First Line | Holistic Mental Health and Medical Education

How to Decide How Many and Which Medical Schools to Apply to


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Episode 97.

MSAR for MD programs (free information and paid version with additional features)- https://students-residents.aamc.org/medical-school-admission-requirements/medical-school-admission-requirements-msar-applicants

Choose DO Explorer for DO programs (free resource)- https://www.aacom.org/explore-med-schools/choose-do-explorer

Factors to consider when choosing schools: public vs. private, rural vs. suburban vs. urban, state/region preference, admission requirements (premed coursework, MCAT and GPA minimums), MCAT and GPA averages, tuition and financial aid, mission statement, quality of the education, match rates, how happy the students are, grading system, lecture attendance requirements, lecture vs. independent learning vs. team-based learning, research opportunities

Factors to consider when deciding number of schools: your competitiveness (MCAT, GPA, clinical experience, research, leadership), how competitive you are for your top programs (adding more if your top programs are reaches)

Include about 1/4 schools that are "safety" (public schools in your state, MCAT and GPA more than average), match/fit (public in state or private out of state, within 5 points on MCAT

For most applicants, aim for 15-25 schools, which is the average. Involve mentors in this process because this is highly individual and depends on numerous factors. For example, you may not need to apply to this many if you are applying to osteopathic medical schools with an application that has a strong osteopathic medicine focus. You also may not need to apply to this many if you are competitive for your top programs.

I also speak on why should consider applying to osteopathic medical schools.

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First Line is created and hosted by Dr. Aubrey Ann Jackson. Visit First Line’s website where you can view blog posts: ⁠ ⁠⁠⁠https://www.firstlinepodcast.com⁠

This episode is sponsored by TrueLearn. For a discount off your TrueLearn subscription use link: ⁠https://truelearn.referralrock.com/l/firstline/⁠ and code: firstline

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Content on First Line is for educational and informational purposes only and is not medical advice. Please see your primary care physician (DO or MD) for any medical concerns you have. All ideas expressed are individual ideas of the host and do not represent any organizations the host is linked to.

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First Line | Holistic Mental Health and Medical EducationBy Dr. Aubrey Ann Jackson

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