Medicine's future. I think DO students need to address that certain specialties are going to be a far reach relatively soon. Sure, as a pre-med/applicant/first-second year one can say that they're certain of what speciality they want to match, but what if rotations disappoint? Or what they want something else. Sure, it can still happen..but the avenue in doing so might be a tougher one.
Gotcha 👍
But the comparison was of High MCAT at SGU compared to one at DO. Is the assertion that SGU will better prepare for Step 1 than a DO? Probably, but will this put the SGU grad ahead of the DO grad?
Aside from "matchability", there is also the attrition rate at carib schools making such a choice a ridiculous gamble in the first place.
well..... that isnt actually how that word works... but if you want to attempt to exploit a non-existent technicality to convince yourself you are not biased, be my guest 👍
Saying that an interest in one negates an interest in the other isnt bias - it is a logical fallacy. The two are not mutually exclusive. To be unbiased is to be "interest free" 😉 I would say don't worry so much about some arbitrary perception. I am clearly biased towards MDs. However I do not agree with Jonathan on this one - you are better off going DO than you are going to SGU for a number of reasons. Aside from "matchability", there is also the attrition rate at carib schools making such a choice a ridiculous gamble in the first place.
I don't believe there is anything that will put an SGU grad above a DO grad across a large sample size. It is perfectly feasible that a single SGU grad could be better than a single DO grad (or a single HMS grad for that matter) but discussion of individuals is pretty useless here - this is why we use trends. PDs are aware that carib schools teach for the USMLE and stack their decks in order to publish better numbers. They don't want a kid who barely passed UG and scored 20th percentile on the MCAT who went to a 4 year dedicated program of "How to pass the USMLE". IMO the carib schools barely produce clinicians (at least from what I have gathered). There is more to being a doctor than the Step1.
For those who get to do clinical training in the US, SGU actually has better clinical rotations than many DO schools.
I thought my take on matchability was already stated.Let's not be ridiculous and pull out definitions. This discussion is not about that.
So what is your take on the matchability? Attrition rate is somewhat irrelevant to this conversation.
For those who get to do clinical training in the US, SGU actually has better clinical rotations than many DO schools.
The key phrase there is "those that get to." does that mean not all SGU students get to rotate in the US?
certain specialties will be far reach for DO's soon, especially going through the ACGME. FMG's face the same problem, however, they don't have the AOA match to fall back on which is why they are GENERALLY at a larger disadvantage than DO's when matching certain specialties. There are locations where both will be at a larger disadvantage than usual. These are usually places that are saturated with large academic centers and where large quantities of top notch MD students apply. In these locations, PD's have all the U.S MD applicants they want and probably dont need to look at DO's/FMG's.
Yes, but it gets boring.
Self-congratulatory half-hearted attempts at rationalization of the DO degree like this thread are just the background whine of SDN. There are so many of them, if I check "Unread" posts on the iPhone one inevitably pops up.
To sum it up: I have nothing against DOs. They can be fine physicians. The distinguishing features of the DO degree and the AOA in general are BS, however.
Osteopathic manipulation belongs in the waste bin of history along with homeopathy (and the term "allopathic" for normal medicine).
I thought my take on matchability was already stated.
DO>carib
Sure, and when it comes to that point will PDs view DOs/FMGs very similar? In the same instance, I don't see DOs giving up in their attempts to obtain residency through ACGME and wanting to settle for AOA residencies.