Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've noticed that the DOs at a given group practice tend to be the only ones with whom you can get an appointment! Well, one particular medical group I was hoping to get into, turns out only 3 physicians were accepting patients at the time: 1) a fairly young looking (probably recently graduated) DO female; 2) an Indian male doctor (not recently graduated); and 3) another recent grad, female MD.
The DO's bio mentioned she's into the holistic treatments.
OT but is this a red flag to stay away from docs like this?
Anonymous wrote:I've noticed that the DOs at a given group practice tend to be the only ones with whom you can get an appointment! Well, one particular medical group I was hoping to get into, turns out only 3 physicians were accepting patients at the time: 1) a fairly young looking (probably recently graduated) DO female; 2) an Indian male doctor (not recently graduated); and 3) another recent grad, female MD.
The DO's bio mentioned she's into the holistic treatments.
Anonymous wrote:A DO is an MD with additional training (osteopathy). My best friend is an MD and her husband a DO. In a hospital/clinic setting, they are interchangeable. Some DOs choose to focus solely on osteopathy and tend to be more in the integrative/holistic health realm in private practice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A DO is an MD with additional training (osteopathy). My best friend is an MD and her husband a DO. In a hospital/clinic setting, they are interchangeable. Some DOs choose to focus solely on osteopathy and tend to be more in the integrative/holistic health realm in private practice.
This is not correct. DOs are not MDs with additional training. DOs attend a different type of school - osteopathic instead of medical. Osteopathy is more holistic. Some DOs go to that type of school because they believe in a integrative approach, but a fair number go to DO school instead of medical school because they weren't able to be admitted to an MD program.
Anonymous wrote:A DO is an MD with additional training (osteopathy). My best friend is an MD and her husband a DO. In a hospital/clinic setting, they are interchangeable. Some DOs choose to focus solely on osteopathy and tend to be more in the integrative/holistic health realm in private practice.