What undergrad, and is there any science research? and what is the STEM gpa, not the overall? Mine is at a top 10 and they have an entire system for getting students in, most of it availible on campus or on the med campus. A 3.9 if it is also a stem 3.9, with that mcat, 1.5-2 full years of science research and also clinical experience that has allowed hands on(EMT, etc): they all get in to top-25 med schools. They show the premeds charts with gpa and mcat from this undergrad. 3.6s get in somewhere, usually with a couple yrs off but still. This undergrad says as long as there are no C's, and they follow the med advising plan of research as well as intense clinical experience, not just dabbling here and there for 500 hours, they get in somewhere in the US. The ones with Cs usually spin off to take an extra year/post bac or so and then more than half of them get in eventually. The ones with a 3.9-science and 515+ go straight in to med school all the time, unless they choose an extra year(such as a fellowship to study abroad or something similar). |
Not from a top school, where they do the research as they go, often starting after freshman year or during sophomore year. OP said they are published. From a top undergrad OP should have all they need, depending on the details of the coursework and the details of the clinical experience. I think it is still very early, OP. Hang in there. |
This is quite funny based on the lack of details we have about the research, clinical experience, grades, shadowing etc. . , The devil is in the details. |
90 percent of the class at Emory Medical School took at least one gap year, as I’d 72 percent of ALL first year U.S. medical students admitted in the 2022-23 cycle. https://www.emorywheel.com/article/2024/02/medical-school-gap-year-rates-continue-to-rise-at-emory-nationally#:~:text=According%20to%20the%20Association%20of,57.9%25%20of%20respondents%20who%20reported |
This. I am the one who asked for the details. Although OP has been back to post, she didn’t answer my post. 1000 hours doesn’t tell is the distribution, the longevity, the type of hours, etc. without that, the post is akin to posting on here asking if the mole on my back is cancerous. |
| Still early. He’ll get in. |
+1 |
|
OP here. Thank you again for all the replies. For those asking for more details, I’m hesitant to give too much detail but DS has shadowed three different doctors at a teaching hospital, with the shadowing extending throughout the 3 years; volunteered at the hospital throughout the past three years, also clinical work throughout the past three years, including all three summers. And has published in a journal. Also has lots of hours volunteering with a nonprofit that serves underprivileged youth.
I truly appreciate all the kind responses and encouragement. It is still very early so I will reiterate that with DS. TY. |
| OP here, forgot to add the GPA noted is the science GPA |
| Bringing this up in case anyone with younger teens interested in med school is here reading: The best route to med school is to be a superstar high school student but go to a lesser ranked public university that offers pre-admission to med school. There are several, think University of Toledo and the like. Otherwise, med school application is cut throat and top school for undergrad does not help at all. |
Yes, although this is also a difficult admit as well. For example, if VCU is considered a lesser public, it’s admit rate for direct admission is 3%-5%: https://www.collegevine.com/faq/22043/vcu-bs-md-acceptance-rate#:~:text=The%20VCU%20Guaranteed%20Medicine%20program,%25%20to%205%25%20of%20applicants. |
| OP, any leadership experience? |
Collegevine overwstimated. Their admissions presentation said it is about .75% are admitted. |
| Don’t we have a physician shortage? Why do we torture these poor brilliant kids in such a manner and make them do three years of “research” instead of letting them become great doctors ASAP? This is insanity. |
Because the AMA and its lobbyists want to keep the profession as small and exclusive as possible so that salaries stay high. This is why Congress won’t lift the cap on residency spots. And please don’t anyone say that there is a “distribution problem, not a shortage.” That is a load of crap spewed by the establishment and its sycophants. There is a real shortage and will just get bigger and bigger. |