# MD vs DO: The Difference That Determines Your Career

## Метаданные

- **Канал:** Med School Insiders
- **YouTube:** https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LhQipHcaa5c
- **Дата:** 09.05.2026
- **Длительность:** 12:01
- **Просмотры:** 11,502
- **Источник:** https://ekstraktznaniy.ru/video/51837

## Описание

⏱️📝 Craft an ideal med school list in seconds: https://geni.us/np9bQZ

MD and DO are not the same degree. Anyone telling you otherwise is either misinformed or trying not to offend you. If you're a premed making the decision between MD and DO, you deserve the full picture.

In this video, we cover where MD and DO actually diverge, how this decision can impact your entire career trajectory, and the one scenario where DO outright wins.

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📝 Accompanying Article: https://medschoolinsiders.com/pre-med/md-vs-do/

LINKS FROM VIDEO:
MD vs DO: the difference no one explains: https://youtu.be/4h1TtVuRSeY
Step 1 Pass/Fail Made Everything Worse (Here's Proof): https://youtu.be/gT5fhJd4TEU
Med School Chance Predictor: https://geni.us/np9bQZ

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## Транскрипт

### Introduction []

MD and DO are not the same degree. Anyone telling you otherwise is either misinformed or trying not to offend you. If you're a pre-med making this decision, you deserve the full picture, including the part where DO is actually the right call. Doctor Jubbal, medicalinsiders. com. Today, we're covering where MD and DO actually diverge, how this decision can impact your entire career trajectory, and the one scenario where DO outright wins. If you're already a DO student or a DO physician watching this, this video isn't a knock on you. You've done the hard work of getting into and through medical school, and you are equally as equipped as an MD to be an outstanding physician. The degree doesn't determine how good of a doctor you are. You can have an MD and be a terrible physician. You can have a DO and be an exceptional one. What makes a great doctor has nothing to do with which letters follow your name and everything to do with your clinical judgment, your commitment to your patients, and how seriously you take your ongoing education. Being a DO doesn't mean you can't become a neurosurgeon. The nine DO seniors who matched into neurosurgery in the 2026 match proved that. But, the data is also clear that it's much easier to do so if you're on an MD path. This video is not saying that DO physicians are inferior. It's saying the DO path comes with structural disadvantages that affect training opportunities and specialty options. Those are system-level realities, not a reflection on individual ability. The conversation we're having today is specifically for pre-meds who haven't committed to a path yet because that's where the decision actually matters. There are more misconceptions about MD versus DO that deserve a full breakdown. I'm covering those over on the Med School Insiders Blueprint channel, linked in the description. The single most important

### What Matters Most [1:42]

thing to understand when choosing between MD and DO is optionality. Medical school will change you. The specialty you want today is probably not the specialty you'll want in two or three years. That's not speculation. Surveys of medical students show that around 72% of students entering medicine change their specialty preference or were never certain in the first place. We see this time and time again with the students we work with. I experienced it myself. I started medical school convinced I was going to be a pediatric gastroenterologist, one of the least competitive specialties in medicine, and left matching into plastic surgery, one of the most competitive. This means the question isn't just what do I want to be, it's which path keeps the most doors open while I figure this out. Every single year, match data shows that earning an MD keeps more doors open. More research opportunities, stronger clinical training at academic medical centers, and wider recognition for competitive specialties. You aren't choosing between two equal paths. You're choosing between a path with more options and a path with fewer. And the data makes that crystal clear. Both MDs and DOs are fully licensed physicians who can prescribe medications, perform surgery, and practice in any specialty across all 50 states. So, in that sense, yes, the degrees are the same. But, the overall match rate tells you nothing about where people matched. Once you break it down by specialty, the picture changes significantly. On the surface, the overall match rates look nearly identical. In 2026, 93. 5% of MD seniors matched into a residency and 93. 2% of DO seniors matched. That gap has essentially closed to less than half a percentage point. If that's where you stop reading, you might conclude the two paths are essentially the same. In 2026, 208 MD seniors matched into plastic surgery. Four DO seniors did. That's not a slight disadvantage. Out of 230 total plastic surgery positions, DO seniors filled fewer than 2% of them. Neurosurgery, 243 MD seniors matched, nine DO seniors. Vascular surgery, 92 MD and eight DO. Interventional radiology, 49 MD seniors, 10 DO seniors. These are not edge cases. These are the specialties that a significant number of medical students ultimately pursue, often after changing their minds during training. And remember, that's not unlikely to be you. The specialties where DO students are well represented tell a different story. In 2026, DO seniors matched into family medicine at 1,403 positions, emergency medicine at 1,119, psychiatry at 566, and physical medicine and rehabilitation at 103, filling 40. 7% of available PM& R spots. These are acceptable, rewarding, and deeply necessary fields. But the point isn't which specialties are good or bad. The point is that choosing DO limits your options in ways that aren't visible until you're already in medical school, and by then, it's too late to change course. You may feel completely certain about your specialty today. I did, too. I entered medical school set on pediatric gastroenterology, one of the least competitive specialties in medicine. I left having matched into plastic surgery, the single most competitive. If I had gone DO, that path would have been nearly impossible. And I'm not special. Almost three quarters of med students change their specialty preference after starting. The odds are high that you'll be one of them. To

### What You're Actually Signing Up For [5:07]

understand why the match data looks the way it does, you need to understand two structural realities of the DO path. The first is OMM. DO students complete 300 to 500 additional hours of training in osteopathic manipulative medicine, a set of hands-on techniques used to diagnose and treat patients through physical manipulation of the musculoskeletal system. Some of it is supported by evidence, and not. Craniosacral therapy, for example, involves touching specific points along the spine to supposedly alter the flow of cerebrospinal fluid. That claim is not supported by science. The overwhelming majority of practicing DOs don't use OMM with their patients at all after residency. You spend hundreds of hours learning it in medical school, and most physicians set it aside once they're in residency and beyond. Those extra hours have to come from somewhere. They come at the expense of the time MD students spend on other coursework, research, and clinical prep. That's the trade-off, and it's worth understanding before you commit to a path. The second is licensing exams. MD students take the USMLE. DO students take the COMLEX. Both qualify you for licensure, but COMLEX is widely understood among residency program directors to be less rigorous than USMLE. Many DO students are aware of this, which is part of why a significant number choose to take the USMLE in addition to COMLEX, particularly those applying to competitive specialties or programs that prefer or require USMLE scores. Taking both exams adds cost, time, and pressure on top of an already demanding medical school curriculum. There's also a percentile issue that doesn't get talked about enough. Some programs that accept COMLEX scores require a higher minimum percentile from DO applicants than they do from MD applicants on the USMLE. Program directors know the tests aren't equivalent in rigor, so they raise the bar to compensate. If you have competitive aspirations, taking the USMLE on top of COMLEX is not optional in any practical sense. It is an additional high-stakes exam that costs hundreds of dollars, requires months of preparation, and falls on top of everything else medical school demands of you. The average MD matriculant

### How to Choose [7:14]

enters medical school with a 3. 81 GPA and a 512. 1 MCAT score, landing in the 84th percentile. The average DO matriculant enters with a 3. 6 GPA and a 502. 97 MCAT score, and a 503 lands in the 58th percentile, only slightly above the average test taker at 500. 5. To put the MCAT gap in concrete terms, roughly 84% of test takers scored below a 512. Roughly 58% scored below a 503. The applicant pools these numbers represent are quite different. These are numbers for the most recent 2026 to 2027 percentiles. The gap between MD and DO remains stark. And in fact, the average MCAT for MD matriculants has slightly increased in recent years, and the average MCAT for DO matriculants has slightly decreased, further widening that gap. If you have MD acceptances, know that MD offers more flexibility, and in many cases, more opportunities. This varies by school, but in general, MD institutions have more resources, particularly in research. Research is now one of the most critical factors in matching into competitive residencies, and it's only gotten more important since Step 1 went pass/fail. We covered the explosion in research expectations in a previous video right up here. Choosing MD over DO isn't a bet against primary care, which is a valuable, necessary, and deeply rewarding path. It's a bet on yourself having the flexibility to go wherever your interests take you, whether primary care or not. You can still match into family medicine, pediatrics, or emergency medicine with an MD. The reverse is not equally true for competitive specialties. Sure, you'll hear about the DO who matched into neurosurgery, or the one who got into derm. Those people exist. When you look at the actual data, rather than the anecdotes, DO seniors are matching into these specialties at a fraction of the rate of MD seniors. That's survivorship bias at work, and it misleads pre-meds into underestimating the real structural disadvantage. Leaving your options open means leaving room to discover new passions as you experience what each specialty looks like in medical school, in the clinic, and in the operating room. And if taking a gap year is what it takes to get an MD acceptance, it's worth considering seriously. Medicine is a long road, regardless of which path you take. Four years of school, three to seven years of residency, and potentially one to two years of fellowship after that. In that context, one additional year building a stronger application is basically a rounding error. If MD is what you want, another year spent becoming a better candidate is often worth it. There is

### The One Scenario Where DO Wins [9:51]

one situation where the calculus flips completely, and it has nothing to do with MD versus DO directly. It's Caribbean medical schools. And again, just like with DO, once on the other side of training, Caribbean-trained doctors are often excellent physicians. I know a Caribbean MD who's incredibly successful. He's a pulmonologist with a position as a medical director. His college grades didn't cut it for MD or DO schools, but he worked hard at a Caribbean med school and turned everything around. Getting into a Caribbean school is significantly easier than getting into a US medical school, and these schools accept students year-round. Not only can this feel like a lifeline, but it's also a lifeline on a white sand beach under clear blue skies. But the reality is more complicated. In 2026, only 70% of US IMGs matched into US residency programs compared to 93. 5% of US MD seniors. And even this number deserves context. It reflects attainment rather than strict NRMP match rates, meaning it includes positions filled through SOAP and other last-minute routes after the main match closes. Most Caribbean schools don't publish their match data at all, which should tell you something. Even if you do match, competitive specialties are largely out of reach. What most students also don't realize is how these schools are structured financially. Many Caribbean schools deliberately accept far more first-year students than they can graduate. High attrition isn't a flaw in the model because it's the business model. When a student fails a course, they don't just repeat the course. They repeat the entire semester and pay full tuition again. The school profits, and the student falls further behind. It's a system designed to extract tuition from students who are never likely to make it through and most of them don't find that out until they're already enrolled. If you're choosing between a Caribbean school or any international medical school and a DO program, choose DO. It's not a close call. Not sure where your stats land on the MD versus DO spectrum, use the free Med School Chance Predictor right up here. It compares your MCAT, GPA, and state of residence against admissions data from every US medical school and gives you a clear picture of where you're competitive before you commit to a path.
