+1 There is a lot of stupid information on this thread from people whose kids haven’t applied who don’t have a clue. Including the one who scoffs at Brown. |
DC1 is a double legacy, but we went to Brown in the regular program and we're donors but nothing like the Tisch family. DC will be the 4th generation in medicine in our family and has been volunteering in the hospitals since freshmen in high school, including at an international hospital in developing countries. |
I'm the mom with the PMLE kid and DC has HS friends in the VCU program and it is wonderful. VCU placed 5 in dermatology, 2 in plastic surgery, and 13 in general surgery. https://honors.vcu.edu/admissions/guaranteed-admission/ https://medschool.vcu.edu/news/stories/2021/matchday2021/ |
DP but I believe "not agreeing" is the definition of "argumentative" |
If you must study medicine 4-7 years, why do bio? Do something insanely crazy you won’t have a chance to do as a med student - fine arts, music, etc. |
| Also look into the Rice program with Baylor College of Medicine. |
| Does Michigan still offer Interflex? |
Yeah that asshat is always here, always scoffing. Maybe at least their little routine entertains them, let's hope so because I can see no other point in it. |
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My kid was lucky to get into both Brown PLME and Northwestern HPME before HPME was discontinued. Both programs were excellent. DC ended up choosing PLME because DC wanted to enjoy full undergrad experience.
Very happy with the choice. Great thing about PLME is the freedom the program provides to its students. Small difference in med school ranking doesn’t matter for residency and future opportunities. Success depends on how well students do in med school. Brown Alpert students do quite well. Current Stanford med school dean did both his undergraduate and med school at Brown. OP give it a try and consider applying. You never know. |
Good to know. What were your kids stats? |
My niece in the area is in HPME program in her 3 rd year. I have seen her very busy all her high school years. She did a lot of shadowing at Shady Grove hospital for clinical hours (I believe that is something they look for). She also did an NIH research internship in the junior or senior year. I think they look for demonstrated interest in medicine. I know another friend's daughter in a similar 7 year program who is training to be an EMT |
what? Isn't an EMT like 6 months of training? |
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For a lot of reasons--some political--Brown's med school focuses on primary care. (Brown is the only med school in Rhode Island and gets a lot of state money. A generation ago, RI wanted to fix the situation in which anyone who needed a good hospital had to go to Boston. )
US News divides med school rankings into 2 groups: research and primary care. Brown is ranked at #19 for primary care, tied with UVa. Pitt is ranked at 34, tied with UChicago. Stanford is 22. For research, Brown is ranked #36. Pitt is 13. So, I wouldn't say that Pitt is a "much better" med school than Brown. Dartmouth ranks below Brown for both. If I had a kid who was sure they wanted to end up with a MD/PhD, I would not recommend Brown. However, if I had a kid who wanted to be an internist, pediatrician, family practitioner, etc. Brown is a great place to go. The focus of the med school is most definitely primary care. That is a bit unusual. |
| Why all the rushing and pushing? Looking back, as an MD for the past almost 20 years, I am really glad I took time between college and med school to explore other interests, do other things. There is so much burnout in medicine that I am concerned about these young ones putting so much pressure on themselves in high school to get into X college to get into Y med school to get Z residency. Med school and residency were by far the most diverse educational experiences I had with students and residents from a really wide array of education, paths, geographic and ethnic backgrounds. Those who had taken a little time in between had more maturity and perspective and resilience to handle the intensity of med school and residency. |
For my kid it was a "keeping workloads manageable" thing (full disclosure: not in the Brown PLME student, just a regular premed). By doing bio, all of her classes that counted for the bio major also counted for the premed requirements. Having to take the premed classes AND entirely unrelated classes for a major is quite a lot to juggle, and she is a big believer in the Keep it Simply Silly acronym. Plus, she just likes biology. It's her favorite subject. why not study what you love AND what will make your life manageable AND what will check off boxes for the career you want? |