Category Archives: PreMed

Pre-Med Haters

Here’s an unfinished draft I pulled up from way back in early 2008. I’m thinking it still applies:

I think some of the naive pre-meds have been drinking a bit too much of the Hatorade lately. I’ve seen numerous threads pop up in the pre-allo forum at SDN referencing Med School Hell and typically the comments are negative. Here are my responses:

  • You’re shitting your pants
    In reality you think that medicine is rainbows and butterflies, but you’re scared that I may just be right. After all, I’ve gone through medical school and you haven’t. This little tidbit of information makes your acceptance look a lot less appealing.
  • You think you know it all
    That 3.8 GPA and medical mission trip in Africa has instilled in your mind that you know all. Therefore anyone that says anything negative about medicine is a dumbass and doesn’t know shit.
  • You’re young
    Most of you are in your late teens or early twenties, and have gone from high school to college and then hopefully straight to medical school. You’ve never worked a real “job” in your life. Just wait until you’re working from 7am-7pm 5-6 days a week dealing with all that medicine has to give. Until then, shut the fuck up.

Thinking back, I do remember what it’s like to be a pre-med. I didn’t know shit and neither do you.

Is It Time To Rethink Your Pre-Med Major?

Many students who dream of going to medical school often choose to major in the sciences: Biology, chemistry, biochemistry, physics, or any other related field of study. After all, you will be better prepared for medical school, right?

Not necessarily.

Actually, medical school admission committees are now looking to fill their classes with well-rounded students.

Even as breakthroughs in science and advances in technology make the practice of medicine increasingly complex, medical educators are looking beyond biology and chemistry majors in the search for more well-rounded students who can be molded into caring and analytic doctors.

This is great news, particularly for students who don’t exactly enjoy the sciences to the degree that they do other fields of study. It reinforces the fact that you can major in anything and still get into medical school. The odds are actually in your favor now.

The number of science majors applying to medical school has been steady for the past decade—about 65 percent of applicants major in biology or another physical science. What’s changing is who gets in.

Medical educators are favoring students who major in the arts, humanities, or related areas. In principle, this makes sense. The science that you learned as an undergraduate student is rarely used in medical school at best. Does it make practical sense, though?

Reinforcing The Generalist

You don’t necessarily have to be good at anything, as long as you are average in everything. This is the basic premise of the well-rounded student — as they adcoms would have us believe, anyway. It’s never this cut and dry, but the argument holds true.

In other words, students who are mediocre scientists but have great social skills should make better physicians than those with excellent science skills and mediocre social skills. This can’t be further from the truth, but is the basis for the change in admission preferences.

During my medical school experience, I saw students both with excellent grades and superb social skills. These were likely the same students who majored in chemistry and studied night and day during college. Along the same lines, I saw students in the top 3% of my class who absolutely sucked with patients. You cannot make generalizations, but that is exactly what the adcoms are doing.

Medicine is an age of specialists. The best physicians are extremely specialized while the general family practice physicians are considered a “jack of all trades, master of none.” This is not to say that generalists are bad physicians, but who would you want treating your hyperthyroidism — your family physician or an endocrinologist?

Consider the pediatric cardiac surgeon who specializes in congenital heart defects. Is this person well-rounded? Maybe in the social realm, but as a medical professional he is about as specialized as you can get.

Whether or not your child’s cardiac surgeon plays the oboe in the city symphony orchestra matters very little to you. What does matter is the fact that he has a firm grasp on the pathophysiology of congenital heart defects and knows how to diagnose, treat and cure them.

Good social skills are required for successful physicians. But, they should not be a substitute for excellence in one particular field.

What I Think

1. If you enjoy it, do it.
If you truly enjoy the sciences and can’t see yourself majoring in anything else, go for it. Being a science major doesn’t automatically make you poor applicant choice.

2. English majors perform better on the verbal reasoning section of the MCAT.
It’s been known for awhile that students who practice verbal reasoning and deduction throughout college outperform other students on the verbal reasoning section of the MCAT — often the most difficult section for students.

3. If you enjoy a wide variety of activities, you are not automatically well-rounded.
Likewise, if you study every waking minute, this does not mean you’re socially inept.

4. Students will adapt.
If changes to the selection process of medical schools change, so will the students applying. Just like many students shadow physicians or do some volunteer hospital work to pad their application, they’ll start to adapt and make themselves more “well-rounded” on paper.

5. It’s just a game.
Any changes to the admissions process is just another new rule in the ever-changing game of gaining a spot in medical school. Play the game well and you will be rewarded. This is your first set of hoops that you’ll jump through over the next four years. Put your shoes on because there will be many, many more.

Medical School Requirements

So you’ve taken the plunge and have decided to attend medical school. Medical school requirements will certainly vary from school to school, but there are some generalities that we can make. These will help you in deciding which classes you need to take in order to get prepared for medical school.

General Class Information
For most medical schools, you will need at least one year of:

  • General Biology
  • General Chemistry with Laboratory
  • Physics
  • Organic Chemistry with Laboratory
  • English
  • Calculus

Now keep in mind that these classes will also help you immensely on the MCAT, which you will also need to take. These classes can be completed at nearly any four year college.

Grade Point Average
There is no secret universal GPA that you should have when applying to medical schools. However, each individual medical school will probably have their own internal cut-off GPA. If you browse around, you can find rumors and oftentimes official statements of what these cutoff values are. However, you should try and maintain your GPA as high as possible since getting into medical school is highly competitive to begin with.

A GPA of above 3.5 is ideal. Anything below a 3.3 and you’ll probably need to do some post-bac work to improve it. Your GPA will be broken down into a general GPA and a science GPA. Medical schools typically place more weight on your science GPA, so try to maintain it as high as possible.

Degree
A bachelors degree is required for most medical schools, but it does not have to be from a science major. In fact, there have been rumors that medical schools like applicants who aren’t science majors, as it shows diversity in the applicant. On another note, English majors typically do well in medical school since they have spent the last 4 years reading a lot of information. Thus, they have found ways to digest information more effectively, and oftentimes do incredibly well on the verbal portion of the MCAT.

If you do decide to complete a bachelors degree in a science major, it will not hurt you. Just keep in mind that you do not have to have a science major in order to be accepted into medical school.

Medical College Admissions Test
The Medical College Admissions Test (MCAT) is a requirement for all medical schools (except for the combined B.S. / M.D. programs). Just like GPA, there is no universal cutoff value in score. The exam tests your knowledge from college in the biological sciences, physical sciences, and verbal reasoning. Anything above 36 is a great score, but I have read about numerous applicants being accepted with scores as low as 28. If you go below 28, it’s probably a good idea to take the exam again and try to improve your score.

Taking the exam more then three times has been rumored to hurt your chances for admission. Although admission committees like to see persistence, a large number of attempts will show them that you might not be cut out for the rigors of medical school.

Most examinees will take an MCAT preparation course offered through Kaplan or the Princeton Review. Not doing so doesn’t guarantee that your score will be low, but you will be putting yourself an an automatic disadvantage versus other applicants. Take the course if you can afford it.

It has also been rumored that an even scoring distribution is ideal. So, for a score of 36 having three 12s is better than two 14s and an 8.

Volunteer Work
Volunteer work, although technically optional, is something that most applicants to medical school will complete at some point during their college career. Look for anything that will give you some exposure to working in medicine, and try to do as much as you can. Typically a year or more of consistent volunteer work will be sufficient to pad your application enough for the admissions committee.

Undergraduate Research
While not required, this is a great way to pad your application. I did research as an undergraduate and talked about this research at each of my medical school interviews. It shows that you’re interested in the sciences in general and certainly doesn’t hurt your application at all.

Keep in mind that doing volunteer work as well as research presents an awesome opportunity for letters of recommendation. You will need anywhere from 3-5 depending on the schools that you are applying to.

Summary of Medical School Requirements:

  • General Class Information
    • General Biology
    • General Chemistry with Laboratory
    • Physics
    • Organic Chemistry with Laboratory
    • English
    • Calculus
  • Grade Point Average
    • Above 3.5 is ideal.
    • Try not to go below 3.3
  • Degree
    • Bachelors degree is required, but not necessarily in the sciences.
  • MCAT
    • Scores above 28 with an even scoring distribution are ideal.
  • Volunteer Work
    • Optional, but doesn’t hurt your application.
    • Gives opportunity for letter of recommendation.
  • Research
    • Optional, but improves your application a decent amount.
    • Gives opportunity for letter of recommendation.

A Primer for Applying

The following guest contribution was written by Locus Potus, who writes for the blog Hybrid Vigor.

Dear Friend/Family/Colleague:

You are receiving this letter because someone you know is about to apply to medical school. The entire lengthy process is riddled with intricacies, misperceptions, variables, and unknowns that make it unlikely you realize the full extent of what this person is about to do. I’m sure that you will try to empathize over the next year, but some things in life must be lived to be understood. Even my own knowledge base, seasoned over a long application cycle and qualified enough to enter medical school this fall has already become outdated with changes to the MCAT and the application process. Nonetheless, I will try to inform you as best I can.

A pre-medical student is born the instant they make the decision to apply to medical school. For most, this happens years before they ever start filling out application forms and taking tests. Making good grades is an obvious undertaking, but they must also be significantly involved in extracurricular activities, all while befriending busy professors to write raving letters of recommendation. All this extra work makes them an “average” applicant. Thus, for the pre-med you know, the application process began long ago.

The initial step in applying to medical school is the Medical College Admissions Test (MCAT, pronounced “em-cat”, not “em-cats”). For most people, this test is prepared for months beforehand, often utilizing expensive test-prep classes (>$1000), and on top of a full work/school/life load. Like most standardized tests that can be studied for, it does little to measure actual intelligence, but does reflect baseline knowledge in the sciences and reading comprehension needed for medical school, particularly in the first year. There is a weak correlation between MCAT score and USMLE scores (the licensing exam for MD’s) and even less predictability with being a good doctor. The full details of this 8-hour monstrosity could fill pages, but suffice it to say that the test itself is needlessly long (one quarter of the test, the writing portion, is generally not considered by medical schools), expensive (>$250), and just another “weed out” step in narrowing down the applicant pool into only the most studious and determined applicants. In my day, the exam was only held twice a year, leading to a great amount of anxiety on test day, but thankfully it is now being offered multiple times per annum.

Assuming your acquaintance has made it this far in the process and taken the test, next up comes the actual application mediated through the American Medical College Application Service (AMCAS) beginning in June, the year before they are to start med school. This is the pre-med’s first official foray into the needless bureaucracy that is the American medical system and a continuation of the expensive journey into medical school. All coursework and activities must be meticulously detailed in the AMCAS application. As this information will be sent to schools in a standardized format, pre-meds will strive to polish their resumes as best they can. More importantly, however, the AMCAS also collects a personal statement, also known as the application essay, which asks the question “why are you interested in medicine.” Herein lies one of the greatest challenges facing any aspiring physician – to put into words a lifetime of experiences that led them to pursue their career path. The personal statement can make or break an application, especially for the “average” applicant since there are thousands of others who likely have the same exceptional grades and activities. Using the cliche “I’ve always wanted to be a doctor since my parents bought me a Playskool doctor set” might as well be asking for a rejection because the admissions committee sees hundreds of these essays every year. No, this essay must be special. It must reflect who they are as a person. It must grab the reader’s attention and compel them to offer the writer an interview. Not surprisingly, finding a unique way to say “I want to help people” can be difficult. It will take a long time to write, with multiple revisions and criticisms. If your applicant is on the ball, it will be completed before AMCAS even begins to accept applications in June. Whatever you do, don’t question why they are spending so much time/stressing on an application because this step weighs heavily on the rest of their careers and lives. Applying early is a crucial advantage in a cutthroat process, where any edge should be employed.

Before hitting the Submit button on their internet browser, pre-meds must select their list of medical schools. Unlike college, where everywhere basically teaches the same material in the same way, each medical school has a distinct personality and should really only be chosen after some consideration. US News and World Report rankings is not the best of guides, as they are based mostly on revenue from research grants, not necessarily educational practice. Different schools will appeal to different applicants based on their interests. It is difficult to say one school is “better” than another, especially given that all Allopathic medical schools require national certification. In this regard, there are only varying degrees of good.

Although your pre-med may be very smart and accomplished, applying to the very top schools is not always a wise investment. Most applicants to every school will come from the top of their classes nationwide. No, Harvard will not accept them just because everyone says, “she’d make such a great doctor and she’s SOOO smart!” Even a 4.0 GPA and a high MCAT score is no guarantee to any medical school, many such applicants find themselves applying again in the next year (especially if their personalities are unappealing during the interview). The list of schools must also be chosen prudently because each additional school costs $30. I applied to an average number of schools, fifteen, which cost me approximately $500. In return for this exorbitant fee, which you must pay, AMCAS will check your transcript for accuracy (that applicants enter themselves) and send all the information in a nice, neat electronic file to each medical school. That’s right, for about an hour’s worth of work on their part and minimal production time/cost, they take what most student’s can save over an entire summer – but I digress and this fee pales in comparison to the next step in the application process. Did I mention that AMCAS processing takes about a month (if you’re early)? If your pre-med’s spirit and bank accounts are not exhausted by now, they soon will be.

Once AMCAS finishes their part, medical schools will begin collecting the primary applications and processing them in what amounts to another month of waiting. Mind you, each school will do things differently (see above about researching schools), but most will be willing to offer you their own, secondary application, for an additional fee of course. For each school selected in the AMCAS, pre-meds can expect to pay anywhere between $50-$120 for the pleasure of writing additional essays on exciting topics like “Why do you want to be a physician?(yes, they ask it again and heaven forbid you put the same answer as your primary application)”, “What makes you special?” or “Why do you want to come to School X?”. If they’re lucky, they’ll be able to recycle essays between schools, but expect lots of long nights and stress while they come up with answers that must not only be well-written, but sound original and fresh. If they applied to 15 schools like I did, it becomes very time consuming and expensive for this step alone (~$2000).

In another long pause after the frenzy to return secondary applications – remember, early is better – pre-meds will try to recover some lost money and time. Soon, interview season will be upon them. Don’t expect any particular reason why or when school’s schedule interviews. As I mentioned before, even excellent applicants don’t get interviews everywhere. An application may sit at a school from July to January the next year, presumed as a rejection, only to be called up for an interview. The logic behind each medical school’s admissions decision to interview (and accept) is a well-guarded secret. If you haven’t noticed odd behavior already, your pre-med will likely to obsessively check their email accounts every couple of hours/minutes for any word from schools. Small letters in the mail are generally rejection letters, get used to the sight of them arriving even if they’re a “better-than average” applicant. (Note: sometimes schools will offer interviews via snail-mail, but they will usually accompany an email).

A brief commentary on chances of admission: It is important for you to remain realistic during the application process. Making it any step beyond the secondary application is an achievement. A few exceptional students will be very fortunate in the process and garner numerous invitations and eventual acceptances. This is not the norm. Almost half of all applicants nationally will not be accepted anywhere and more applicants are applying every year. Many applicants get only a few, if any, interview invitations. At any medical school, expect only 1 in 5 applications on average to get an interview. Of these, only 1 in 3 or 4 will be accepted, for an overall acceptance rate between 3-10%. It may be tempting to stop worrying after receiving interview invitations, its not over until you see an acceptance letter in hand. In each of the waiting periods, be patient and supportive, but don’t assume that an acceptance is coming, chances are against them.

Assuming your pre-med is lucky enough to get an interview invitation so begins another round of expensive and time consuming preparation. Interviews are usually done on the pre-med’s own (you stay at home) and in proper business attire (more $$$). The cost of tickets and hotel can cost hundreds per trip. In these nerve-wracking situations, they can be expected to answer questions like “Why do you want to be a doctor (yes, they ask it again)” or “Tell me about yourself.” Unfortunately, there is a high degree of variability in interviews – some interviewers are nice, while others can put on a full-out grilling session, even at the same school. This is another reason why applying is often called a “crapshoot.” Applicants must prepare themselves to answer questions about medicine in general and also weaknesses in their application without sounded too rehearsed, although they are likely to have answered the same questions everywhere they interviewed. The day can be long or short, depending on the school, but almost always awkward formal – it’s a face to face meeting with the competition. However, they can be fun as pre-meds are usually Type A personalities with interesting backgrounds or else they wouldn’t have made it this far. Interviews are generally extended from September to February, don’t read too much into the timing.

Some schools will start accepting students soon after they start interviewing and are known as “rolling admissions schools.” Others, like many of the top schools, will make their applicants wait until March 15th to hear if they are accepted, waitlisted, or rejected, known as “non-rolling admissions.” Some schools will not even send any kind of notification at all, leaving many pre-meds to wonder indefinitely. In perhaps the worst kind of torture this process can put you through, a pre-med can be put on the waiting list of the school they want to attend and held in limbo until the first day of school. At any given moment, even well into next July or August and after plans have been made to attend another school, a student may be accepted off the waitlist. Therefore, a pre-med applicant may never really know where they are going to school up until the day they actually attend somewhere – often over a year after they initially submitted their primary AMCAS application. Don’t expect definitive answers from your pre-med since there are many things to consider like cost (including financial aid with its own application process), location, and teaching style. I hope at this point you are beginning to understand my initial statement above regarding the complexity and strain involved in the application process.

If your pre-med does get accepted to medical school – any medical school – they are to be thoroughly congratulated. They beat the odds and the thousands of people clawing for a spot. A common trend these days is for applicants to take a few years off before school to add another dimension to their application. I highly recommend this approach for students because it gives them a chance to live life and get a break from school before the onslaught of med school itself.

After all this expense, effort, and drama, the “pre-med student” evolves into a “med-student.” Keep in mind that most pre-meds and med-students have a marginal knowledge of actual medicine. Even after medical school, we’re not very qualified to practice medicine on our own until after years of residency. So, hold off on your impulse to start asking questions about that burning sensation you’ve been meaning to see a real doctor about. Also keep in mind that the progression to medical student and eventual doctor is not a guarantee of financial success. Medicine is not what it used to be. The bureaucracy and hoops to jump through only continue during a physician’s career, which is probably why they make us do it when we enter the profession – they want to see if we are willing to put up with it. Many doctors will graduate with six-figure debts, live modestly, and lead stressful lives well into their 30’s and 40’s – something to consider before advocating a hand in marriage to any future doctor. Many experts agree that our healthcare system is in disrepair. Due to absurd insurance rates and frivolous lawsuits, physicians are leaving their practices in droves, resulting in a deepening healthcare crisis. Physician’s wages are determined by a pencil pusher at an HMO and may decrease with a change in US policy. Despite this bleak market outlook, pre-meds will still strive at great lengths to enter into medical school.

My strongest advice is to not assume too many things and to be patient with your pre-med during the application process. Ask questions and be prepared for uncertain answers. They will need your support through it all and even beyond. The stresses of becoming a doctor are great. Medical students have some of the highest depression rates among any profession. After all the drudgery, conformity, and expense, the original, bright-eyed, and optimistic person you know may be gone. I can only hope that I don’t go that way myself.

This letter is by no means comprehensive and maybe a little dated, but I doubt that much as changed in a year. I hope it serves as a primer for one of the most difficult years of anyone’s life – many people would agree that the hardest part about medical school is getting in. As a further resource, I recommend the Student Doctor Network forums as a place to ask for more information. Many applicants, including myself, have relied on this site while applying, especially when most of the people around me didn’t fully understand what was going on.

Good luck to you and your pre-med.

Sincerely,

Locus Potus
Nom de plum

Your Royal Screwing Was Just A Fluke, Our Apologies

A bunch of pre-meds (787 to be exact) are rightfully pissed because the AAMC just boned a bunch of them on the MCAT last Saturday.

The boning was via a verbal reasoning passage wherein the topic was robotic fish and the questions were about birds! A total of 2,400 took the test, so that’s a third who were given the flawed passage.

Of course, Dr. Robert Jones of the AAMC feels the enormously large error was just a fluke.

Not good enough. The expectation is that students have to be among the very elite to be able to be given the “honor” of medical school admittance. You have to perform reasonably well on the MCAT to even have a chance of an interview, for crying out loud. So the AAMC can make grave lapses like this and it’s not a big deal? Dr. Jones himself admits everything is reviewed in detail by several different people (ostensibly competent ones). Huh? If this is even true, it’s unacceptable.

The solution put forth is to give a VR score that’s extrapolated based on the non-flawed passages. If the student doesn’t opt for that, option #2 is a refund. Obviously both of these are horrible solutions. Extrapolated scores could mean a much higher or lower result, and refunding money means these poor pre-meds have to prepare and TAKE IT AGAIN when it’s not their fault.

As is pointed out by FairTest, a watchdog group, there are also variables such as having an ungodly huge anxiety attack when seeing f’d up questions that have no bearing on the passage. Might just slightly ruin your optimal performance.

Fluke or systemic incompetence? Whatever the case, I say let all 787 matriculate at medical schools of their choices. Why not trade an incredible mistake for an incredible solution? Perhaps only just 10% would be as incompetent as the AAMC is in this case.