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You haven't matriculated yet, so you're not a medical student.Hi Everyone,
I've been accepted to 1 MD school, waitlisted at 2 others, and haven't heard back from a 4th. I already committed and paid my deposit to my accepted school, and plan on matriculating in July.
When is it "safe" to add "MD Student/Candidate" as my title on Linkedin? I have this irrational fear that the school will pull my acceptance! 🤣
Not true, LinkedIn is definitely used for finding jobs. But it is more or less worthless for a med student. So in light of that, just wait until you matriculate or say something like “accepted medical student” or something like that.It’s pretty cringeworthy and LinkedIn is mainly for business not medicine so not sure how much it would even help to have a profile in terms of networking
1. I imagine many medical students had LinkedIn before medical school.Why are you on LinkedIn? Are you actively looking for jobs? What are you hoping to achieve by being on LinkedIn and further putting down MD candidate on there?
I'm just a grumpy old man yelling at clouds, but I've never liked the MD Candidate title.You could probably list "Incoming Medical Student" or "Medical Student" (Class of 2027 in the description) since you've already committed to enrolling. I don't think it matters much.
Many medical students use "MD Candidate" on Linkedin/email signatures - technically not an accurate or professional term and could sound silly to some people but I don't think it matters all that much.
Everybody is a "learner" now (talk about cringey).How about just "Medical student"?
I like to put “Future Powerball Winner” personally.I'm just a grumpy old man yelling at clouds, but I've never liked the MD Candidate title.
The question being asked by OP is about displayed MD candidate. Not about student doctor or medical student which would include DO.Did you seriously just separate DOs from MDs and lump them in with Nurses and Physical Therapists???? Lol