No, not racist or sexist. This is all based on scientific observation and statistical analysis.Typical leftist racism and sexism.Yeah, but white men are generally pretty dumb, even when they have the grades and scores to get into medical school.
No, not racist or sexist. This is all based on scientific observation and statistical analysis.Typical leftist racism and sexism.Yeah, but white men are generally pretty dumb, even when they have the grades and scores to get into medical school.
It’s been explained to you more than once in this thread that it is not discrimination to use more criteria than GPA and MCAT scores to admit students and that the differences in scores are small and not predictive of who will make a good physician. Not every prospective medical student is willing to pursue the less high paying positions in general practice, pediatrics, internal medicine or ob/gyn care.No question they are. But how does discriminating by race in medical school admissions help alleviate that?Exactly. Just wanted to add that rural communities are very underserved.
But white and Asian students do NOT need higher scores to get into any medical school.No. I am saying that if whites and Asians need markedly higher grades and scores to get into any medical school that this is racial discrimination.No. You see someone ( white or Asian)not getting a spot in a particular medical school when some other person who is neither white nor Asian dies get a spot in medical school as racial discrimination.
Of course. Nobody is claiming otherwise. But unless you think that these other attributes are found less often in white or Asian applicants, it still does not explain the discrepancy in average scores and grades of those being admitted. It is still racial discrimination.You fail to grasp that medical school admissions boards look at more than just GPAs and MCAT scores.
It has been claimed many times over the years, and refuted just as many times. "Understanding is something you have to do for yourself" is something you should take to heart yourself.This has been discussed and explained to you many times over the years. Understanding it is something you have to do for yourself.
Citations?No, not racist or sexist. This is all based on scientific observation and statistical analysis.Typical leftist racism and sexism.Yeah, but white men are generally pretty dumb, even when they have the grades and scores to get into medical school.
Bronzeage, I'm white and got good scores in public school and later university. But I'm not dumb. It's just that wisdom has been chasing me for many years and I have always managed to outrun it. Not getting caught by wisdom is smarts in and of itself.No, not racist or sexist. This is all based on scientific observation and statistical analysis.Typical leftist racism and sexism.Yeah, but white men are generally pretty dumb, even when they have the grades and scores to get into medical school.
Medical students typically choose their specialty (s) in their 3rd year of a 4 year degree before moving onto residencies.First of all, medical schools do not graduate "cardiac surgeons". Medical schools graduate MDs (or in case of osteopathic schools, DOs). They do not have a specialty yet. That is the job of residencies.Medical schools have goals, and they are not limited to graduating the most academically accomplished, specialty, high-paid, cardiac surgeons.
What kind of nurse would that black girl had been going around forging names on documents.? She may have learned her lesson sure. But if she didn't she may do it again and get herself and others in huge trouble. She would have been better off doing something else.
As for the Hispanic girl hiring managers are not dumb. If she had a masters but not a Bachelors they would have seen through what happened and she was smart enough to forsee this. They may have still hired her but behind the scenes it would be understood she did not really get masters level work and not rise as high as she may have otherwise.
The problem is that the other factors being used are things that can't really be measured and there's no reason think there would be huge differences between races. It looks extremely suspect.It’s been explained to you more than once in this thread that it is not discrimination to use more criteria than GPA and MCAT scores to admit students and that the differences in scores are small and not predictive of who will make a good physician. Not every prospective medical student is willing to pursue the less high paying positions in general practice, pediatrics, internal medicine or ob/gyn care.No question they are. But how does discriminating by race in medical school admissions help alleviate that?Exactly. Just wanted to add that rural communities are very underserved.
But no one can understand these things for you.
First of all, medical schools do not graduate "cardiac surgeons". Medical schools graduate MDs (or in case of osteopathic schools, DOs). They do not have a specialty yet. That is the job of residencies.Medical schools have goals, and they are not limited to graduating the most academically accomplished, specialty, high-paid, cardiac surgeons.
Applicants to med schools do not commit to any particular specialty, much less to a type of practice.Some have specific programs for rural healthcare and healthcare for underserved communities. The mission of the program is to target some seats on the medical school for applicnts who can serve, who will serve and who can successfully serve in capacities and communities that specifically need medical practitioners. But the charts presented above don’t subtract out these numbers.
The type of specialty you choose, or what setting (urban, suburban, rural, academic vs. community) you want to practice in is also not a function of race or ethnicity.
Working knowledge of Spanish may be useful in many settings, but non-Hispanics may speak Spanish just as many 2nd gen or later Hispanics do not speak a word, and yet get to check the box that gives them URM privileges.
In reality a white guy from Appalachia may be far more likely to serve in a rural community and a Chinese-American daughter of laundromat owners may be far more likely to work with underprivileged patients than a black son of a Coke exec from Atlanta. But guess who gets URM points from adcoms.If Mr. 4.0/220 White Guy or Asian Guy answers his essay with an obvious lack of understanding of underserved communities, and an obvious lack of compelling backstory on whether they have any intention to serve those communities or capability of being comfortable in those comunities, they will lose out to someone who, perhaps with a lower GAP or MCAT, shows a willingness to serve there and compelling backstory showing they are capable of it.
I do not think they are more likely, but also see no reason to think they would be less likely. And yet, black and Hispanic applicants are given significant preference.So about those asians - are they, as a group, more likely than Black applicants to want to serve in poor communities as a General Practicioner?
Why do you keep repeating 220? Did you mean 520?It will look, on Derec’s charts, like Mr. 4.0/220 White Guy or Asian Guy was “unfairly descriminated against,” when in fact he was not qualified for the mission of the program.
And why do you think white and Asian students are more likely to lack this subjective "mission fit"?
It strikes me as similar to the "personality scores" given by Harvard where Asians were routinely given low "personality scores" in order to reduce the number of Asians getting accepted.
The truth is that med schools do descriminate[sic] by race.Some people will ignore this truth, and continue to whine piteously about the plight of the White Guy or the Asian Guy who is unwilling to serve as a GP, when GPs are what is needed, but dammit! their Asian Guy has a high MCAT!! It must be unfair descrimination!
And again, one does not commit to a particular specialty upon application.
It is not until the 4th year that students apply for residencies.
Why do you assume that whites and Asians do that more frequently than blacks and Hispanics?Medical schools don’t have to give a shit about high MCAT people who express disinterest in the mission of the program.
The otther factors are easily measured. Look at the doctors in underserved communities who stay and put down roots and serve these places long term. Get more people like them. They aren’t high MCAT, high GPA, Type-A ambitious academic wonders, perhaps.The problem is that the other factors being used are things that can't really be measured and there's no reason think there would be huge differences between races. It looks extremely suspect.It’s been explained to you more than once in this thread that it is not discrimination to use more criteria than GPA and MCAT scores to admit students and that the differences in scores are small and not predictive of who will make a good physician. Not every prospective medical student is willing to pursue the less high paying positions in general practice, pediatrics, internal medicine or ob/gyn care.
But no one can understand these things for you.
I'm also white, but specifically a red neck. I got good grades in school and college, for what that's worth. All of my working life, I've been among other white men who were dumb, but had the advantages of being a white man, which meant the competition for jobs and pay was less severe. The reason I brand them as dumb is because they thought they did it all on their own merit.Bronzeage, I'm white and got good scores in public school and later university. But I'm not dumb. It's just that wisdom has been chasing me for many years and I have always managed to outrun it. Not getting caught by wisdom is smarts in and of itself.No, not racist or sexist. This is all based on scientific observation and statistical analysis.Typical leftist racism and sexism.Yeah, but white men are generally pretty dumb, even when they have the grades and scores to get into medical school.![]()
Why do you give them every benefit of the doubt when if the shoe were on the other foot you would certainly think it was discrimination??It strikes me as similar to the "personality scores" given by Harvard where Asians were routinely given low "personality scores" in order to reduce the number of Asians getting accepted.
You assume it was done “in order to reduce the number of Asians getting accepted,” but the intent behind the measure is speculation on your part. Equally likely is to react to other goals such as who tends to make it through residency with favorable job reviews from their advisors. And if that does not include certain socio-economic backgrounds, that may have significantly different representations in diversity, then the “diversity” numbers will look different.
It has to be a slow change because of inertia. An immediate change in procedures translates to a slow change in the outcome. Deciding to admit more minorities doesn't make more qualified minorities magically appear. That's the colleges. And the high schools. And the grade schools. And the communities. To fairly get equal numbers you need a cohort that grew up without discrimination.
You have no reason to think you know this in order to do things racially. Maybe in some cases it is. Maybe in some cases they think, “shit, we have been discriminating against these groups for, like, ever. We have to show that we have changed, or the diverse applicants will never consider us. We have to be the change we want to see.”
And then they acknowledge that they will have to listen to whiners who can’t abide that they want to change fast. Wanh! No! It should be a slow curve! Only natural changes to fix artificial problems!!
And why do you assume their statement of intent are truthful? Those with any form of tertiary education are prone to moving around. Once again it sounds like a justification for discrimination.Also, in another post you proposed that medical schools should change the residencies if they want more GPs, but this will obviously not solve the problem as people are not required to stay in the area of their residency after completion, and so the underserved areas will continue to have to replace their healthcare force regularly and at great cost, unless they can select in medical school for applicants who have a passion and a reason to commit to serving these areas.
The reason medical school admission is brought up is because the data about it is so clear.
because I expect from you, Derec, that you will not internalize or understand what is written here and we will see the same whiney complaint about how change is enacted - using the exact same uninformed complaints as if you had never read any of this - the next time you decide to launch into a rant about medical school admissions when you are in a discussion about the VP candidate choices. And you will once again claim that medical schools don’t target specialties upon application and that there’s no reason white or Asian applicants will eschew underserved care at a different rate, as if you had never read an explanation of why that is demonstrably so.
Why do you give them every benefit of the doubt when if the shoe were on the other foot you would certainly think it was discrimination??It strikes me as similar to the "personality scores" given by Harvard where Asians were routinely given low "personality scores" in order to reduce the number of Asians getting accepted.
You assume it was done “in order to reduce the number of Asians getting accepted,” but the intent behind the measure is speculation on your part. Equally likely is to react to other goals such as who tends to make it through residency with favorable job reviews from their advisors. And if that does not include certain socio-economic backgrounds, that may have significantly different representations in diversity, then the “diversity” numbers will look different.
It has to be a slow change because of inertia. An immediate change in procedures translates to a slow change in the outcome. Deciding to admit more minorities doesn't make more qualified minorities magically appear. That's the colleges. And the high schools. And the grade schools. And the communities. To fairly get equal numbers you need a cohort that grew up without discrimination.
You have no reason to think you know this in order to do things racially. Maybe in some cases it is. Maybe in some cases they think, “shit, we have been discriminating against these groups for, like, ever. We have to show that we have changed, or the diverse applicants will never consider us. We have to be the change we want to see.”
And then they acknowledge that they will have to listen to whiners who can’t abide that they want to change fast. Wanh! No! It should be a slow curve! Only natural changes to fix artificial problems!!
Nope, all the nope.Likewise, in the workforce you need such a cohort. Even if you could abolish all discrimination with the stroke of a pen it would take 50+ years for that to propagate to the boardroom.
And why do you assume their statement of intent are truthful? Those with any form of tertiary education are prone to moving around. Once again it sounds like a justification for discrimination.Also, in another post you proposed that medical schools should change the residencies if they want more GPs, but this will obviously not solve the problem as people are not required to stay in the area of their residency after completion, and so the underserved areas will continue to have to replace their healthcare force regularly and at great cost, unless they can select in medical school for applicants who have a passion and a reason to commit to serving these areas.
It’s not clear in the way you think, as I outlined in my reply to Derec and to you.The reason medical school admission is brought up is because the data about it is so clear.- the next time you decide to launch into a rant about medical school admissions when you are in a discussion about the VP candidate choices.
But how does discriminating by race in medical school admissions help alleviate that?
In South Florida, when people want to find a doctor who's Black, they often end up contacting Adrienne Hibbert through her online website, Black Doctors of South Florida.
"There are a lot of Black networks that are behind the scenes," says Hibbert, who runs her own marketing firm. "I don't want them to be behind the scenes, so I'm bringing it to the forefront."
Hibbert says she got the idea for the website after she gave birth to her son 15 years ago. Her obstetrician at the time was white, and the suburban hospital outside Miami didn't feel welcoming to her as a Black woman pregnant with her first child.
"They had no singular photos of a Black woman and her Black child," Hibbert says. "I want someone who understands my background. I want someone who understands the foods that I eat. I want someone who understands my upbringing and things that my grandma used to tell me."
In addition to shared culture and values, a Black physician can offer Black patients a sense of safety, validation and trust. Research has shown that racism, discrimination and unconscious bias continue to plague the U.S. health care system and can cause unequal treatment for racial and ethnic minorities.
Black patients have had their complaints and symptoms dismissed, their pain undertreated, and are referred less frequently for specialty care. Older Black Americans can still remember when some areas of the country had segregated hospitals and clinics, not to mention profoundly unethical medical failures and abuses, such as the 40-year-long Tuskegee syphilis study.
But even today, Black patients say that too many clinicians can still be dismissive, condescending or impatient — which does little to repair trust. Some Black patients say they'd prefer to work with Black doctors for their care, if they could find one.
How common is it really? And how much is unfair perception vs. reality. It is black patients who can be biased, not just white doctors. In any case, it is unjust to discriminate against white prospective med students because of some other white people might have done.Has anyone mentioned that the reason we need more Black doctors is because there is lots of data that shows that it's common for Black people to be treated unfairly by a good percentage of white doctors?
Significantly lower.But, even if the grades and MCAT scores are in some cases a little bit lower,
I reject this idea that black patients should be seen by black doctors. Would you extend that to white doctors and white patients etc., or it is a one-way street, like most discourse about race?there is a need for more Black doctors, especially in a state like Ga., where over 30% of the population is Black.
They do determine that to a great degree. Not alone, of course, but they are significant metrics.Grades and MCAT scores don't determine if someone will be a great physician, regardless of ethnic background.
It's hard to predict the former, and I see no reason to assume that compassion differs by race. As far as the latter, I would think that more academically minded people enjoy learning new things and that they therefore would be more inclined to keep up with developments in their field, and maybe even contribute to them.Compassion and keeping up to date with one's area of practice are far more important and sadly, there are too many providers who lack compassion and don't seem to keep up to date with the newest things in medicine. It's complicated.
Anybody else find that kind of separatism concerning?NPR said:In South Florida, when people want to find a doctor who's Black, they often end up contacting Adrienne Hibbert through her online website, Black Doctors of South Florida.
"Did not feel welcoming". But was that because of anything the white doctor said or did or because of Hibbert's own prejudices?Hibbert says she got the idea for the website after she gave birth to her son 15 years ago. Her obstetrician at the time was white, and the suburban hospital outside Miami didn't feel welcoming to her as a Black woman pregnant with her first child.
It seems to be the latter - it is Hibbert's prejudices, not the doctors that were making her uncomfortable."They had no singular photos of a Black woman and her Black child," Hibbert says. "I want someone who understands my background. I want someone who understands the foods that I eat. I want someone who understands my upbringing and things that my grandma used to tell me."
Yes, but racial discrimination by whom? It seems these patients are discriminating on the basis of race, not the doctors.I've also read that a good number of Black men don't like going to the doctor unless they can find a Black doctor because of racial discrimination.
Two wrongs don't make a right.Hi Derec - I want to interject a point here - before you argue against DEI, It's important to know that hiring based on gender and race was already happening before these ideas came into place.
No, it is not. It is the same course, just with different groups being discriminated against.DEI is an effort to course correct.