Thursday, December 10, 2009

The medical school interview

In this post I want to share some experiences on what the medical school interviews are like. During my application process I attended eight (8) interviews. These ranged from small private schools to large universities.

[1] Appearance
It is important to look your best; you are applying to a professional program. Focus on having clean shoes, haircut, and a dark appropriately sized suit. Also, don't chew gum; its distracting.

[2] Interview day
Every school does pretty much the same thing -> you will see the classrooms; anatomy room; other areas. The only thing I would pay attention to is the dinning facilities (you want to have a nice place for lunch/dinner because you will be spending many hours in the building).

[3] Lunch time
Usually this is a chance to eat with medical students from the school. Here is where you can probably find out the most information. But don't expect to hear anything bad about the school; med students volunteer for this stuff and are generally people that have a positive view of the school, or are afraid of saying anything bad. Save the negative questions for Student Doctor Network.

Useful questions to ask: Where do students live? How much is rent? What is the daily schedule like? What holidays do you have off?


[4] One on One interview
This is where the differences come into play. Some of them will have two people interviewing you. It can be a faculty member or it could be a practicing physician. Out of eight interviews only one asked me an ethics question. You are guaranteed to be asked "do you have any questions for me?" So you need to have an idea as to why you are choosing the school, and come up with some generic question. I suggest asking about non-academic stuff (don't bother asking about research, quality of teaching, etc...), ask about student organizations, volunteer projects, etc.

[5] Can you predict acceptance based on interview?
No, it is pretty much a game of chance after you are done. You may have had a bad interview or a great interview and the outcome can be the same. The reason for this is that there are other things that come into play besides your interview performance. So don't dwell too much on your performance.
I follow a 6:2 rule -> for every six interviews you should expect to get two acceptances.

Friday, September 18, 2009

A strategy for applying to medical school

Now that I am a medical student, and have gone through the application process I look back at the process of getting into medical school. So I would like to offer a strategy to pre-meds out there based on my experience.

[1] Apply to 15+ schools
The idea behind this is to spread your risk, and increase your chances of getting in. I know that each primary costs ~$50 and each secondary another $50-70. You have to look into the long term results; its better to pay that extra $1000.00 and get in rather than having to incur costs of re-application.

My general rule of thumb is that for every 5-6 applications you should get at least 1 interview.

[2] Choose schools wisely
My biggest mistake was that most of my schools were in the North East (OH, PA, NY, MD). These states are just crazy competitive b/c it has the most density of medical schools, and traditionally people apply here more. So even the less competitive schools get tons of applications.

I suggest applying to 50% schools in North East & 50% in Mid West/South.

[3] Apply to Osteopathic Schools (D.O.)
Osteopathic schools have lower MCAT/GPA requirements and are easier to get into. Don't let the D.O. designation dissuade you. D.O.s and M.D.s work side by side and get the same salary.

The only part that is different if you want to apply to a D.O. school is that (1) application is done through a different service (2) You need to shadow a D.O. physician and get a letter of recommendation.

[4] Go to the cheapest school if accepted
Medical school tuition is extremely expensive these days. Some schools I got into send me a finanical package of $73,000.00 per year in tuition + living. Think about this number, you will be graduating with $292k in medical school dept alone. Also keep in mind that interest rates on Stafford & Grad PLUS are very high right now (6.8% and 8.5% respectively). So when you are in residency for 4-8 years the interest on this 292k will be unbearable.

Saturday, July 25, 2009

Summer break

It's the summer between first and second medical school year. Some advise to travel, visit friends, while others work and study for the upcoming board exams. What ever it is, this summer is the last normal summer a medical student will ever have.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Stress and Dept of U.S. Medical Students

By now the application process is drawing to a close and some of the applicants are either very happy with their acceptance letters while others are gearing up to apply again for the next school year.  I was lucky to get in on the first try, yet I did not understand the many realities of medical school until I started this school year.  

For those that got in, it is important to realize that being accepted does not guarantee graduating medical school.  People will be dropping out after the first semester, second semester, and even third semesters because of academic failure or in minor cases health issues.  A 1994 article in Academic Medicine showed that graduation rate of 1988 matriculates was 81.2%.  Now that may have been not so bad in 1988, but things are very different today.  

The main problem is the cost of education.  Think about it -you probably spent about $60k+ on undergraduate education and now you will be spending at least $50k/year on medical school.  So if for some reason you are not doing well in your first year and fail out, you are now $100,000.00+ in dept.  The situation is made worse by the fact that majority of medical students have basic science education (biology, chemistry, etc...).  With these types of basic degrees it will be difficult to find work.  So you will have to go back to undergrad and get another degree.    

It is this financial stress that hangs over my head all the time.  You need to work hard and pass every test because the alternative is not pretty.  Once you start your first year there is not much opportunity to go back.  


About Me

Currently a medical student, sharing articles and noteworthy information in the field of medical technology and medicine.