Originally posted by normalforce
1. Facilities
2. National Board Performance
3. Additional degrees offered
4. Previous Residency Match Lists
5. Research
6. Nightlife/Location/Cost of Living
Normalforce
*sigh*
Facilities of a medical school mean very little. Especially at DO programs. Your first two years you are *in a classroom*. Does it matter if its in a marble building or an old church? And a good majority of the DO schools (UHS is no exception) send their students to other cities for rotations. So the "base institution" means terribly little for most students.
National Board Performance- Most, if not all, of the DO schools have a >90% board pass rate. So what if a class has 2 or 3 more "losers" than the rest. What you want to look for is the "AVERAGE" board score, not the pass/rate fail. If you are a *decent* student, you will pass. Those that fail usually didnt' study enough or studied wrong, or are just bad test takers. Check the "average" board SCORE (not pass rate) and see how little that varies amongst schools.
Additional Degrees Offered. Very much a pre-med criteria. Do you think in your spare time during medical school you'll want to do a MPH degree or an MBA degree? You don't even know what you really want to do after medical school. And do you want to pull 80 hour weeks in rotations and have to add 8-10 hours a week on top of that for a degree you may never need/use? Most of hte time, people get them for CV "fluffing" anyways.
Previous Residency Match List. Somewhat useful but very misleading. Look at my school. My class, a large %age stayed in FL. The year before, many students left the state for residency. My year, only 3-4 people matched EM, a few years before that, 10 or so. Beware the data. Know that you can match anywhere from any school.
Research. Pah. How many people really want to do physiologic research? Still a pre-med thought. If you are interested in research, there's plenty of time in residency for that. Mots of the research done in DO programs is post-graduate, not the basic science stuff. If research is TRULY your bag, go to an MD program.
Nightlife/Cost of Living - Now you're talking!
I think the criteria you should use are:
Where do you want to live for 2, 3, or 4 years?
How much is the tuition?
Do you want to live close/far from your family?
Did it "click" when you interviewed there?
These four criteria are both sensitive AND specific... Quinn tested, mother approved.
Q, DO