Two recent commentaries discuss some of the problems for aspiring physicians:
- RP Walensky, LD Walensky. NEJM 2025; 392: 1251-1254. Application Overload — A Call to Reduce the Burden of Applying to Medical School
- DB Holt, EA Elster. NEJM 2025; 392: 1249-1251. Rethinking Shadowing for Aspiring Physicians
In the first article, the authors detail the burden associated with the common-place high-volume applications to medical schools.
“The cost is approximately $150 per school for application fees, plus $345 for taking the MCAT and having the score distributed through AMCAS. These fees are waived for qualifying low-income applicants (as primarily defined by household income below 400% of the national poverty level) who apply to the AAMC Fee Assistance Program and provide the required financial documentation.2 After submitting the primary application, applicants face a flood of secondary applications, some requiring up to eight additional essays. Even when the essay prompts are similar to those from other schools, the instructions often specify different lengths. One premedical student posted on social media the findings of his review of 54 medical schools’ secondary applications: he identified 222 different prompts, which he provided to help applicants get a jumpstart on their frenzied essay writing.3..
Between 2013 and 2023, … the total number of applications and the average number of applications per student increased dramatically — by 40% (from 690,281 to 966,947) and 28% (from 14.4 to 18.4), respectively. Despite the disproportionate escalation in applications submitted, the success rate (matriculants divided by applicants) remained flat (range, 36 to 44%).”
The authors recommend limiting applications to 10 to 12 medical school applications per applicant. This would benefit students as well as faculty burdens.
“The secondary-application process also needs to be reined in. Medical schools could adopt standardized secondary essays… Under this model, a student applying to 10 schools would complete a maximum of 13 secondary essays — 3 standardized and 1 customized essay per school — rather than the current norm of 60 to 80 essays (e.g., 20 secondary applications with 3 to 4 distinct essays each).”
My take: In Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, there are only five golden tickets. If everyone buys twice as many Wonka bars, it is a lot more expensive and perhaps more time-consuming. For medical school applicants, applying to 20 or more programs does not help if almost everyone is doing this. It does disadvantage the minority who do not have the financial means or available time to complete this arduous task.
In the second commentary, the article details the problems with shadowing experiences.
“Medical school admission in the United States remains intensely competitive. In 2024, according to the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC), prospective students submitted an average of 18 applications apiece…Many medical school admissions committees consider shadowing a physician to be an essential clinical experience for professional identity formation, so nearly all applicants now do some shadowing: 95% of respondents to the 2024 AAMC Matriculating Student Questionnaire (MSQ) said they’d spent time observing a physician at work.1 …
Premedical students are spending more time shadowing — sometimes hundreds to thousands of hours, which often necessitate taking a “gap year” between college and medical school at a financial cost…Three quarters of medical school applicants report taking time off before medical school, 50% taking 1 to 2 years and 25% taking 3 or more years...
These additional years delay entry into the workforce and result in higher levels of debt than moving more quickly toward potential earnings as a physician; one lost year of a physician’s salary (an average of $265,000) would result in an estimated net loss of $2 million by retirement if the money were invested at a 7% return…
Although medical schools consider clinical experiences other than shadowing, a review of our own data suggests that applicants who have shadowed physicians for more than 50 hours are more likely than their peers to be admitted — and more likely to come from higher-income families.“
The authors point out that unstructured observation is of unclear benefit. A course from Stanford, that far fewer hours (11-20 hrs) was sufficient for more than 90% of students “to decide whether medicine was the right career for them….The current emphasis on shadowing not only contributes to a longer and more expensive medical education pathway but also discourages nontraditional applicants and pursuit of genuine interests in other areas that make for well-rounded physicians.”
My take: The pathway to medical school has become more time-consuming and expensive. At the same time, it is doubtful that lengthy shadowing experiences or extensive numbers of applications are benefiting aspiring students.
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