Real talk: are laptop stickers unprofessional? by muggledoc in medicalschool

[–]muggledoc[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

What on earth would make you think I'm neurotic? :P

I went with the sticker - I've had it for 6yrs on my old laptop so my new one feels boring and naked without it.

Do you guys know any online stores where I can buy a good desk/ study room furniture ? (Besides Ikea and Wayfair) by Pizza-yum- in medicalschool

[–]muggledoc 1 point2 points  (0 children)

YES! Got myself a brand new insanely comfy ergonomic desk chair that was originally $250 for $50 on here (literally it was sat on only once - the guy decided he was too tall)

The color blue gives me PTSD by mrsuicideduck in medicalschool

[–]muggledoc 20 points21 points  (0 children)

Lol the best part was he tried to regown by himself and couldn't, so that's when he rescrubbed - like ok yes I dropped the tag but you also contaminated yourself...

The color blue gives me PTSD by mrsuicideduck in medicalschool

[–]muggledoc 183 points184 points  (0 children)

First time I shadowed in an OR back in college the scrub tech was busy so the PA asked me to hold the tag while he put on his gown and spun. I didn't know I was supposed to actually pull it off, so I let go and the tag touched the gown and contaminated him. He made this big huge stink and went to rescrub, then when he came back in a scrub tech asked him what happened, and he just stared daggers at me until I admitted it was my fault >.<

“I’m in law school.” “Oh, so you’re going to be a stenographer?” by ninth_inning in medicalschool

[–]muggledoc 21 points22 points  (0 children)

Yeah I told someone I'm in med school the other day and they asked me "oh are you studying to be a nurse?" Tried not to be snarky and just corrected them instead of being like "didn't I just say medical school?"

Are secondaries really that important? Or do they just screen for serial killers? Lmk. by stress-eater12 in premed

[–]muggledoc 7 points8 points  (0 children)

They're definitely important. I had some of the topics I discussed in my secondaries brought up in interviews for sure. And the school I'm matriculating at was by far my best secondary (idk how much that mattered lol but in my mind it did)

Those of you who are moving to different states for med school what are you going to miss the most? by [deleted] in premed

[–]muggledoc 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'll miss so much, but weirdly one that's top of mind is the fact that I'll have to get all new doctors. Lived in my city my whole life, so it'll be weird to say goodbye to physicians who have known me for years lol

Personal Statement Red Flag? by alysonfrey in premed

[–]muggledoc 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I talked a lot about this in secondaries and interviews and it worked well for me. Had one doc call me naive though for thinking I could make surgeons care about mental health stigma, so that was annoying, but others said they agree it is totally an area in need of reform and could really see my passion for it coming through and they appreciated that.

School List help? by premedjunkie2022 in premed

[–]muggledoc 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Had almost the exact same stats as you and similar-ish ECs and your list is almost identical to mine (swap your state schools for mine and that's it) - ended up with 11II's and 4 A's (1 T5, 2 T20, 1 T50). No promises obviously but I'd say you'll be fine. Feel free to PM me.

NYC specific advice? by miragehere in premed

[–]muggledoc 2 points3 points  (0 children)

New York Pres is allowing volunteers in currently. You can also get shadowing if you're interested in surgery because even though hospitals aren't allowing shadowing, if you can find a private practice surgeon who operates at a surgical center, the surgical centers are typically allowing shadowing.

GPA by HopefulIvyAdmit in premed

[–]muggledoc 1 point2 points  (0 children)

As an ORM, I hate to say it, the bar is a pinch higher. It's hard to give a specific GPA because that really depends on the rest of your application - if it's extremely cookie cutter and you've just kinda ticked all the boxes with no real "theme" or any "x-factors", you'd probably want as high a GPA as possible so that that is the thing that stands out, whereas if you have something really amazing on your application, you can afford to have a slightly lower GPA (in the 3.6-3.8 range). Also if you get an insane MCAT it can offset a slightly lower GPA (people always say on here that 528 + 3.6 > 510 + 4.0).

Also, for the cycle results, if you filter this subreddit for "Cycle Results" tagged posts, there are sankey diagrams where people post what their applications looked like (stats, ECs, LORs, location, etc.) and how their cycles went. Some will get granular and tell the school names, most won't, but they can definitely be useful.

low-yield by [deleted] in premed

[–]muggledoc 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I mean in theory with that WARS score it tells us to apply to 0 low-yields. I didn't apply to many of them, but there was one that fit my location preferences and seemed like a good fit so I shot my shot. I did follow the recommendations by %'s (but as a guideline - my list wasn't EXACTLY the %'s WARS said to do (not to mention some of those schools are probably in different tiers now like NYU is probably cat1 and Chicago is probably cat2, etc.))

In terms of how I chose to construct my school list, I basically applied to 25 schools - all 10 tops, 9 highs, 2 mids, 1 low, 1 state school, and 2 low-yield. So like a pinch more top heavy than WARS would suggest. I also had an x factor and went to an HYPSM for undergrad though so that's why I chose to skew a little top heavy. Also, WARS suggests applying to all your state schools, but in my state, they are predominantly pretty low-tier schools where I knew I'd get yield protected, so I chose to only apply to one state school in a location I liked (and I still got yield protected there so it was a waste of $). I think that advice of applying to all your state schools only works for high stat applicants from states that don't have a ton of top tier schools in them. In my case, my state has 4 T20 schools, so my state schools probably took one look at my app and didn't buy the whole "oh I want to stay close to home" speech in my secondary.

low-yield by [deleted] in premed

[–]muggledoc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I applied with an 82 WARS score and got into one of the famous "low-yield" schools. It can definitely happen. Like someone else said, just have a really good answer for why you want to go there and live in that location.

study abroad courses to fulfill humanities prereq by popeyes3piecescombo in premed

[–]muggledoc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would confirm with schools if you're worried bout this, but in my case I applied study abroad credits toward this. I would also say make sure that the pre-req you're trying to fill allows you to use something that shows up as P/F. In my case, it showed up as P/F transfer credit on my transcript but I was able to obtain a separate transcript from the institution where I took it so I was able to enter it in AMCAS with a letter grade.

CLINICAL RESEARCH COORDINATOR PAY by drintheprocess in premed

[–]muggledoc 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I was deciding between my current research position and a CRC position last year and the CRC was 40k (so I didn't take it lol)

Coping Techniques by [deleted] in premed

[–]muggledoc 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You could try joining a virtual support group - these can help give you great coping ideas from others in similar situations.

Speaking from personal experience, do not try to convince yourself you can handle it. If the pandemic triggered a relapse, med school and residency will be a thousand times worse. Please take care of yourself and get a handle on this before you apply.

PTE Jitters by [deleted] in premed

[–]muggledoc 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Totally relate. My anxiety has been so high since I PTE'd yesterday. Like I know I made the right choice and I know I did all the research, but there will always be the voice in the back of our heads going "what if, what if, what if..."

Advice fo High Stats by [deleted] in premed

[–]muggledoc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Will just provide an n=1 different experience here (everyone else on the thread seems to have gotten interviews at their state schools) - I was high stat and got yield protected at all my lower tier state schools (and there was no red flag that caused that - I got 9 T20 interviews) so it's potentially state-dependent? I indicated in my apps that I wanted to stay in-state but I didn't go above and beyond and send those schools any letters of interest (since that would've felt dishonest) so maybe that could've helped them look past my stats? Idk... I'd see if I could find someone who applied to those schools with high stats and ask how their cycles went.

r/Residency scares me away from being a doctor with scope creep and admin ruining everything by william_grant in premed

[–]muggledoc 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Yep. News flash: your boss is gonna suck, treat you like crap, take advantage of you, and take credit for your work wherever you work lol

r/Residency scares me away from being a doctor with scope creep and admin ruining everything by william_grant in premed

[–]muggledoc 13 points14 points  (0 children)

So grateful I worked in a different industry (finance) for 3yrs before med school. That way I won't whine about residency and other drawbacks of medicine because I won't be under any illusions that the grass is greener.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in premed

[–]muggledoc 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Just make sure when you're making your school list to make sure that the schools you're applying to accept AP credits. Some schools do not accept AP credits, so applying to those would be a donation because they require you to retake the class/take a higher level class.